The Abandoned (1945 film) explained

The Abandoned
Director:Emilio Fernández
Producer:Felipe Subervielle
Starring:Dolores del Río
Pedro Armendáriz
Víctor Junco
Paco Fuentes
Fanny Schiller
Maruja Grifell
Music:Manuel Esperón
Cinematography:Gabriel Figueroa
Editing:Gloria Schoemann
Distributor:Films Mundiales
Runtime:103 minutes
Country:México
Language:Spanish

The Abandoned (Spanish:Las Abandonadas) is a 1945 Mexican film, directed and co-written by Emilio Fernández, starring Dolores del Río and Pedro Armendáriz.

Plot

Margarita (Dolores del Río) is a young woman abandoned by her fiancé. She is forced to perform various jobs to raise her son, in a tumultuous 1920s Mexico.

Production

Since its inception, the film was considered a rough project. Emilio Fernández's uncertain relationship with the movie studio Films Mundiales had become somewhat overconfident, judging by his increasingly frequent involvement in drafting the scripts of his films.

While Fernandez mixed stories that he had seen on the screen with events of the Mexican Revolution, producer Agustrín J. Fink became ill. A cloud of pessimism clouded preparations for the shooting, as the budget went over one million pesos, much of it invested in very expensive clothes that a Hollywood designer drew up for the showcasing of Dolores del Río. Efforts to save Fink's life were useless, and the producer died three weeks before the shooting began.

In November 1944, The Abandoned was ready for release when the ban came exhibition. The then head of the Film Censor Department, under the Ministry of the Interior of Mexico, said he had suggested to Fernandez and Films Mundiales put a caption indicating that the plot was happening "In the turbulent Mexico of 1914." The incident was resolved through the intervention of journalists and film critics, who noted the incongruity of prohibiting the showing of a film whose script had been reviewed and authorized by the same censorious authorities. Finally, in March 1945-and favored by the scandal The Abandoned was released to great acclaim.[1]

This film ranks 93 in the list of the 100 best films of Mexican cinema, in the opinion of 25 film critics and specialists in Mexico.[2]

Notes and References

  1. https://web.archive.org/web/20030217170253/http://cinemexicano.mty.itesm.mx/peliculas/abandonadas.html Las abandonadas in Mexican Cinema by ITESM
  2. https://web.archive.org/web/20021125104242/http://cinemexicano.mty.itesm.mx/pelicula1.html Las 100 mejores películas del cine mexicano