La mujer desnuda (The Naked Woman) is a Mexican drama film directed by Fernando Méndez. It was released in 1953 and starring Meche Barba and Antonio Aguilar.
La mujer desnuda | |
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Directed by | Fernando Méndez |
Written by | Luis Manrique Pedro de Urdimalas |
Produced by | Luis Manrique Gregorio Walerstein |
Starring | Meche Barba Antonio Aguilar Miguel Torruco Carlos López Moctezuma |
Cinematography | Agustín Martínez Solares |
Music by | Sergio Guerrero |
Distributed by | FILMEX |
Release date | March 25, 1953 (México) |
Running time | 90 min |
Country | Mexico |
Language | Spanish |
A cabaret dancer, daughter of a circus clown, marries a famous singer. When everything seems to be happiness for both, a former lover of the young woman returns from her past to blackmail and not reveal her dark past.
In this film Meche Barba does not appear naked as the title suggests, but she was painted gold, and then dressed in expensive fur coats in a gruesome story with melodramatic ending. The film was vetoed by the now defunct League of The Decency.[1] Highlights the great photograph of Agustín Martínez Solares that gives a touch of Film noir with the singer Antonio Aguilar as a sort of Mexican Victor Mature who just handing him tremendous beating to the villain Miguel Torruco.[2]
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