Del otro lado del puente (1980 film)

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Del otro lado del puente
Directed byGonzalo Martínez Ortega
Written byGonzalo Martínez Ortega
Produced byArnulfo Delgado
StarringJuan Gabriel
Valentin Trujillo
Lucha Villa
Julio Alemán
Estela Núñez
Narciso Busquets
Ana Laura Maldonado
CinematographyLeón Sánchez
Edited byCarlos Savage
Music byJuan Gabriel
Release date
  • 17 April 1980 (1980-04-17) (Mexico)[1]
Running time
97 minutes
CountryMexico
LanguagesSpanish
English

Del otro lado del puente (Spanish: "On the Other Side of the Bridge") is a 1980 Mexican musical drama film directed by Gonzalo Martínez Ortega and starring Juan Gabriel, Valentin Trujillo, Lucha Villa, Julio Alemán, Estela Núñez, Narciso Busquets and Ana Laura Maldonado. The story concerns a Mexican who is attracted by stories of unlimited opportunities in the United States, but once he arrives to the country faces a harsh reality, but is nonetheless determined to succeed.[2]

It was one in a wave of Mexican films about the Chicano experience.[3][4] It was the first in a trilogy of films directed by Martínez Ortega and starring Juan Gabriel, followed by the autobiographical duology El Noa Noa (1981) and Es mi vida (1982).[3]

Plot

The young Mexican Alberto (Juan Gabriel) lives in Los Angeles with the family of his older brother, Manny (Narciso Busquets) and studies at UCLA with the support of Professor Bob (Julio Alemán). Another young man, Jimmy Joe (Valentin Trujillo), who lives with his sister Estela (Ana Laura Maldonado), is encouraged to quit drug addiction at a youth rehabilitation center coordinated by Manny. Disillusioned with a gringa, Alberto meets Estela at a disco and becomes her boyfriend.

Cast

Production

It was filmed in 1978.[1]

Release

It was released on the Aragón 2, Colonial, Ermita, Marina, Soledad, Tlatelolco, Variedades, Vallejo 2000, Lago 2, and Premier cinemas on 17 April 1980, for six weeks.[1]

Reception

In Historia de la producción cinematográfica mexicana, 1977–1978, Marina Díaz López referred to the film by saying of Juan Gabriel that the "singer owed little of his great fame to his few jobs as a movie star".[5]

References

External links