Smoke in the Eyes

(Redirected from Humo en los ojos)

Humo en los ojos (Smoke in the Eyes) is a Mexican drama film written and directed by Alberto Gout. It was released in 1946 and starring Meche Barba and David Silva.

Humo en los ojos
Directed byAlberto Gout
Written byAlberto Gout
Produced byAlfonso Rosas Priego
Enrique Rosas Priego
StarringMeche Barba
David Silva
María Luisa Zea
CinematographyEzequeil Carrasco
Music byRosalío Ramírez
Distributed byProducciones Rosas Priego
Release date
November 13, 1946 (México)
Running time
77 min
CountryMexico
LanguageSpanish

The film is in the public domain in both Mexico and the United States.[1]

Plot edit

Maria Esther (Meche Barba) is a young girl that works as a dancer in a cabaret. María Esther falls in love with Carlos (David Silva), a sailor who had a previous relationship with a cabaret woman named Sofia (María Luisa Zea). A rivalry erupts between the two women. Neither of the two realizes that, in reality, they are mother and daughter.

Cast edit

Reviews edit

The plot was inspired by the same named song of Agustín Lara, who brought other tropical themes along with Juan Bruno Tarraza and Rafael Hernández Marín. One of the classic films of the Rumberas film is Humo en los ojos. In his essential and delicious Documentary History of Mexican cinema, the researcher Emilio García Riera writes the following comment: It's funny the outcome of this tropical melodrama. David Silva feels incestuous by simple solidarity with her former lover Maria Luisa Zea and that makes him give up of a Meche Barba more "femme fatal" than ever. In the microcosm of the tropical cabaret, the director Alberto Gout discovered how the passions tragically collide with the revelations of kinship. At the same time, Gout was finding, for him and for the genre of Rumberas, the style that would give prosperity in the coming years.[2]

The film was originally offered to the Cuban-Mexican rumbera María Antonieta Pons. As the producer(s) and Pons did not reach a salary agreement, the producer Alfonso Rosas Priego and the director Alberto Gout began to test several other candidates. Among them were Lupita Torrentera, Yadira Jimenez and Ethel Maklen, but eventually Meche Barba was chosen. Thanks to this film, Barba makes her foray into Rumbera films.[3]

References edit

  1. ^ "Alameda et al v. Authors Rights Restoration Corporation et al". Justia Law. 19 May 2003. Retrieved 8 February 2019.
  2. ^ Películas Pepito: Humo en los ojos (1946)
  3. ^ Muñoz Castillo, Fernando (1993). Las Reinas del Trópico. Grupo Azabache. p. 71. ISBN 968-6084-85-1.

External links edit