Weeping for a Bandit
1964 Spanish film
- 1 September 1964 (1964-09-01)
Running time
Weeping for a Bandit (Spanish: Llanto por un bandido) is a 1964 Spanish drama film directed by Carlos Saura. It was Saura's first film in color. It was co-produced with France and Italy, and starred Italian Lea Massari and French-Italian Lino Ventura. Thanks to his friendship with Saura, filmmaker Luis Buñuel has a small role. The film was entered into the 14th Berlin International Film Festival.[1]
Cast
- Francisco Rabal – José María 'El Tempranillo'[2]
- Lea Massari – María Jerónima
- Philippe Leroy – Pedro Sánchez
- Lino Ventura – El Lutos
- Manuel Zarzo – El Sotillo
- Silvia Solar – Marquesa de los Cerros
- Fernando Sánchez Polack – Antonio (as Fernando S. Polack)
- Antonio Prieto – El Lero
- José Manuel Martín – El Tuerto
- Agustín González – Capitán Leoncio Valdés
- Venancio Muro – Jiménez
- Rafael Romero (actor) – El gitano
- Gabriele Tinti
- Luis Buñuel – El verdugo
- Antonio Buero Vallejo – El esbirro
- Pablo Runyan - Pintor inglés
- José Hernández - boy[3]
References
External links
- Weeping for a Bandit at IMDb
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Films directed by Carlos Saura
- Cuenca (1958)
- The Delinquents (1960)
- Weeping for a Bandit (1964)
- The Hunt (1966)
- Peppermint Frappé (1967)
- Stress Is Three (1968)
- Honeycomb (1969)
- The Garden of Delights (1970)
- Ana and the Wolves (1972)
- Cousin Angelica (1973)
- Cría Cuervos (1975)
- Elisa, vida mía (1977)
- Blindfolded Eyes (1978)
- Mama Turns 100 (1979)
- Faster, Faster (1980)
- Blood Wedding (1981)
- Sweet Hours (1981)
- Antonieta (1982)
- Carmen (1983)
- The Stilts (1984)
- El amor brujo (1986)
- El Dorado (1988)
- The Dark Night (1989)
- ¡Ay Carmela! (1990)
- The South (1990)
- Marathon (1992)
- Sevillanas (1992)
- Outrage (1993)
- Flamenco (1995)
- Taxi (1996)
- Little Bird (1997)
- Tango (1998)
- Goya in Bordeaux (1999)
- Bunuel and King Solomon's Table (2001)
- Salomé (2002)
- The 7th Day (2004)
- Iberia (2005)
- Fados (2007)
- I, Don Giovanni (2009)
- Flamenco, Flamenco (2010)
- Zonda, folclore argentino (2015)
- J: Beyond Flamenco (2016)
- Renzo Piano, an Architect for Santander (2018)
- The King of All the World (2021)
- Las paredes hablan (2022)
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