The Path to Crime | |
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Directed by | Don Napy |
Written by | Antonio Corma Don Napy |
Starring | Tito Alonso Juan Carlos Altavista Máximo Berrondo |
Cinematography | Roque Funes |
Edited by | Jacinto Cascales |
Music by | Tito Ribero |
Release date |
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Running time | 83 minutes |
Country | Argentina |
Language | Spanish |
The Path to Crime (Spanish: Camino al crimen) is a 1951 Argentine comedy film directed and co-written by Don Napy during the classical era of Argentine cinema. [1]
Premio Nadal is a Spanish literary prize awarded annually by the publishing house Ediciones Destino, part of Planeta. It has been awarded every year on 6 January since 1944. The Josep Pla Award for Catalan literature is given at the same ceremony.
Fernando Casado Arambillet, best known as Fernando Rey, was a Spanish film, theatre, and television actor, who worked in both Europe and the United States. A suave, international actor best known for his roles in the films of surrealist director Luis Buñuel and as the drug lord Alain Charnier in The French Connection (1971) and French Connection II (1975), he appeared in more than 150 films over half a century.
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Mecha Ortiz was an Argentine actress who appeared in films between 1937 and 1981, during the Golden Age of Argentine cinema. At the 1944 Argentine Film Critics Association Awards, Ortiz won the Silver Condor Award for Best Actress for her performance in Safo, historia de una pasión (1943), and won it again in 1946 for her performance in El canto del cisne (1945). She was known as the Argentine Greta Garbo and for playing mysterious characters, who suffered by past misfortunes in love, mental disorders, or forbidden love. Safo, historia de una pasión was the first erotic Argentine film, though there was no nudity. She also played in the first film in which a woman struck a man and the first film with a lesbian romance. In 1981, she was awarded the Grand Prize for actresses from the National Endowment for the Arts.
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