Manuela Saenz is a historical biography movie directed by Diego Risquez, with a script by Leonardo Padron. It stars Beatriz Valdés in the title role, alongside Mariano Álvarez as the liberator Simón Bolívar. Other main cast members include Erich Wildpret, Juan Carlos Alarcón, Orlando Urdaneta, Manuel Salazar, Alejo Felipe, and Juan Manuel Montesinos.
Manuela Saenz, La Libertadora Del Libertador | |
---|---|
Directed by | Diego Risquez |
Written by | Leonardo Padron |
Produced by | Pedro Mezquita |
Starring | Beatriz Valdes
Erich Wildpret Mariano Alvarez Alejo Felipe Juan Carlos Alarcon Juan Manuel Montesinos Manuel Salazar Isabel Herrera Orlando Urdaneta |
Cinematography | Leonardo Henriquez |
Edited by | Cesar Jarowski |
Music by | Eduardo Marturet |
Country | Venezuela |
Language | Spanish |
The movie premiered in Venezuela in December of 2000 and had a special screening in the city of Washington in January of 2001.
In 2003, the movie was released in France, specifically at the Biarritz Film Festival.[1]
In 2006, the movie was broadcast on the Venezuelan channel Venemovies, a subsidiary of the Venezuelan broadcasting service Venevision.[2]
Plot
editIn 1856, a whaler arrives in Paita, Peru; on board is Herman Melville, who is astonished to learn that Manuela Sáenz, for eight years the lover of Simon Bolivar, is still alive. He calls on her, and although she will not talk to him about her life, his visit sends her to her chest of Bolivar's letters. As she reads them, the sepia-toned present gives way to flashbacks in color: she meets 'the Liberator' in 1822, becomes his lover, and also becomes a colonel in his military movement to realize the 'Gran Colombia', one nation across South America. As plague (brought by the ship) closes in on Manuela's household, so does her tempestuous story move toward Bolivar's betrayal and death[3]
Cast
edit- Beatriz Valdes as Manuela Saenz
- Mariano Alvarez as Simon Bolivar
- Erich Wildpret as Hernan Melville
- Juan Carlos Alarcon as Jose Maria Sanz
- Alejo Felipe as Vicente Ayuso
- Asdrubal Melendez as General Anastasio Bustamante
- Juan Manuel Montesinos as Jose la Mar
- Isabel Herrera as Natividad
- Manuel Salazar as Agustin Gamarra
- Orlando Urdaneta as Simon Rodriguez
Reception
editThe movie currently has a score of 6.5/10 on the cinema website IMDb.
According the movie website page “ El espectador Imaginario” one of the best elements in the film are the dramatic scenes. The principal lead cast have good chemistry and retells the history of love between Simon Bolivar and Manuelita Saenz. One lacks aspect its the scenes of battles to shorts and very low budget for recreate.[4]
References
edit- ^ Sáez, Liliana (2018-02-02). "Las guacamayas se fueron con Diego Rísquez - Críticas | Sinopsis | Comentarios". El Espectador Imaginario (in Spanish). Retrieved 2023-08-26.
- ^ Fuente, Anna Marie de la (2006-09-05). "Venevision bows U.S. pic channel". Variety. Retrieved 2023-08-26.
- ^ "Manuela Sáenz: La libertadora del Libertador - Ibermedia Digital" (in Spanish). 2015-05-07. Retrieved 2023-08-26.
- ^ admin (2001-01-18). "(Arte y Cultura) CINE-VENEZUELA: Vida de Manuela Sáenz atrapa a la taquilla". IPS Agencia de Noticias (in Spanish). Retrieved 2023-08-26.