Secreto de confesión

Secreto de Confesión
Directed by Fausto Galaurán
Produced by Don Danón
Written by Manuel de Amechazurría
Starring Armando Villa
Rosa María
Nita Farias
Mario de Cordova
Mari del Sol
Julio Gonzales
Eliseo Carvajal
Distributed by Parlatone Hispano-Filipino, Sociedad Anónima Incorporada
Release dates
1939 (1939)
Running time
90 minutes
Country Commonwealth and Associated Free State of the Philippines
Language Spanish

Secreto de Confesión is the title of the first Filipino film in Spanish language, which was presented at the time as "la primera película hablada y cantada en español producida en Filipinas" (the first film spoken and sung in Spanish in the Philippines).

International distribution

Secreto de Confesión was screened with great box office success in the United States, Cuba, Puerto Rico, and several other Spanish speaking countries in the American continent. It also was shown in Macau, Hong Kong, Spain and Portugal.

Other Filipino films in Spanish from the same period, such as Las Dulces Mestizas, Muñecas de Manila or El Milagro del Nazareno de Quiapo, had an even greater success at the box office, and started to create international distribution channels for the Philippine film industry spoken in Spanish.

Cast

Loss during World War II

Unfortunately, all existing copies of the film were lost during the U.S. bombing of Manila at the end of World War II. It was not the only film destroyed during the armed conflict, since there are only copies of five pre-war Filipino movies, none of them in Spanish.

Versions

A Tagalog version, produced years later, was screened after the end of World War II in 1945 in major cities throughout the Philippine archipelago, but with very limited box office success.

Artistic legacy

Guillermo Gómez Rivera, Spanish-speaking Filipino writer and academic, director of the prestigious Academia Filipina de la Lengua Española (Philippine Academy of the Spanish Language), is credited with the recovery of this film in the memory of the Filipino film industry, which had forgotten it for decades.

See also

External links

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