• Reinicializar su contraseña

Menú de cuenta de usuario

  • Iniciar sesión
Inicio
Drupal 11 - DO NOT USE THIS SITE TO REGISTER OR TO BECOME MEMBER!!

Navegación principal

  • Contacts
  • Old Albums
  • New Albums
  • Archives
  • Files
  • Forums
  • Recent Forum Comments
  • Links
  • Films
  • Notary
  • Map

Ruta de navegación

  • Inicio
  • Foros
  • History, Culture and General Discussion
  • Mexican Movies

Mexican Movies

Profile picture for user meef98367
Por meef98367 | 5:00 PM MST, Sáb Junio 17, 2006

Marge -

I showed my husband your message about the theaters in El Paso. He too went to the same theaters, and he waxed nostalgic. He told me:

"I remember in the early forties walking into the El Alcazar theater and the 'unbearable stench of being' hitting my nose immediately. In those days before air-conditioning in most theaters, and the weather outside around 110, and the young men that frequented the theater sporting flannel socks and tennis shoes (not Nikes or sneakers, but the real tennis shoes, two strips of canvas that laced up the ankles), you had the makings for a real 'pot boiler'. We dubbed the theater "El Calzetin".

"One memory that sticks in my mind regarding the 'Colon" theater was that every time we would see some guy hitting on a girl, we would yell 'dejala -----on [an expletive that starts with an 'h'], dale tu toston, pa' que se vaya al Colon!".

"The best movie I have ever seen, or will ever see, was at the El Calzetin. It is titled 'Maria Candelaria' and features Dolores Del Rio and Pedro Armendariz. This movie is real in essence, emotional at heart, and spiritual to the core. There will never be another movie like this, international or otherwise." [It is obviously his favorite movie of all time].

This past September on the TMC channel, Robert Osborne hosted several classic Mexican movies, and I recall that Maria Candelaria was one of them. How I wish my husband had taped them. They showed a different movie every Tuesday and Thursday throughout the month. My personal favorite was a very allegorical one set in the Mexico of the 18th century, about a poor serf who had sacrificed all his life to support his family, and he never had enough to eat to satisfy him. So one day his wife stole a turkey from her master and cooked it for him to eat all by himself and he took it to the hill near his house, and when he was about to devour the turkey a stranger approached. What happens then is fantastical. That one to me is a must see. My husband can't remember the name of the movie, but I loved it. It really moved me. It had so much to say about Mexico and its people. Also, I found it amazing that in the 18th century, the rich espanoles dressed up just like George Washington
, with b
reeches and white wigs, etc. and rode around in beautiful carriages with matching horses to pull them. I guess the upper classes in all Europe and the colonies kept up with the same styles in dress, lifestyles, penmanship, etc.

Emilie Garcia
Port Orchard, WA ----

margeval

Hace 18 years 11 months

Enlace permanente

Mexican Movies

Emilie, tell your husband that I remember that the Alcazar was
nicknamed "El Calzetin." The lady who sold the sandwiches and the
popcorn at the concession stand was Mrs. Mauregui, and she sold baloney
and cabbage sandwiches. When she ran out of baloney, she would sell
cabbage sandwiches--at the same price as the baloney ones.:)

I remember seeing reruns of Buck Rogers at that theatre, I was about 6
or 7. My sister and I were taken and dropped off when "Las Chitas"
(the Mauregui's granddaughters) were visiting there. We felt perfectly
safe. Marge:)

On Jun 17, 2006, at 6:55 PM, Emilie Garcia wrote:

> Marge -
>
> I showed my husband your message about the theaters in El Paso. He
> too went to the same theaters, and he waxed nostalgic. He told me:
>
> "I remember in the early forties walking into the El Alcazar theater
> and the 'unbearable stench of being' hitting my nose immediately. In
> those days before air-conditioning in most theaters, and the weather
> outside around 110, and the young men that frequented the theater
> sporting flannel socks and tennis shoes (not Nikes or sneakers, but
> the real tennis shoes, two strips of canvas that laced up the ankles),
> you had the makings for a real 'pot boiler'. We dubbed the theater
> "El Calzetin".
>
> "One memory that sticks in my mind regarding the 'Colon" theater was
> that every time we would see some guy hitting on a girl, we would yell
> 'dejala -----on [an expletive that starts with an 'h'], dale tu
> toston, pa' que se vaya al Colon!".
>
> "The best movie I have ever seen, or will ever see, was at the El
> Calzetin. It is titled 'Maria Candelaria' and features Dolores Del
> Rio and Pedro Armendariz. This movie is real in essence, emotional at
> heart, and spiritual to the core. There will never be another movie
> like this, international or otherwise." [It is obviously his favorite
> movie of all time].
>
> This past September on the TMC channel, Robert Osborne hosted several
> classic Mexican movies, and I recall that Maria Candelaria was one of
> them. How I wish my husband had taped them. They showed a different
> movie every Tuesday and Thursday throughout the month. My personal
> favorite was a very allegorical one set in the Mexico of the 18th
> century, about a poor serf who had sacrificed all his life to support
> his family, and he never had enough to eat to satisfy him. So one day
> his wife stole a turkey from her master and cooked it for him to eat
> all by himself and he took it to the hill near his house, and when he
> was about to devour the turkey a stranger approached. What happens
> then is fantastical. That one to me is a must see. My husband can't
> remember the name of the movie, but I loved it. It really moved me.
> It had so much to say about Mexico and its people. Also, I found it
> amazing that in the 18th century, the rich espanoles dressed up just
> like George Washington
> , with b
> reeches and white wigs, etc. and rode around in beautiful carriages
> with matching horses to pull them. I guess the upper classes in all
> Europe and the colonies kept up with the same styles in dress,
> lifestyles, penmanship, etc.
>
> Emilie Garcia
> Port Orchard, WA ----
>
>
>

  • Inicie sesión para enviar comentarios
History, Culture and General Discussion

User login

  • Reinicializar su contraseña

Recent Forum Comments

Subject: test forum topic for announcements
Comment Date: 2024-09-20
Last Comment: Lee Ingram
Subject: test 2
Comment Date: 2024-08-08
Last Comment: Lee Ingram
Subject: test 2
Comment Date: 2024-07-31
Last Comment: Lee Ingram

Most Recent Genealogy Research Forum Topics

2024-08-08
test 2
2024-07-31
test 2
2024-06-19
Jose Cresencio Bugarin

Most Recent History, Culture and General Discussion Topics

2024-04-10
Romo De Vivar: Descendants of the Influential Jewish Family Ha Levi
2024-03-19
Way to show 400 years of family
2023-05-01
DNA Doe Project --- Identification: Parga

Most Recent Announcements and Event Topics

2024-07-18
test forum topic for announcements
2024-06-22
Test Forum message
2024-04-02
New Member

Language switcher

  • English
  • Español
Funciona con Drupal

Copyright © 2025 Company Name - All rights reserved

Developed & Designed by Alaa Haddad