Los hacendados don Pedro Ruiz y don Miguel Daz, que son compadres, se disputan la posesin del Monte de los Pericos. El hijo de don Pedro, Romn (Jorge Negrete), termina con su novia Lupe porque ama a Rosaura (Miroslava), hija de don Miguel y ahijada de don Pedro. El padre de ella se opone al amor de Romn y Rosaura debido a la disputa que tiene con su compadre para obtener el monte. Despus de muchos sacrificios de los enamorados, el amor de Romn logra vencer todas las rencillas que existen entre las dos familias, no sin que antes sucedan varias desgracias. Landowners Don Pedro and Don Miguel are very close to each other but they fight over the ownership of a parcel of land. Pedro's son Romn (Jorge Negrete) and Miguel's daughter Rosaura (Miroslava), who is Pedro's goddaughter, are in love. Her father Miguel, however, opposes the relationship because of his dispute with Pedro. After many problems, Romn's love for Rosaura and their joint sacrifices prove stronger than the quarrel between the families.
La Posesion was an incredible movie! Both Isabela Corona and Miroslava were amazing! Maybe that's what makes the movie so good.The great cast includes Isabela Corona, Miroslava, Jorge Negrete, Domingo Soler, Eva Martino.The movie moves on like a dream and end leaving you wanting for more.
Ulzana's Raid was an incredible movie! Both Burt Lancaster and Bruce Davison were amazing! The great cast includes Burt Lancaster, Bruce Davison, Jorge Luke, Richard Jaeckel, Joaqun Martnez.
If you love watching Burt Lancaster or Bruce Davison, you are deffinetly going to want to watch Ulzana's Raid.
Robert Aldrich pulls no punches in his unrelentingly brutal story of a reign of terror perpetrated on Arizona settlers by a bitter Apache warrior and the cavalry's frustrated attempts to stop him. Burt Lancaster, a longtime Aldrich collaborator and star of the similar 1954 Western Apache, brings his laconic, quietly authoritative presence to the role of McIntosh, a blunt-speaking, introspective old army scout with more respect than hate for his enemy. A very young Bruce Davison is the green-as-a-sapling Lieutenant DeBuin, fresh from West Point and filled with Christian ideals, thrown into the field against the vicious, tactically brilliant Ulzana. DeBuin is shocked and appalled at Ulzana's brutality--torturing male homesteaders to death, raping the women, leaving a trail of mutilated corpses--and as he struggles to understand Ulzana his values of Christian charity soon melt into racist hatred. Ulzana's tactics were familiar to Americans in 1972 who followed the war in Vietnam and the guerrilla attacks of the Vietcong. Like The Wild Bunch before it, Ulzana's Raid removes the sentimentality of Western ideals in its harsh portrayal of the violent world, though unlike Sam Peckinpah, Aldrich leaves the violence off-screen and allows the audience to see only the horrific aftermath. (These scenes are often graphic and not recommended for the squeamish.) It's a disturbing and powerful film, where the concept of good guys and bad guys becomes meaningless and the battle between cultures ultimately comes down to survival in a harsh world. --Sean Axmaker