mexican films
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“Shifting Moods, Shifting Tones” - Model: Alina - OhThumbelina
Tongolele (aka. Yolanda Montes)Appearing in a publicity still for the 1953 Mexican crime thriller: “El Mensaje de la Muerte”..
Mexican Coke James M Lens, Kodot XGrizzled Film, No Flash, Taken with Hipstamatic
awesome-cuckoldvideo: bbw mexican wife taking bbc while on holiday. hubby films
nude-celebrity-fakes: Salma Hayek - Salma Hayek Jiménez (born September 2, 1966) is a Mexican American film actress, director and producer. She began her career in Mexico starring in the telenovela Teresa and went on to star in the film El Callejón
hollywoodpixperfect: Happy birthday to actor Germán Robles, born on March 20, 1929, in Gijón, Asturias, Spain. This is an Argentinean one sheet for his classic Mexican horror film El Vampiro (1957). Robles’portrayal of a vampire was said to have
#patreon #modelphotography #models #photography #model-“Fashion Fox,” 2019Find all my uncensored photo sets only on Patreon!
riveralwaysknew: riveralwaysknew: I took my father to see Rogue One today. I’ve wanted to take him for a while. I wanted my Mexican father, with his thick Mexican accent, to experience what it was like to see a hero in a blockbuster film, speak the
Just saw this Mexican horror film on Netflix…. :O
My mom just told me Maria Bonito, the song I previously posted, was written for Maria Felix a Mexican film actress and for some reason I got teary-eyed. I want to cover that song because it moves me more than any song I’ve heard in a while.
ghostsareassholes: “Hello? Yes, this is Santo.”
cazadordementes: Era México, 1960. Los tiempos del blanco y negro, Santo, “el enmascarado de plata” rescataba a bellas damas de las garras de zombies, marcianos y vampiros; junto a los personajes que aparecían en los llamados comics, Chanoc y
mexican-gwc: Theresa Manchester Yashica Mat 124 Fuji Provia 400 I have lots of naked photos taken of me, this much is true, but I really think this is just a lovely portrait.
jugheadjones:Reblog and put your last purchase, last meal, and last film watched of the year in the tags.
gonegirlbyeee-blog: A fan outside the Arlington Theatre asked Rosamund Pike what she liked about Santa Barbara. Her answer: the Mexican taqueria La Super Rica. A woman after my own heart! She was here tonight to accept the Santa Barbara film fest’s
fuckyeahlatinamericanhistory: The Gaucho (1927), a silent film set in Argentina, featured Mexican actress Lupe Velez in her first major role.
lyndez: steveholtvstheuniverse: imagine if disney/pixar made their dia de los muertos film imagine how great their one half-mexican lead character would’ve been imagine how the sombrero-wearing villain would be the only pure mexican imagine new yorxico
fuckyeahmariafelix: Spanish film starring Mexican actress María Félix. A modern (comic) retelling of the old Goethe play, Faust.
swinton: wehadfacesthen: Iconic Mexican film star Maria Felix in La couronne noire (Luis Saslavsky, 1951), a Spanish-French co-production. Tomorrow is this great woman’s 100th celebratory birthday!
cburgoin: María Félix was a Mexican actress, considered by many to be the most iconic leading lady of the Golden Age of Mexican cinema, known for her larger-than-life, tough film characters.
wehadfacesthen: Mexican film legend Maria Felix in a 1961 portrait by Allan Grant
wehadfacesthen: Dolores Del Rio, 1948, at her home in Acapulco, Mexico. She left Hollywood after a 20 year film career to return to her native Mexico where she became one of the greatest stars (along with Maria Félix) of the Golden Age of Mexican Cinema
wehadfacesthen: Mexican film star María Félix, called “La Doña”, 1956, photo by Philippe Halsman
semajzayd: The character “Ernesto de la Cruz” is inspired by Mexicans singers/actors Pedro Infante and Jorge Negrete, who also made a brief cameo in de la Cruz’s party. The film features a variety of animated caricatures or cameo appearances
wehadfacesthen: Mexican film star María Félix in La Diosa Arrodillada I The Kneeling Goddess (Roberto Gavaldón, 1947), the story of a married artist who falls in love with his model
wehadfacesthen: Maria Félix, queen of Mexican cinema, whose birthday I forgot yesterday (8 April 1914 – 8 April 2002).Of her earliest films she said: “With these films, I became the number one enemy of the Mexican family morals… Somehow, I
ohyeahpop: Portrait of Mexican actress Maria Félix wearing a Cartier snake bracelet and a scarf around her head on a boat at the Venice Film Festival. Photo by Emilio Ronchini, Venice, August 1959.
locsgirl: swinton: Mexican film director Emilio Fernández, one of my favorite directors, posed for the Oscar statue …. Things you didn’t know. The 8-pound, 24-karat gold plated statues that will be handed out Sunday evening at the 85th Annual
guanin: I was tagged by the wonderful @sunlitroom to list 9 films that fit my aesthetic. 1. The Book of LifeThis is the most authentically Mexican aesthetic I have ever seen in an American film. The wood carving folk art animation, the brilliant colors,
heart8r8ker: best picture was won by a film where the main character is mute and uses sign language. her two best friends are a closeted gay man and a black woman. it was directed by a mexican immigrant and y'all wanna focus on the fact that there was
riveralwaysknew: riveralwaysknew:I took my father to see Rogue One today. I’ve wanted to take him for a while. I wanted my Mexican father, with his thick Mexican accent, to experience what it was like to see a hero in a blockbuster film, speak the
pendejx:Emilio “El Indio“ Fernández was a Mexican film director, actor and screenwriter. He was one of the most prolific film directors of the Golden Age of Mexican cinema in the 1940s and 1950s. The Oscar statuette was originally designed by
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paintmefiftyshadesofgreen: cuntakinte: A Mexican stuntman died while making a film; at the funeral his mother approached the director and said,”Jesus died for your scenes.” I JUST CHOKED
joaquinguzmanloera: cburgoin: María Félix was a Mexican actress, considered by many to be the most iconic leading lady of the Golden Age of Mexican cinema, known for her larger-than-life, tough film characters. 💖
lievekofye: I want more Mexican characters in TV/film not as the help, the field worker or the gangster. Yes that is a reality but WE ARE MORE THAN THAT. we’re not all undocumented immigrants. We don’t all work in hotels or the kitchens. AND SO WHAT
bluemoonwalker: “See that little Mexican girl over there? She is hot. It would take a fire department to cool her down. Them boys over there they don’t even got a glass of water” Never before seen outtakes from The Way You Make Me Feel short film
anahuacalli: Las musas de Emilio Fernández. Exposición Under the Mexican Sky: Gabriel Figueroa—Art and Film
wookieeleaks: I just cried like a baby with COCO, it’s a beautiful film, and I’m not saying this just because I’m mexican, like, SERIOUSLY, is one of the best Disney/Pixar movies ever made!! Thank you, Disney, for showing the world that México
caliloner559: riveralwaysknew: I took my father to see Rogue One today. I’ve wanted to take him for a while. I wanted my Mexican father, with his thick Mexican accent, to experience what it was like to see a hero in a blockbuster film, speak the way
uniswoon: Still image from Mexican science fiction-noir film La Pantera Negra.
cine-mexicano: This stunning film is one of a few films made by Adolfo Best Maugard (“Fito Best”), the great Mexican painter. Initially banned under the administration of Lázaro Cárdenas, it was released in a badly censored form for a short run
wehadfacesthen: Maria Felix, “the most beautiful face in Mexican cinema”, in 1958. She was a star in Mexican and European films and television for over 40 years.
thighsandburritos: my grandma serving mexican film star lüüks
superheroesincolor: El Santo (The Saint) Rodolfo Guzmán Huerta (1917 – 1984), more widely known as El Santo (The Saint), was a Mexican Luchador enmascarado (Spanish for masked professional wrestler), film actor, and folk icon. El Santo, along