
El amor de mi bohĂo
El Amor de Mi BohĂo, which translates to "The Love of My Hut" (or shack ), was written and directed by Juan Orol, inspired by the song o a popular love ballad of the same name, created by the great Cuban composer Julio Brito Ibåñez, "The melodic painter of Cuba", wich is the song that you can hear as the opening theme of the film. It is Director Juan Orol's tale of a violent love triangle where two farm hands out to prove who is the most macho, and thereby win the affections of a woman. This tragic love story takes place on a tropical plantation located just outside of Havana, where its workers are housed in small, thatched-roof "bohios". The two rival suitors are driven by passion for the girl they both love, and soon engage in a series of challenges designed to help this young woman choose the right guy in the end. These competitions start out to include simple and benign activities at first, like dancing, singing and dueling guitars, or betting on the winning bird at a cock-fight, However, they soon escalate to more violent activities, like public brawls, and saber dueling, which set life changing events into motion for everyone.
- Runtime
- 1h 27m
- Released
- 1947
Details
Release year: 1947
Storyline
El Amor de Mi BohĂo, which translates to "The Love of My Hut" (or shack ), was written and directed by Juan Orol, inspired by the song o a popular love ballad of the same name, created by the great Cuban composer Julio Brito Ibåñez, "The melodic painter of Cuba", wich is the song that you can hear as the opening theme of the film. It is Director Juan Orol's tale of a violent love triangle where two farm hands out to prove who is the most macho, and thereby win the affections of a woman. This tragic love story takes place on a tropical plantation located just outside of Havana, where its workers are housed in small, thatched-roof "bohios". The two rival suitors are driven by passion for the girl they both love, and soon engage in a series of challenges designed to help this young woman choose the right guy in the end. These competitions start out to include simple and benign activities at first, like dancing, singing and dueling guitars, or betting on the winning bird at a cock-fight, However, they soon escalate to more violent activities, like public brawls, and saber dueling, which set life changing events into motion for everyone.
Top credits
- Yadira JimĂ©nez â Rosa InĂ©s
- JosĂ© Pulido â Luis del Valle
- Carlos BadĂas â Armando
- Kiko Mendive â Cantante