You and Me Are Three
1962 Argentine film
You and Me Are Three | |
---|---|
Spanish | Tú y yo somos tres |
Directed by | Rafael Gil |
Written by |
|
Based on | You and Me Are Three by
|
Starring |
|
Cinematography | Heinrich Gärtner |
Edited by | Antonio Ramírez de Loaysa |
Music by |
|
Production companies | Coral Producciones Cinematográficas Internacional Productora de Peliculas Argentinas |
Distributed by | Chamartín |
Release date |
|
Running time | 89 minutes |
Countries | Argentina Spain |
Language | Spanish |
You and Me Are Three (Spanish: Tú y yo somos tres) is a 1962 Argentine-Spanish comedy film directed by Rafael Gil.[1] It is about a woman who falls in love by correspondence with a man who turns out to have a conjoined twin. It is based on a play by Enrique Jardiel Poncela.
Cast
- Analía Gadé as Manolina
- Alberto de Mendoza as Rodolfo Céspedes / Adolfo Céspedes
- Pepe Rubio as Ramiro
- Ismael Merlo as Dr. Alberto Cendreras
- Katia Loritz as Eva
- Matilde Muñoz Sampedro as Manolina's aunt
- José Franco as Raimundo Cisneros's uncle
- Paula Martel [es] as maiden
- José María Tasso [es] as photographer
- Pilarín Casanova
- Venancio Moreno
- Pilar Cano
- Beni Deus [es]
- Laly Soldevila as street girl
- Erasmo Pascual [es]
- Ramón Elías
- José Morales
- Julia Caba Alba as Dominga
- Licia Calderón as Matilde
- José Isbert as President
- Manolo Gómez Bur as Cabo Rebollo
- José Luis López Vázquez as nurse Gómez
- Ángel de Andrés as chauffeur
- Gracita Morales as receptionist at the hospital
References
- ^ de España, Rafael. Directory of Spanish and Portuguese Film-Makers and Films. Greenwood Press, 1994. p. 119. ISBN 0313294593.
External links
- You and Me Are Three at IMDb
- v
- t
- e
Films directed by Rafael Gil
- The Man Who Wanted to Kill Himself (1942)
- Journey to Nowhere (1942)
- Traces of Light (1943)
- Eloisa Is Under an Almond Tree (1943)
- Lessons in Good Love (1944)
- The Nail (1944)
- Thirsty Land (1945)
- The Phantom and Dona Juanita (1945)
- The Prodigal Woman (1946)
- The Holy Crown (1947)
- Don Quixote (1947)
- The Faith (1947)
- Mare Nostrum (1948)
- The Sunless Street (1948)
- Just Any Woman (1949)
- Adventures of Juan Lucas (1949)
- Saturday Night (1950)
- Apollo Theatre (1950)
- The Great Galeoto (1951)
- Our Lady of Fatima (1951)
- The Song of Sister Maria (1952)
- From Madrid to Heaven (1952)
- I Was a Parish Priest (1953)
- He Died Fifteen Years Ago (1954)
- Judas' Kiss (1954)
- The Other Life of Captain Contreras (1955)
- The Cock Crow (1955)
- The Big Lie (1956)
- Miracle of the White Suit (1956)
- Let's Make the Impossible! (1958)
- Luxury Cabin (1959)
- College Boarding House (1959)
- Litri and His Shadow (1960)
- Darling (1961)
- Green Harvest (1961)
- Rogelia (1962)
- Queen of the Chantecler (1962)
- You and Me Are Three (1962)
- The Blackmailers (1963)
- Pedrito de Andía's New Life (1965)
- Currito of the Cross (1965)
- Samba (1965)
- Road to Rocío (1966)
- He's My Man! (1966)
- Another's Wife (1967)
- Fruit of Temptation (1968)
- The Sailor with Golden Fists (1968)
- A Decent Adultery (1969)
- Blood in the Bullring (1969)
- The Locket (1970)
- The Man Who Wanted to Kill Himself (1970)
- The Green Envelope (1971)
- The Doubt (1972)
- Nothing Less Than a Real Man (1972)
- The Guerrilla (1973)
- The King is the Best Mayor (1974)
- The Good Days Lost (1975)
- Forget the Drums (1975)
- Death's Newlyweds (1975)
- The Legion Like Women (1976)
- Two Men and Two Women Amongst Them (1977)
- Father Cami's Wedding (1979)
- Spoiled Children (1980)
- And in the Third Year, He Rose Again (1980)
- Old Shirt to New Jacket (1982)
- The Autonomines (1984)
- The Cheerful Colsada Girls (1984)
![]() | This article related to an Argentine film of the 1960s is a stub. You can help Wikipedia by expanding it. |
- v
- t
- e