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1961 Mexican film From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
El gato con botas (Puss in Boots, in English) is a 1961 Eastmancolor live-action Mexican fantasy film. Based on Charles Perrault's Puss in Boots, it was scripted, produced and directed by Roberto Rodriguez, and, starring Santanon in the title role, the film was made by Peliculas Rodriguez, S.A. at the Churubusco-Azteca film studios.
Puss in Boots | |
---|---|
Directed by | Roberto Rodríguez Manuel San Fernando |
Written by | Charles Perrault (story) Sergio Magaña (screen story) |
Produced by | Roberto Rodríguez |
Starring | Santanón Humberto Dupeyrón |
Cinematography | Rosalío Solano |
Music by | Sergio Guerrero |
Production company | Películas Rodríguez S.A. |
Release date |
|
Running time | 90 minutes |
Country | Mexico |
Language | Spanish |
A king is forced to give his daughter to an ogre. However, a fairy gives a peasant boy a pair of boots. The boy puts them on his cat, which becomes human-sized and leads the boy to fight the ogre.
For his role as Puss, the star Santanon was covered entirely by a furred cat costume, which in turn was adorned with feathered hat, vest and pants, and a sword.
In 1964, entrepreneur K. Gordon Murray acquired American rights to the film, edited it to 70 minutes, dubbed it, and released it nationwide as one in a series of fantasy films intended to be exhibited strictly as matinee films for children. Murray's advertising for these films came with strict instructions as to showtimes, additional programming, advertising displays, and other matters normally left to the discretion of theater managers.
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