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Nada más que una mujer

  • 1934
  • Approved
  • 1h 21m
IMDb RATING
6.8/10
11
YOUR RATING
Berta Singerman and Juan Torena in Nada más que una mujer (1934)
Drama

David Landeen of San Francisco arrives at the port of Ropangi, British North Borneo, in order to take over his deceased uncle's plantation on the neighboring island of Tilo. Beauregard, who ... Read allDavid Landeen of San Francisco arrives at the port of Ropangi, British North Borneo, in order to take over his deceased uncle's plantation on the neighboring island of Tilo. Beauregard, who owns the next plantation and who has taken control of the Landeen property, sends a group ... Read allDavid Landeen of San Francisco arrives at the port of Ropangi, British North Borneo, in order to take over his deceased uncle's plantation on the neighboring island of Tilo. Beauregard, who owns the next plantation and who has taken control of the Landeen property, sends a group of island natives to beat David up and take his papers. The natives leave David for dead, ... Read all

  • Director
    • Harry Lachman
  • Writers
    • Stuart Anthony
    • Lester Cole
    • Enrique Jardiel Poncela
  • Stars
    • Berta Singerman
    • Alfredo del Diestro
    • Juan Torena
  • See production info at IMDbPro
  • IMDb RATING
    6.8/10
    11
    YOUR RATING
    • Director
      • Harry Lachman
    • Writers
      • Stuart Anthony
      • Lester Cole
      • Enrique Jardiel Poncela
    • Stars
      • Berta Singerman
      • Alfredo del Diestro
      • Juan Torena
    • 1User review
    • 1Critic review
  • See production info at IMDbPro
  • See production info at IMDbPro
  • Photos2

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    Top cast10

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    Berta Singerman
    Berta Singerman
    • Mona Estrada
    Alfredo del Diestro
    • Julio Franchoni
    Juan Torena
    Juan Torena
    • David Landeen
    Luana Alcañiz
    Luana Alcañiz
    • Gilda
    Lucio Villegas
    • Doctor Steiner
    Carmen Rodríguez
    • Madame Lascar
    Julian Rivero
    Julian Rivero
    • Hansen
    Frazer Acosta
    • Ali
    Juan Ola
    • Native
    Jimmy Dime
    Jimmy Dime
    • Native
    • (as James Dime)
    • Director
      • Harry Lachman
    • Writers
      • Stuart Anthony
      • Lester Cole
      • Enrique Jardiel Poncela
    • All cast & crew
    • Production, box office & more at IMDbPro

    User reviews1

    6.811
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    Featured reviews

    bensonj

    Unexpected, Vital Must-See performance!

    This is the Spanish version of Fox's PURSUED, with the Spanish title translated literally as Nothing Like a Woman. A small boat arrives at the squalid dock of a small south seas port. (The port being too small for a seagoing ship, passengers must come ashore by small boat.) A woman with an interesting face, but not particularly young or beautiful (Singerman), comes ashore and takes a rickshaw to a seedy night club. It's morning and the floor is being scrubbed, the chairs atop the tables. The woman approaches the female owner of the club and asks for a job. "Can you sing?" "No." "Can you dance?" "No." "What do you do?" "Recitations." Although background material for the film has indicated that the actress is a "legendary cabaret poetry reciter," foreign language versions of early thirties Hollywood films are generally lackluster, so the viewer is inclined, with the café owner, to give a cynical chuckle. But the owner's sycophantic side-kick suggests that she hear her out, and so the stranger stands before them to start a recitation. Immediately, though she continues the recitation uninterrupted, the scene changes to the club in the evening, with a crowded audience, and the performer on a balcony. The scene change serves economically to tell us that the audition was successful. But the recitation itself is the real convincement. Like the owner, we're forced to swallow our chuckle in the face of an awesome, powerful, exciting performance. The poem is a paean to physical love, startlingly explicit, haunting, vigorously poetic, and with a use of onomatopoeia similar to Vachel Lindsay's "The Congo." One can hardly believe that a recitation could be so thrilling, so dynamic and visceral. Naturally, nothing in the film that follows matches this performance, but still, it hovers over the entire film, even though the story is a somewhat conventional south seas tale, with the stock characters of a powerful, menacing, ugly big wheel in a white suit and hat, and a handsome, innocent, weak (and temporarily blind) young man who falls for the poet. The pictorialization of the tropics and the seedy digs of the poet, the little public square, and the jungles of the plantation is well done and appropriate to the melodrama. The players, especially the villain and the sympathetic doctor, are all quite good, though none besides Singerman go beyond standard professional performances. Singerman performs recitations three more times in the film, one a word-picture essay of the sights and sounds of Buenos Aires, complete with the calls of street vendors. They're all good but don't match the power of the opening performance. As a whole, the film more than holds its own when compared to other tropical-isle films of the time. Jory probably made a good villain in Fox's English-language version, but for Singerman's performance alone, I'm sure this is a more memorable production!

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    • Connections
      Alternate-language version of La môme Mona (1934)

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    Details

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    • Release date
      • November 23, 1934 (United States)
    • Country of origin
      • United States
    • Language
      • Spanish
    • Also known as
      • Nothing More Than a Woman
    • Production company
      • Fox Film Corporation
    • See more company credits at IMDbPro

    Tech specs

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    • Runtime
      1 hour 21 minutes
    • Color
      • Black and White
    • Aspect ratio
      • 1.37 : 1

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    Berta Singerman and Juan Torena in Nada más que una mujer (1934)
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