| La Vendedora de fantasías | |
|---|---|
![]() Film poster for La Vendedora de fantasías  | |
| Directed by | Daniel Tinayre, Orlando Zumpano | 
| Written by | Alejandro Verbitsky and Emilio Villalba Welsh | 
| Produced by | Edgardo Togni | 
| Starring | Mirtha Legrand and Alberto Closas | 
| Cinematography | Alberto Etchebehere | 
| Edited by | Jorge Gárate | 
| Music by | Víctor Slister | 
Production company  | |
Release date  | 
  | 
Running time  | 97 minutes | 
| Country | Argentina | 
| Language | Spanish | 
La Vendedora de fantasías (The Fantasy Saleswoman) is a 1950 Argentine crime comedy film directed by Daniel Tinayre. It stars Mirtha Legrand and Alberto Closas.
Plot
Marta (Legrand), a department store clerk, aids her police detective fiancé (Closas) in hunting down a gang of jewel thieves. She awakens to later realise that it was all a dream.[1]
Cast
- Mirtha Legrand as Martha
 - Alberto Closas as Roberto / Aníbal Ferro, "Pulguita"
 - Alberto Bello as Jaime
 - Homero Cárpena as Lavanca / policeman
 - Nathán Pinzón as El Cabezón
 - Beba Bidart as Olga Bernard
 - Francisco Charmiello as Pancho
 - Diana de Córdoba as Woman in hotel
 - Pilar Gómez as Catalina / mother of Alberto
 - Haydée Larroca as Cholita
 - Miguel Ligero as Garófalo
 - Alberto Quiles as Mucamo
 - Ramón J. Garay as concierge
 - Alberto Barcel as chief of police
 - Luis García Bosch as Borracho
 - Manuel Alcón as jewelry buyer
 - Carlos Belluci as Sereno
 - Fernando Campos
 - Carmen Llambí as telephonist
 - Jesús Pampín as director of orchestra
 
Reception
The critic King thought it was "good cinema and another opportunity to laugh" and Noticias Gráficas considered it a "funny, agile and very well filmed police farce". Film writers Raúl Manrupe and María Alejandra Portela write: "Successful at the time, today it can be seen as an exercise of formal and conceptual arbitrariness. Valued in part by the critics, it retains some effective moments."[2]
References
- ↑ Thompson, Currie Kerr (28 May 2014). Picturing Argentina : myths, movies, and the Peronist vision. Amherst, New York: Cambria Press. p. 5. ISBN 9781604978797.
 - ↑ Manrupe, Raúl; Portela, María Alejandra (2001). Un diccionario de films argentinos (1930-1995) (in Spanish). Buenos Aires: Ediciones Corregidor. p. 605. ISBN 950-05-0896-6.
 
External links
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