Manuel Barbachano Ponce (4 April 1925 – 29 October 1994) was a Mexican film producer, director, and screenwriter associated with the development of independent and culturally oriented production in Mexico.
He produced key mid-century titles including Raíces—entered into the 1955 Cannes Film Festival—and the documentary Torero!, which received a special citation at the Venice Film Festival.
He also produced internationally recognized features such as Nazarín (directed by Luis Buñuel) and later films including María de mi corazón, Doña Herlinda y su hijo, Frida, naturaleza viva, and Tequila.
As a director, he made popular comedy features such as Chistelandia and its sequels, and he participated in the 1965 anthology Amor, amor, amor, a project linked to the First Experimental Film Contest and shaped by adaptations of contemporary Mexican literature.
Production
33
Male
1925-04-04
Mérida - Yucatán - Mexico
Miguel Barbachano Ponce
Complot Petróleo: La cabeza de la hidra
A Mexican Buñuel
Tequila
The Beloved Ones
Frida Still Life
Forbidden Homework
Clandestine Destiny
Love Love Love
Chistelandia
Doña Herlinda and Her Son
Torero!
Nueva Chistelandia
Vuelve Chistelandia
Confidencias
Nazarín
Pedro Paramo
Roots
The Golden Cockerel
Sonatas
The Widow
Lola of My Life
The Shunammite
The Two Elenas
The Man from the Island
Land of Hope
Mexican Bullfighters
Public Art
Mexican Muralism
Portrait of a Painter
Heart of the City