Perdida (1950) Poster

(1950)

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7/10
Fallen Woman!
andrabem17 August 2007
The story of Perdida is interesting enough. In more skilled hands it could have become a classic Mexican melodrama, but the film sometimes plods along and the story loses some of its effectiveness. In films like "Victimas del Pecado" and "Aventurera" (both featuring Niñon Sevilla), the musical numbers mix effortlessly with the plot. Fernando Rivero, the director, is sometimes heavy-handed - some scenes drag a bit too much, but all in all, it is still fun to see the film - Niñon Sevilla and the musical numbers take charge of that.

The story is traditional enough. It talks about a naive country girl who is raped by her stepfather, runs away and goes to the big city, looking for a job. Needless to say, she ends up in a brothel and all kinds of misfortunes befall the poor girl. I think that I'm not spoiling anything because this is a traditional story line that many Mexican films followed at the time.

There is one scene in particular that I like a lot: Niñon Sevilla is sitting sadly on an armchair in the brothel where she had been trapped, and the trio "Los Panchos" descends slowly the staircase with their guitars singing "Perdida" (perdida could be translated in English as "fallen woman". They stop in front of her, always singing, and whenever they sing the refrain Perdida (Fallen Woman) the camera shows Niñon Sevilla's face bathed in tears. It's unbelievable! But you have to think that scenes like that made many people cry in the movie theater at the time.

In one of her musical performances, Niñon Sevilla (dressed as Carmen Miranda), with the Anjos do Inferno as backing group, sings "Nego" in Portuguese - her Spanish accent is very sexy!

Unfortunately Fernando Rivero hasn't got the handicraft ability of Alberto Gout, or the melodramatic poetry of Emilio Fernandez. Even so Perdida is worth to see for the fans of Niñon Sevilla and the Mexican melodrama.
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8/10
Another Must-See for Sevilla Fans
JohnHowardReid3 August 2009
Warning: Spoilers
Immediately before her triumph in "Aventurera", Ninon Sevilla had starred in "Perdida" (1949) which has some of the same story elements that were brought to a more powerful fruition in "Aventurera". The title could be aptly translated as "Fallen Woman", but it also appropriately means "Madly in Love". To translate the brief synopsis on the Laguna DVD: The dancer, Rosario (Ninon Sevilla), and the bullfighter, Antonio Velasquez (played by himself), have a get-together in which she recalls her life. Violated by her stepfather, she flees from home and finds refuge in a brothel. After a lot of suffering, she becomes a famous dancer and finds true love with the bullfighter. Unfortunately, he is already married.

What the synopsis fails to mention is that the main burden of the male storyline is actually carried by Agustin Lara, of all people! Lara has a dramatic role, which he handles well. The climax of the movie in which he vainly searches for the rejected Ninon in a seedy, smoke-filled bar is absolutely unforgettable. Elsewhere, director Fernando A. Rivero seems a trifle heavy-handed, even slapdash; but the photography (Alex Phillips) and film editing (Alfredo Rosas Priego) are always top-drawer.

As usual, Ninon worked out her own choreography and dances up a storm. And not content with one Carmen Miranda impersonation, she does two! Other songs (there are ten all told) are performed by Lara (of course), Pedro Vargas (stiff as ever), the Mariachi Vargas de Tecalitlan and the guitar-strumming Trio Los Panchos who handle the title ditty.
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worth seeing for Ninón Sevilla
cyn_duncan1 November 2003
I'm a big fan of Ninón Sevilla, the Cuban cabaret artist who showed up in a lot of Mexican films during this era. This is a typical "cabaretera" film, where the girl who dances in the cabaret tries to go straight, she falls in love with a decent man and wants to have a family, but things never work out right. A subplot featuring Agustin Lara provides a lot of good songs written by Lara and performed by great singers like Pedro Vargas and el Trio Los Panchos. Sevilla's dance numbers are energetic and full of life. She does a great mambo, and her costumes are wonderful. There are no surprises in this film. It follows the plot line of many other cabaretera films, but it's still worth watching for the musical numbers.
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