El sátiro
| El sátiro | |
|---|---|
| Directed by | Raúl Zenteno | 
| Screenplay by | Raúl Zenteno | 
| Story by | Mauricio Serral Raúl Zenteno  | 
| Starring | Mauricio Garcés Patricia Rivera Alberto Rojas  | 
| Cinematography | Miguel Araña | 
| Edited by | Alfredo Rosas Priego | 
| Music by | Gustavo César Carrión | 
Production company  | |
| Distributed by | Televicine | 
Release date  | 
  | 
Running time  | 95 minutes | 
| Country | Mexico | 
| Language | Spanish | 
El sátiro (in English: "The Satyr") is a 1980 Mexican comedy film directed by Raúl Zenteno and starring Mauricio Garcés, Patricia Rivera, and Alberto Rojas.[1][2]
Plot
A Don Juan (Mauricio Garcés), a successful businessman in the lingerie business but fed up with having to resort to various costumes, wishes to rekindle his charm and maintain his reputation as a middle-aged womanizer with the help of a friend and apartment neighbor (Alberto Rojas). Things get complicated when he seems to find true love in the daughter of a friend (Patricia Rivera), a girl much younger than him.
Cast
- Mauricio Garcés
 - Mónica Prado
 - Gloria Mayo
 - Isaura Espinoza
 - Patricia Rivera
 - Alicia Encinas
 - Felicia Mercado
 - Jacaranda Morel
 - Tere Cornejo
 - Alberto Rojas (as Alberto Rojas "El Caballo")
 - Víctor Manuel Castro (as Víctor Manuel "Guero" Castro)
 - Carlos Riquelme
 - Roberto G. Rivera
 - Fernando Yapur
 - Pancho Müller (as Francisco Mueller)
 - Carlos Bravo y Fernández (as Carl-Hillos)
 
Analysis
Gustavo García and José Felipe Coria in Nuevo cine mexicano described the film as a "self-critical revision" and "bitter self-criticism" in reference to the roles of romantic leading man played by Mauricio Garcés throughout his career.[3] In Miradas disidentes: géneros y sexo en la historia del arte, Alberto Dallal noted that the fact that Garcés's character "ends up in love with a girl who is smarter, in matters of seduction, than him" was a theme similar to that of a previous Garcés film, Don Juan 67 (1966).[4] In Del quinto poder al séptimo arte: la producción fílmica de Televisa, Raúl Miranda López cited the film as one among a group of films that at the time "raised [...] the issue of amusing sexual impotence" (describing Garcés as a "stubborn flirter"), describing it as a "condition [that was] returning to do its thing in the macho Mexican cinema."[5]
References
- ^ Amador, María Luisa; Ayala Blanco, Jorge (2006). Cartelera cinematográfica, 1980–1989 (in Spanish). UNAM. p. 69. ISBN 970-32-3605-7.
 - ^ Díaz, Sergio (2008). Historia de la producción cinematográfica mexicana, 1979–1980 (in Spanish). Vol. 2. Universidad de Guadalajara. p. 255. ISBN 978-970-27-1400-2.
 - ^ García, Gustavo; Coria, José Felipe (1997). Nuevo cine mexicano (in Spanish). Editorial Clío. p. 17. ISBN 9789686932690.
 - ^ Dallal, Alberto (2007). Miradas disidentes: géneros y sexo en la historia del arte (in Spanish). Universidad Nacional Autónoma de México, Instituto de Investigaciones Estéticas. p. 232. ISBN 978-970-32-3195-9.
 - ^ Miranda López, Raúl (2006). Del quinto poder al séptimo arte: la producción fílmica de Televisa (in Spanish). CONACULTA/Cineteca Nacional. p. 10. ISBN 970-99-6104-7.