Chiquititas: rincón de luz

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
(Redirected from Chiquititas: Rincón de luz)

Chiquititas: rincón de luz
Directed byJosé Luis Massa
Written byAlex Ferrara
Walter Ferrara
Based onChiquititas
Produced byCris Morena
Carlos Mentasti
Juan Lovece
StarringRomina Yan
Facundo Arana
CinematographyRicardo Rodríguez
Music byCris Morena
Carlos Nilson
Distributed byLíder Films S.A.
Release date
  • 12 July 2001 (2001-07-12) (Argentina)
Running time
100 minutes
CountryArgentina
LanguageSpanish
Budget$3.250.000 million

Chiquititas: rincón de luz is a 2001 Argentine fantasy-adventure film directed by José Luis Massa and written by Alex Ferrara and Walter Ferrara. Based on the television series of same name which began on Argentine television in 1995. The film was released in Argentina on 12 July 2001, and is produced by Cris Morena, creator of Chiquititas original television series. Starring Romina Yan, Facundo Arana, Camila Bordonaba, Felipe Colombo, Benjamín Rojas, Luisana Lopilato, Nadia Di Cello, Milagros Flores, Agustín Sierra, Natalia Melcon, Sebastián Francini, Federico Barón and Brian Vainberg. The antagonists were Juan Leyrado and Alejandra Flechner.[1]

Plot[edit]

The story follows the life of some orphans who are forced to work on a farm ran by Colonel Francisco Estévez (Juan Leyrado) and Marga Calvo (Alejandra Flechner). One of the orphans, Belén Fraga (Romina Yan) comes across a book that Tok (Brian Vainberg) and the Old Wise Man recommended to her. Belén also meets Alejo Méndez Ayala (Facundo Arana) who lives with a boy named Felipe Mejía (Felipe Colombo). The colonel was interested in a cave that contained very valuable diamonds. By the end, it turns out that the diamonds belonged to Belén. It is a story full of magic and songs.

Cast[edit]

Protagonists[edit]

Main cast[edit]

Antagonists[edit]

  • Juan Leyrado as Coronel Francisco Estévez
  • Alejandra Flechner as Marga Calvo

Participations[edit]

  • Roberto Carnaghi as Mayor
  • Franklin Caicedo as Old Wise Man
  • Gilda Gentile as Gypsy
  • Lelio Lesser as Man in town
  • Alejandra Perlusky as Fish Saleswoman
  • Gustavo Pastorini as Conejero
  • Carlos Kaspar as Huevero

Production[edit]

The first plans of a Chiquititas film began four years before the start of this production. The project was supposed to be made for the Brazilian audience[2][3] but ideas later dropped out.

The movie was shot in 2000 in Villa La Angostura.

Music[edit]

Chiquititas: rincón de luz features, in addition to the television show's cast, the songs that became a hit with the Chiquititas Argentine young audience, such as "Pimpollo", "Había una vez", "Penitas", and the main title song that featured in Chiquititas show's third season, "Rinconcito de luz".

The actress Camila Bordonaba and the actor Felipe Colombo sang the song "Pimpollo" in Hebrew for the Israel play Katantanot based on the film Chiquititas: rincón de luz

Reception[edit]

The Chiquititas feature film was not screened for critics, as it was basically a result of the huge success among children from Argentina and other countries, like Israel. However, it received mixed to negative reviews. Reviewers stated that rincón de luz presented typical elements from famous American musical/fantasy films (which Cris Morena herself enjoys) such as The Sound of Music and The NeverEnding Story.[4] The film received a positive review from Argentine newspaper La Nación.[5]

The film was a huge success at the Israeli box office, and was adapted into a musical production in the country. Actors Sebastián Francini and Nadia Di Cello were featured in a presentation.[citation needed]

External links[edit]

References[edit]

  1. ^ "Breves I". 9 December 2000.
  2. ^ "El fenómeno de "Chiquititas" - LA NACION". La Nación. Archived from the original on 1 December 2017. Retrieved 9 October 2013.
  3. ^ "Este año, la TV redobla su apuesta - LA NACION". La Nación.
  4. ^ Una pelicula infantil cinenacional.com [dead link]
  5. ^ "Para fans de "Chiquititas"". La Nación. Archived from the original on 12 February 2018. Retrieved 9 October 2013.