Category
page 11969 Spanish-language films

Che!
Che! is a 1969 American biographical film directed by Richard Fleischer and starring Omar Sharif as Marxist revolutionary Ernesto "Che" Guevara. It follows Guevara from when he first landed in Cuba in 1956 to his death in Bolivia in 1967, although the film does not portray the formative pre-Cuban revolution sections of Guevara's life as described in the autobiographical book The Motorcycle Diaries (1993).

Blood of the Condor
1969 film by Jorge Sanjinés

Spain Again
1969 film by Jaime Camino

Tetepango
Tepepa, also known as Blood and Guns, is an Italian epic Zapata Western film starring Tomas Milian and Orson Welles. The film was directed by Giulio Petroni. It was co-produced with Spain, where the film was released with the title Tepepa... Viva La Revolución.

The Wanton of Spain
1969 film by César Fernández Ardavín

Honeycomb
1969 film by Carlos Saura

Invasión
Invasión is an Argentine science fiction mystery film released in 1969 and directed by Hugo Santiago and written by Santiago together with Jorge Luis Borges and Adolfo Bioy Casares. Widely regarded as an important cult film, its style is considered as intermediate between classic cinema and the French nouvelle vague.

Simón Bolívar
1969 film by Alessandro Blasetti

The Olympics in Mexico
1969 Olympics in Mexico directed by Alberto Isaac

Fuego
1969 film by Armando Bó

Coup de Grâce
1969 film by Ricardo Becher

Deliciosamente amoral
1969 film by Julio Porter

Don Segundo Sombra
1969 film

Something Bitter in the Mouth
1969 film by Eloy de la Iglesia

Jackal of Nahueltoro
1969 film by Miguel Littín

Brief Heaven
1969 film by David José Kohon

Urtain, King of the Mountains
1969 film by Manuel Summers

Eloy
1969 film by Humberto Ríos

Cautiva en la selva
1969 film directed by Leo Fleider

La Venganza del sexo
1969 film by Emilio Vieyra

El Libro de piedra
1969 film by Carlos Enrique Taboada

Desnuda en la arena
1969 film by Armando Bó

The Exquisite Cadaver
1969 film by Vicente Aranda

Esa mujer
1969 film directed by Mario Camus