La antorcha encendida (TV Series 1996) Poster

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10/10
two actors' names have been reversed:
WylieJJordan22 December 2022
The history of the independence movement in México is told with reasonable accuracy, and presented as the background to a romance between fictional characters Mariano Foncerrada and Teresa de Muñiz, played by the lovey Leticia Calderón.

Ofelia Guilmaín does a star turn as Doña Macaria, mother-in-law of the villaneous Don Pedro de Soto, played by her son, Juan Ferrara.

Mariano Foncerrada is played by Humberto Zurita, and appears in 138 episodes but is listed as appearing in only one.

Mariano Jiménez is played by Ramón Abascal and I believe appears only once, but is shown as appearing in 138 episodes.
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Epic telenovela that chronicles Mexico's War of Independence
rrincon106 March 2002
Superb epic that recreates the turbulent events that led to Mexico's independence in 1821. While this is not the first telenovela to chronicle these events, the saga benefits from the presence of an excellent cast that includes Patricia Reyes Spindola, Aaron Hernan, Lorenzo de Rodas, Sergio Jimenez, Juan Pelaez, Enrique Rocha, and Maria Rojo.

The plot involving the Foncerrada family and the villainous Pedro de Soto is somewhat cliched, but this doesn't hamper the story. Juan Pelaez delivers an outstanding performance as independence leader Miguel Hidalgo y Costilla, while Sergio Reynoso (who, prior to this, was largely known for starring in ultra violent action movies with his older brother, Jorge) portrays guerrilla commander Jose Maria Morelos y Pavon as a standard "movie tough guy." Enrique Rocha is perfectly cast as Spaniard viceroy Felix Maria Calleja, the primary enemy of Hidalgo and Morelos. Rene Casados gives a slightly melodramatic performance as Royalist Mexican officer Agustin Iturbide (he would later go over the top in his roles in "Tres Mujeres" and "Abrazame Muy Fuerte"), but he manages to restrain himself before going overboard. Roberto Ballestros and Humberto Elizondo, known for playing villains in telenovelas, are given the rare opportunity to play heroes for once: Elizondo plays Morelos' right hand, Hermenegildo Galeana, while Ballestros plays Vicente Guerrero, the last Morelos lieutenant that would help lead Mexico to independence in 1821. The only miscast is Ernesto La Guardia as Hidalgo's chief lieutenant, Ignacio Allende. Although La Guardia does his best to play the second-in-command, he seems to have some difficulty with the role.

The series succeeds in conveying the tragic irony of the war: rather than being a war between Mexican rebels and Spanish overlords, the struggle was a conflict between Mexican insurgents and Mexican troops that were fighting on the side of the Spanish crown. One interesting note is that the last episodes briefly include Francisco Javier Mina, the Spanish lawyer turned guerrilla fighter who was the only Spaniard to have fought for Mexico's independence.
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Soap Opera goes "historical"
rsnunez6 March 2001
As with El Vuelo del Aguila (The Flight of the Eagle) and some others soap-operas not indexed (v.gr., El Carruaje, The Chariot)La Antorcha Encendida was a fair attempt to reconcile soap-opera and historical documentary.

The production is good, and the script is able to mix and match key developments of Mexican history, with the standard soap-opera romantic plot, which was helpful to boost the ratings and capture the audience's imagination while offering a good account of Mexican History.
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