Skip to main content
Filmarian
All films
Poster for Yo he visto a la muerte
1967 · FILM

Yo he visto a la muerte

Released: November 19, 1967Runtime: 101 minLanguage: ES

Drama

Four real episodes told by their protagonists: Antonio Mejías ""Bienvenida"" tells the serious goring he suffered in the Plaza de Las Ventas and his recovery process. Álvaro Domecq Romero evokes the last days of the life of the mare ""Splendid"", the noble animal that was brave and sensitive companion of his father. Andrés Vázquez tells how the times of the ""capeas"" were in little villages. With him were many unknown kids, who found an anonymous and obscure death. Finally, Luis Miguel ""Dominguín"", who was with Manolete, in Linares, the afternoon in which he met his death, evokes that tragic afternoon and glosses the bullfighter's human virtues. The four protagonists have seen the death in one way or another and the four tell the indelible impression that remained on them.

Rating
Sign in to rate

Related titles

No curated related titles yet. Use the edit affordance to add "More from this director", "Same franchise", or "Adaptation source material" entries — every change goes through the wiki review queue.

Sign in to claim that you worked on Yo he visto a la muerte. Claims go to a moderation queue and appear in the Self-Claimed Contributors rail once approved.

Technical specs

No technical specs (aspect ratio, sound mix, cameras…) documented yet. Know it? Add it →

Awards

No awards or nominations listed yet. Know it? Add it →

Connections

No connections (sequels, references, remakes…) mapped yet. Know it? Add it →

Soundtrack

No soundtrack documented yet. Know it? Add it →

Filming locations

No filming locations documented yet. Know it? Add it →

Your take
Seen it? Let the room know.
Progress
Runtime 101 min
h:mm or minutes
0% watched101 min left — enter where you stopped

Sign in to track, collect & rate — keep your watchlist, collection, and lists across the network.

Community tags

Be the first to tag this page — tags appear right away. Try a theme, mood, or subject (e.g. WWII, heist, slow burn, time travel, A24).