Aníbal Troilo Trailers
Al corazón TrailerEsta es mi Argentina TrailerArgentinísima II Trailer
Aníbal Carmelo Troilo, alias Pichuco, was an Argentine bandoneonist and composer of tango, who also made some appearances in films.
Al corazón TrailerEsta es mi Argentina TrailerArgentinísima II Trailer
Aníbal Carmelo Troilo, alias Pichuco, was an Argentine bandoneonist and composer of tango, who also made some appearances in films.
Total trailers found: 15
09 October 1964
Various musical episodes make up this film-magazine in which Del Carril tried to merge his two great passions: cinema and tango.
19 May 1933
The members of a Buenos Aires family have three hobbies — "berretines" in Buenos Aires slang — that keep them apart of their duties.
30 January 1962
A man and a woman fall in love in the streets of a nocturnal Buenos Aires.
06 April 2014
A musical tour through the work of Aníbal "Pichuco" Troilo, one of the defining figures of tango and Argentinian music.
16 January 1948
Obsessed by a Mexican singer, an Argentine doctor arrives in Paris; Far from his land he begins to find his true identity transforming into a singer of tangos.
05 March 1988
After the end of the military dictatorship in Argentina in 1983, Floreal is released from prison. Instead of returning to his wife, he wanders through the night of Buenos Aires.
21 November 1968
A group of porteños attend the grand final between Manchester and Estudiantes.
03 January 1952
The plot reflects the figure of Pascual Contursi, tango poet. In love with a singer, he leaves his wife and son to go with her.
02 May 1974
A geographical-musical walk through Argentina. Beautiful landscapes and the popular festivals of each region.
01 January 1969
The life of the city of Buenos Aires and the history of its music from its origins, with musicians and dancers.
20 June 1973
Argentinísima II is a film filmed in Argentine colors directed by Fernando Ayala and Héctor Olivera according to their own script that premiered on June 21, 1973 and whose main actors were Ginamaría Hidalgo, Eduardo Falú, Jaime Dávalos and Raúl Barboza.