El Siete Machos is a 1951 Mexican western comedy film directed by Miguel M. Delgado, and starring Cantinflas, Alma Rosa Aguirre, and Miguel Ángel Ferriz.
There are 69 films with the same actors, 34 films with the same director, 40871 with the same cinematographic genres (including 592 with exactly the same 2 genres than El Siete Machos), to have finally 70 suggestions of similar films.
If you liked El Siete Machos, you will probably like those similar films :
Directed byMiguel M. Delgado GenresComedy ActorsCantinflas, Flor Silvestre, Roberto Corell Rating71% Cantinflas is a down on his luck but affable shoe shiner that learns that his compadre has died in an accident. His friend's widow, Leonor (Flor Silvestre) is unable to raise her child, Chavita, so she leaves the kid with Cantinflas so she can go to Guadalajara, Jalisco in order to seek help from her parents. In the first days, Cantinflas goes to work in Chapultepec and Chavita catches a ball that some other children are playing with, and almost ends up in a fight with the owners of the ball. Cantinflas calms down the child by promising he will bring him a new ball.
, 2h13 Directed byMiguel M. Delgado GenresDrama, Comedy ActorsCantinflas, Tito Junco, Jack Kelly, Carlos Riquelme, Alberto Galán, Victorio Blanco Rating71% Lopez (known affectionately as "Lopitos" to the Ambassador's secretary), a bureaucrat from the Latin American "Republica De Los Cocos" (a play on the term "banana republic") who is stationed in the embassy of the Communist bloc country "Pepeslavia" (a play on words of Joseph Stalin, the nickname for Joseph in Spanish (José) is "Pepe", and the inflection "-slavia" of Slavic peoples under the rule of the USSR).
, 1h40 Directed byMiguel M. Delgado GenresDrama, Comedy ActorsCantinflas, Ángel Garasa, Pedro Damián, Socorro Avelar Rating66% Mateo Melgarejo (played by Mario Moreno "Cantinflas") is a notary public and scribe for the illiterate people of Santo Domingo, a neighborhood north of Mexico City's Zócalo. A squatter friend asks for his help in negotiating with the land census bureau to regularize a land title. After a great deal of frustration with the government bureaucracy, he writes a letter to the cabinet minister, earning an audience with him. The minister hires Melgarejo to reform the bureau, and the appointee proceeds to lecture the officials on their duties in a democratic society. At the end, he gives up the post, returning to Santo Domingo to help its poor residents.