Search a film or person :
FacebookConnectionRegistration
Tú, solo tú is a film of genre Comedy directed by Miguel M. Delgado with Rosita Quintana

Tú, solo tú (1950)

Tú, solo tú
If you like this film, let us know!
  • Infos
  • Casting
  • Technical infos
  • Photos
  • Videos
  • Film quotes
  • Characters
  • Music
  • Awards
Directed by
Genres Comedy,    Musical
Rating65% 3.2743353.2743353.2743353.2743353.274335

Tú, solo tú ("You, Only You") is a 1950 Mexican film. It was written by Luis Alcoriza.

Actors

Trailer of Tú, solo tú

Bluray, DVD

Streaming / VOD

Source : Wikidata

Comments


Leave comment :

Suggestions of similar film to Tú, solo tú

There are 53 films with the same actors, 34 films with the same director, 40594 with the same cinematographic genres (including 2843 with exactly the same 2 genres than Tú, solo tú), to have finally 70 suggestions of similar films.

If you liked Tú, solo tú, you will probably like those similar films :
The Illiterate One, 2h8
Directed by Miguel M. Delgado
Genres Comedy
Actors Cantinflas, Lilia Prado, Sara García, Ángel Garasa, Carlos Agostí
Rating71% 3.573193.573193.573193.573193.57319
Inocencio Prieto y Calvo receives a letter telling him that he is the heir to his uncle's fortune of two million pesos, which he has only to claim by producing his baptismal certificate as proof of identity. However, as an illiterate, Inocencio has no idea of the contents of the letter. While waiting for the local druggist to wait on him so he can have the letter read to him, Inocencio is embarrassed to see that a customer's young daughter is already able to read while he, a grown man, cannot. He leaves without telling the druggist his problem, resolved to go to school and to wait to learn the letter's contents until he can read them for himself, so that never again will he have to share private matters with others because of his own ignorance. After registering at school, he stops by the local bank to ask for a job, having quit his previous employment that morning. Leaving the bank, he meets Blanca, an attractive young woman newly arrived in town, and shows her the way to her new place of employment, partly to avoid admitting he cannot read the written address. The daughter of Blanca's employer is entertaining her fiancé, Aníbal, who finds Blanca appealing and begins to make advances on her almost immediately. These advances are spurned each time; the final time, Aníbal warns her she will regret her refusals.
The Little Priest, 2h4
Directed by Miguel M. Delgado
Genres Comedy
Actors Cantinflas, Ángel Garasa, Rosa María Vázquez, Angelines Fernández, José Elías Moreno, Rogelio Guerra
Rating72% 3.642443.642443.642443.642443.64244
The young priest Father Sebastián (played by Cantinflas) is assigned to a parish in San Jerónimo el Alto, where he is not welcomed by the community, particularly the resident priest Father Damián (played by Ángel Garasa). The newcomer gradually earns the trust of the people through humor, but firmly captures their hearts by saving the town fiesta by fighting a bull when the hired torero failed to show.
Your Excellency, 2h13
Directed by Miguel M. Delgado
Genres Drama, Comedy
Actors Cantinflas, Tito Junco, Jack Kelly, Carlos Riquelme, Alberto Galán, Victorio Blanco
Rating71% 3.5588653.5588653.5588653.5588653.558865
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).
El ministro y yo, 1h40
Directed by Miguel M. Delgado
Genres Drama, Comedy
Actors Cantinflas, Ángel Garasa, Pedro Damián, Socorro Avelar
Rating66% 3.337373.337373.337373.337373.33737
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.