
Patricia Aspíllaga
Acting
Biography
No biography available for Patricia Aspíllaga.
Born: May 18, 1946
Place of Birth: Cayaltí - Chiclayo, Perú
Known For

Jory
Jory is a fifteen-year-old boy who joins a horse-drive after his father is killed by a drunkard. The drive's leader and a likable cowhand take the boy under their wing, and find that tragedy has taught him how to take care of himself better than anyone could expect.

La ley del monte
After etching their love on a stalk, a boy and girl reunite years later, reigniting their romance amidst the Mexican Revolution.

The Boy and the Star
Wanted to fly to the sky ...And one day he got it When a child dares to steal the keys to the orphanage, guarded by a soldier, is exposed to too many dangers. This is the story of that child, freeing his birds, he demanded to life and men, their own freedom. '

Dinastía de la muerte
Crime-y land-owner declares war on the family at the ranch next door for not having joined with him in his illegal enterprises.

Emiliano Zapata
This is the story of a man, Emiliano Zapata, and of a revolution, the Mexican Revolution.

El derecho de los pobres
Kids in an Ecuadorian slum have a benevolent doctor who tries to help them forward in life. Also they play soccer.

The Children of Sanchez
Hall Bartlett directs the rural drama The Children of Sanchez, based on the tome The Children of Sanchez: Autobiography of a Mexican Family written by Oscar Lewis in the '60s. Anthony Quinn stars as the widowed Jesus Sanchez, a poor farmer struggling to provide for his family in Mexico City. Also starring Lupita Ferrer as Consuelo and Stathis Giallelis as Roberto. This is the last film in the 50-year career of international star Dolores del Rio, who plays the Grandma. Jazz-pop performer Chuck Mangione was nominated for a Golden Globe and won a Grammy award for his original musical score.

El viaje
After the death of his mother, a man agrees to travel to Europe as a tourist guide falls in love with the head of the agency.

El ausente
Young man returns to his childhood home-town, planning to git the people that killed his father.

Anyway, Juan is Your Name
Analytical view of one of the least reported conflicts of national cinema: the Cristero movement that developed in the regions of western Mexico between 1926 and 1929, highlighting the inability to be faithful to both the Church and the State.
Filmography
as Soledad Herrera
as Ana María Valdés
as Susana
as Claudia Guadalajara
as Carmelita Starr
as Magdalena
as Elena
as Bárbara
as Linda