12 Cantinflas Movies Here
The film played.
The Church preemptively condemned the film. Bishops warned the faithful it would mock the clergy. The Legion of Decency gave it a "C" (Condemned) rating. 12 Cantinflas movies
Here’s the interesting story behind that film and its connection to the others. In the early 1960s, Cantinflas was already a god. His films— Ahí Está el Detalle (1940), El Gendarme Desconocido (1941), El Señor Fotógrafo (1953)—had made him the highest-paid comedian in Latin America. But the Catholic Church in Mexico was deeply suspicious of him. Why? Because in El Padrecito , he played a bumbling, accidentally wise priest named Sebastián who gets assigned to a wealthy parish as punishment. The film played
The Church lifted its condemnation the next week. El Padrecito became one of the top-grossing Mexican films of the decade. When asked later why he risked his career for that one film, Cantinflas revealed the truth: His own mother had wanted him to become a priest. After she died in 1953, he found a letter she’d written: "Mario, if you cannot be a priest, then be a clown who makes people understand God's mercy—because laughter is the only prayer that never fails." The Legion of Decency gave it a "C" (Condemned) rating





