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  1. Román Viñoly Barreto (8 August 1910 – 20 August 1970) was a Uruguayan-Argentine film director.

  2. Román Viñoly Barreto. Director: Horizontes de piedra. Born from immigrant parents, as a teenager he joined SODRE, the Music, Theater and Radio National Organization in Uruguay.

    • January 1, 1
    • Montevideo, Uruguay
    • January 1, 1
    • Buenos Aires, Argentina
  3. The Black Vampire (1953) Román Viñoly Barreto, Olga Zubarry, Roberto Escalada, Nathán Pinzón. October 10, 2018. This clever “feminist” reworking of Fritz Lang’s classic M focuses on the mothers of children stalked by a deranged pedophile.

  4. Román Viñoly Barreto (Montevideo, 8 de agosto de 1914 — Buenos Aires, 20 de agosto de 1970) fue un director de cine uruguayo radicado en Argentina.

  5. Román Viñoly Barreto. Director de cine uruguayo nacido en Montevideo, que alternó la comedia con el drama y los temas pasatistas con las más disparatadas tramas. Llegó a Buenos Aires a los 26 años luego de doctorarse en Filosofía y fundar un grupo de teatro en su país natal.

  6. Román Viñoly Barreto. Director: Horizontes de piedra. Born from immigrant parents, as a teenager he joined SODRE, the Music, Theater and Radio National Organization in Uruguay. Since his early twenties he was Principal Stage Director. Worked with legendary conductors like Erich Kleiber and Arturo Toscanini, and theater masters like Louis Jouvet.

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  8. May 10, 2023 · What makes Román Viñoly Barreto’s El vampiro negro (1953) particularly intriguing is its status as an unofficial remake of Fritz Lang’s M (1931), coming just two years after Joseph Losey’s 1951 American remake. While both Lang’s original and Losey’s version maintain a chilling perspective, observing the child murderer and the ...