Yahoo Search Busca da Web

Resultado da Busca

  1. Daniel Giménez Cacho (born May 15, 1961) is a Spanish -born Mexican actor and Ariel award winner, best known for portraying Tito the Coroner in Cronos (1993) and We Are What We Are (2010). Career [ edit] He starred in several Mexican films and television series, such as Sólo Con Tu Pareja, Cronos, Midaq Alley, Tear This Heart Out and Bad Education.

  2. Daniel Giménez Cacho García (Madrid, 15 de mayo de 1961) es un actor mexicano nacido en España. Ha sido galardonado siete veces con el Premio Ariel. Es uno de los actores más aclamados de México y América latina de la actualidad.

  3. Premios Ondas 2001. Daniel Giménez Cacho é un actor mexicano nado en Madrid, España o 15 de maio de 1961. Xa dende pícaro reside en México. Ten traballado para directores do talle de Pedro Almodóvar, Guillermo del Toro, Arturo Ripstein ou Alfonso Cuarón, entre outros.

  4. Daniel Giménez Cacho (* 15. Mai 1961 in Madrid, Spanien) ist ein mexikanischer Schauspieler . Er wuchs in Mexiko auf, wo er an der UNAM Theater studierte. Seit 1988 spielte er in verschiedenen Fernsehserien und Spielfilmen mit. Bekanntheit erreichte er 1992 durch eine Nebenrolle in Guillermo del Toros Cronos.

  5. Daniel Giménez Cacho est un acteur hispano-mexicain, né le 15 mai 1961 à Madrid. Il vit à Mexico depuis son enfance. Acteur pour de grands réalisateurs mexicains ( Alfonso Cuarón , Guillermo del Toro , Arturo Ripstein ) et étrangers ( Pedro Almodóvar , Lucrecia Martel , Apichatpong Weerasethakul ), il a reçu cinq Ariel , les ...

  6. Daniel Giménez-Cacho was born on May 15, 1961, in Madrid, Spain. He is a Mexican actor and director, Ariel award winner, who has starred in several Mexican films such as 'Solo con tu pareja' (1991), 'Cronos' (1993), 'Midaq Alley' (1995) and 'Arráncame la Vida' (2008), among others.

  7. The film stars Daniel Giménez Cacho alongside Griselda Siciliani, and follows a journalist/documentarian who returns to his native country of Mexico and begins having an existential crisis in the form of dreamlike visions. The title refers to the Buddhist concept of the bardo, a liminal state between death and rebirth. [3] .