- published: 29 Apr 2012
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Juan Nepomuceno Carlos Pérez Rulfo Vizcaíno, best known as Juan Rulfo (Spanish: [ˈxwan ˈrulfo] audio ; 16 May 1917 – 7 January 1986), was a Mexican writer, screenwriter and photographer. He is best known for two literary works, El Llano en llamas (1953), a collection of short stories, and the 1955 novel Pedro Páramo. Fifteen of the seventeen short stories in El Llano en llamas have been translated into English and published as The Burning Plain and Other Stories. This collection includes the popular tale "¡Diles que no me maten!" ("Tell Them Not to Kill Me!").
The Juan Rulfo Foundation, which was established by Rulfo's family after his death, holds more than 6,000 negatives of his photographs.
Rulfo was born in 1917 in Apulco, Jalisco (although he was registered at Sayula, Jalisco), in the home of his paternal grandfather. Rulfo's birth year was often listed as 1918, because he had provided an inaccurate date to get into the military academy that his uncle, David Pérez Rulfo — a colonel working for the government — directed.
Juan is a given name, the Spanish language and Manx language version of John. It is very common in the Isle of Man and in Spain (its origin) and in Spanish-speaking communities around the world. The feminine form in Spanish is Juana, or Juanita on its diminutive.
Juan (Mandarin pronunciation: [tɕɥɛ̂n] or [tɕɥɛ́n]; 娟, 隽) "beautiful, graceful" is also commonly used as a given name for Chinese women. The Chinese character "卷", which is almost (being pronounced [tɕɥɛ̀n]) homophonic with the characters for the female name, is a division of a traditional Chinese manuscript or book and can be translated as "fascicle", "scroll", "chapter" or "volume".
Juan Carlos (/ˌhwɑːŋˈkɑːrloʊs/, Spanish: [xwaŋˈkaɾlos]; Juan Carlos Alfonso Víctor María de Borbón y Borbón-Dos Sicilias, born 5 January 1938) reigned as King of Spain from 1975 to 2014, when he abdicated in favour of his son, Felipe VI.
Generalísimo Francisco Franco, the Spanish dictator, took over the government of Spain from the short-lived Second Spanish Republic by leading a successful rebellion in 1939, and ruled as "Regent to the [exiled] King of Spain". In 1969, he chose Prince Juan Carlos, grandson of King Alfonso XIII, to be the next head of state, bypassing his father Juan de Borbón and expecting him to continue Franco's own authoritarian regime. Juan Carlos became King on 22 November 1975, two days after Franco's death, the first reigning monarch since 1931. His father did not abdicate in favor of his son until 1977. Soon after enthronement, however, Juan Carlos introduced reforms to dismantle the Francoist regime and begin the Spanish transition to democracy. This led to the approval of the Spanish Constitution of 1978 in a referendum, which established a constitutional monarchy. In 1981, Juan Carlos played a major role in preventing a coup that attempted to revert Spain to Francoist government in the King's name.
Juan Carlos Rulfo Aparicio (born January 24, 1964 in Mexico City) is a Mexican screenwriter and director and the son of author Juan Rulfo. He has written, produced, and photographed several films. He is married to Valentina Leduc Navarro, a Mexican director.
Rulfo's movie In The Pit won the Grand Jury Prize for an International Documentary at the Sundance Film Festival. He also won the Ariel Awards for Best Editing and Best First Work for his movie Del Olvido al No me Acuerdo, and was nominated for Best Direction and Best Screenplay Written Directly for the Screen. Rulfo has also won at the Goya Awards, the Guadalajara International Film Festival, the Havana Film Festival, the Karlovy Vary International Film Festival, the Montréal World Film Festival.
As director
entrevista de Juan Rulfo. 17 de Abril de 1977. Amigos, muchas gracias. La verdad no había tenido tiempo de revisar, y bueno, los vídeos habían sido bloqueados por reconocimiento de propiedad intelectual de terceros. Ya solucioné el problema y los vídeos están corriendo nuevamente. Lamento el percance. Gracias.
Suscríbete: http://goo.gl/grPuON Entrevista a JUAN RULFO en el programa de T. V. "Espejo de Escritores", y lectura en su propia voz de un capítulo de la novela PEDRO PÁRAMO. Este es un canal sobre arte, literatura y cultura. Tratamos de colocar videos difíciles de hallar o que no se encuentran en youtube. Apóyanos suscribiéndote o colocando un "Me gusta". Gracias. www.amazon.com/author/maximovega www.amazon.com/author/maximovega
Juan Rulfo lee su cuento "No oyes ladrar los perros" ("El llano en llamas", 1953). Fotografía tomada por el propio Rulfo.
El escritor mexicano Juan Rulfo leyendo su cuento "Luvina", que forma parte de su libro "El llano en llamas".
Entrevista a Juan Rulfo luego de la obtención del Premio Príncipe de Asturias de las Letras. Televisión española, 1983. http://www.librosjuanqueduerme.blogspot.com
"Es una lástima que no podamos ya nunca tener, en la voz de Rulfo, la lectura completa de Pedro Páramo. Es una fortuna que podamos imaginarla a partir de dos fragmentos. Los cuentos que Rulfo lee y queda registro, son cuatro de sus obras maestras; cuatro relatos que, una vez leídos o escuchados, no podremos olvidar: Luvina, Talpa, ¡Diles que no me maten! y No oyes ladrar los perros". Para escuchar o leer el resto de los relatos de 'El llano en llamas': http://www.IsmaelValencia.org/2012/08/el-llano-en-llamas.html
27/4/2011. La figura de Juan Rulfo ha sido analizada por expertos, literatos, docentes, investigadores, cientos de personas, pero nunca desde el punto de vista de su hijo. Eso es lo que ofrece su vástago, el cineasta Juan Carlos Rulfo, en este T+. Recuerdos de su progenitor, su voz, sus testimonios, sus costumbres... En definitiva, su esencia. Juan Carlos Rulfo participó en el T+ 'Ausencia y presencia: Rulfo, Hemingway, Valle-Inclán y Sábato'. En La Noche de los Libros, la Casa de América quiso conmemorar así la obra de Juan Rulfo, Ernest Hemingway y Ramón del Valle Inclán a los veinticinco, cincuenta y setenta y cinco años de su muerte, y al mismo tiempo, celebrar los cien años de vida de Ernesto Sábato. Para evocar a estos cuatro grandes maestros de las letras de Iberoamérica, tomaron l...
Adaptación del cuento homónimo de Juan Rulfo. Filmado originalmente en 16 mm. Centro de Capacitación Cinematográfica (CCC), 1978.
(Link crew hustlas in this muthafucka)
Everyday I spend in my life, I'm just trying to get my hustle right
I'm on the block chasing mail all day, raisin hell all day
Life's been crazy for me, since the day I could see
Momma died, couldn't cry till I turned 23
Harden my heart to this cold world, grew up a G
Hit up my homies with the same sign they threw up to me
As we got older, I had bigger plans I wanted to fly
18 years old, ready to ride, ready to die
Drinking liquor with the hardest niggas ever alive
Then I realized, only the smartest soldiers survive
I'm chasing heaven cause we living in hell
So we give'em hell around the clock until we living well
And then it might stop
But if not then I guess it's on till we drop off the planet
I lost another friend to jealousy and can't understand it
Found out, most soldiers fall in the heat of the panic
And get to killing they own in this ghetto titanic
I got to hand it to my father, though I took him for granted
He told me, life is what you make it and not how you planned it
What do the future hold when all we ever do is damage
Growing up mannish, I wonder how my son will manage
I pray I to go to heaven through all the drama will I recover
I got enemies that want me and won't rest till I suffer
What do I do?
[Chorus x2]
Everyday I spend in my life, I'm just trying to get my hustle right
I'm on the block chasing mail all day, raisin hell all day
Everyday and Every night, I find another way to make it right
I blaze the weed to the hell go away, Chasing heaven while I bell all day
When I was 17, times could not have been no better
My and my homie wrote raps, smoked, kicked it together
Wore eachother clothes, even stuck hoes together
Small time dreaming of signing doing shows for chedder
Two young niggas, I guess we didn't know no better
Thought we was invincible real niggas live forever
30 white boys jumped up and nobody ran
handle them Nigga as best as you can
And when you finish niggas bail
Before the rollers catch us again
It's out sight, under the street light fighting with friends
Remember tossing ho's, getting them for the last of they ends
And hit the movie with a blunt or two, drinking on gin
Just the California lifestyle, juvenile sin
Grew up and caught case, both sent to the pen
And even though we went our own ways, we'll meet in the end
I'm raising hell till I see you again
Until then I'm just
[Chorus x2]
My Whole life I guess I always wanted a lover like me
Ambitious, smart and driven from the gutter like me
A little sexy something, something independent and free
With a fuck'em attitude and only listen to me
But all I see is dirty rats, just begging for cheese
Trying to be the baby momma of a nigga with G's
Soon as you leave, the next nigga be fucking with ease
And if you shake that bitch, she'll be fucking the three's
Baby please, I need woman that can roll the weed
Not a gossipy ass hoochie telling all she sees
Sexy and fearless, if they coming not afraid to squeeze
And let'em have it if they need be
I need a soldier like my sistian
First one to bomb when we get it on
And when I'm buckwild, always know how to calm me down
But if I lose her and you happened to find her
Then player know, you got a hell raising rider for sho (A hell raising rider fa sho)