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  1. Box office. $1.3 million [2] Romero is a 1989 biographical film depicting the story of Salvadoran archbishop Óscar Romero, who organized peaceful protests against the violent military regime, eventually at the cost of his own life. [3] The film stars Raúl Juliá as Oscar Romero, Richard Jordan as Romero's close friend and fellow martyred ...

    • $3.5 million
    • August 25, 1989
  2. America, land of the free, has an uncanny habit of picking the wrong side in Latin America. Romero was shot to death while celebrating mass. He was, at the time, not only the spiritual leader of El Salvador's Catholics but one of the most outspoken critics of the government - a government portrayed in this film as little more than a holding ...

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  4. Romero (1989) - Plot summary, synopsis, and more... The life and work of Archbishop Oscar Romero who opposed, at great personal risk, the tyrannical repression in El Salvador.

  5. www.imdb.com › title › tt0098219Romero (1989) - IMDb

    Aug 25, 1989 · Romero: Directed by John Duigan. With Raul Julia, Richard Jordan, Ana Alicia, Eddie Velez. The life and work of Archbishop Oscar Romero who opposed, at great personal risk, the tyrannical repression in El Salvador.

    • John Duigan
    • 2 min
  6. The plot centers on the last three years of Archbishop Romero’s life, where the assassination of the protagonist brings a dramatic end to a story steeped in pain, death and injustice. However, this is not only a film about tragedy and martyrdom, but also about courage, faith and transformation. Romero (1989) Trailer - John Duigan, Raul Julia.

  7. Composer Gabriel Yared, who went on to win BAFTA Awards and an Oscar for his other scores, composed the music for Romero. The movie was filmed in Mexico and set in El Salvador. Reception. Romero was generally well received by critics. The film holds a 80% rating on Rotten Tomatoes, based on 8 reviews.

  8. “A good compromise choice” is how one observer describes the 1977 appointment of Oscar Romero (Raul Julia) — a conservative, orthodox, apolitical bishop of a small rural diocese — to the archbishopric of San Salvador. By the time Archbishop Romero’s tempestuous three-year tenure comes to its violent end, “compromise” is a word no one will ever again think of in connection with him.

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