La venida del Rey Olmos

La venida del Rey Olmos (The Coming of King Elms) is a 1975 Mexican film written by Eduardo Luján and directed by Julián Pastor.

After returning from the small Mexican town of Dublán, Chihuahua, a 20th-century Son of the Father creates a new Church in the outskirts of Mexico City.

Their son dies of dysentery shortly after his departure and Chabela is forced to work as a prostitute in La Sirena, a brothel.

Reynaldo and Chabela had lived in a poor district of San Cayetano on the outskirts of Mexico City, where the streets are unpaved and making simple bricks (ladrilleras) is the main economic activity.

A man, Venustiano Negrón, is shown reading El Nacional; an eight-column headline mentions Ruiz Cortines.

"[2] A sign in a temple in Colonia San Cayetano, on the outskirts of Mexico City, says: "Todos somos iguales, hasta los negros" ("We all are equal, even the blacks").

Reynaldo takes a train to Mexico City to start a new congregation of the sect and says an emotional goodbye to Donald, with whom he has a father-son relationship.