Posts Tagged ‘Mexico’


Maya

September 16th, 2011 | article by | 2 Comments »
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Year: 1989   Runtime: 96′  Director: Marcello Avallone
Writers: Marcello Avallone, Andrea Purgatori, Maurizio Tedesco  Cinematography: Silvano Ippoliti
Music: Gabriele Ducros   Cast: Peter Phelps, Mariellia Valentini, Erich Wildpret, Cyrus Elias,
Mariangélica Ayala, William Berger

A small town in rural Mexico is predominantly inhabited by descendants of a Mayan tribe who are still holding to some old traditions. Once a year, the townsfolk celebrate a ritual, symbolic sacrifice of a child on top of the local pyramid to keep the ghost of the evil Xibalba (or Xibalbai – the voice actors are of more than one opinion), whom the townsfolk’s ancestors murdered, at bay. Of course there’s a prophecy that the dead guy will some day return to cut out every tribe member’s heart.

Some time before the newest celebration is supposed to take place, US expat Salomon Slivak (a very sweaty William Berger) stumbles onto the top of the pyramid after meeting a strange, big-haired girl child, mumbling an off-screen monologue about crossing some sort of “border to the other side”. Slivak sure seems to have crossed over to somewhere, for something or someone kills him up there by cutting out his heart.

A few days after the old man’s death, his daughter Lisa (Mariella Valentini) arrives in town. The more Lisa hears about the circumstances of her father’s death, the more disquieted she becomes, until she kinda-sorta begins to try and find his killer herself. This being the sort of film that it is, Lisa isn’t actually doing much more than walking around, asking weird questions that are answered in even weirder ways, and doesn’t appear for large parts of the plot (such as it is). She also kinda-sorta falls for another local US expat, restaurant owner, gambler, bum and all-around jerk Peter (Peter Phelps), whose best trait probably is his hatred of wearing shirts.

While Lisa and Peter aren’t doing much, further killings hit the town. An invisible force murders people in various, creative ways, but never misses out on cutting out the hearts of its victims afterwards.

The whole affair culminates (as far as a film told in a way as roundabout as this one can be said to culminate) on the night of the big ceremony. Will our protagonists actually do some protagging for a change?

Marcello Avallone’s Maya is a pretty weird film that will grow on a certain, very specific and very small sub-set of fans of Italian horror like green fungus on bread, while the rest of the world will look at it – if it’ll realize its existence at all – with a mixture of boredom and exasperation. Fortunately, it’s quite easy to find out to which of the two groups you, dear reader, will belong. Just try and imagine a film indebted to the style and rhythm of Lucio Fulci’s The Beyond, transplanted into Venezuela standing in for Mexico, tarted up with some barely understandable and badly explained bit of fictitious mythology, with less gore and more interrupted rape scenes (three, by my count), and made by a director who isn’t quite as talented (or mad) as Fulci at his best, but is really trying to be. If that thought makes you happy, or at least a wee bit interested, than there’s a good chance that you’re either me or belonging to the group of Italian horror fans in need to watch out for fungus attacks. Otherwise, you better stay away from Maya, because it’ll only bore you.

  
  
  

For us, the un-bored and un-boreable, Maya is a bit of a treat, especially since there aren’t all that many films actually inspired by more than just the gore of Fulci’s best films. As I said, Avallone’s movie is much more restrained in the gore department than Fulci’s movies generally were, but the murder scenes share the near-arrogant apathy towards the laws of physics and logic with the maestro’s work. The murders are very much at the heart of the movie, too, establishing the proper mood of the unreal, of the breaking-in of the illogical into the world as we know it, at a place where the borders between the quotidian world and the beyond have grown thin and weary.

The parts of the film’s running time that aren’t spent on the murders show the town (most of the time, it actually looks like a village, but some scenes seem to establish it as slightly larger with a slightly less rural feel – you could certainly put it down to sloppy direction, or you could see this imprecision as just another way Avallone uses to rattle the audience’s securities) as a place whose inhabitants are generally closer to acts of madness, violence and irrationality than is typical. Interestingly enough, Avallone uses two (horribly acted) wandering rapist Texan punks on vacation to make it difficult to read the townsfolk’s irrational tendencies as an expression of his film’s racism (though it’s clearly not a filmwithout any problematic ideas about race) but rather as a consequence of the place’s closeness to the other side, as if a door had been standing open just a tiny bit for centuries, letting something unhealthy and destructive cross over that infects (perhaps calls to) anyone coming into contact with it, in small and large ways.

Maya’s plot – as far as you can actually speak of a plot, which you probably can’t – has the stop-and-start quality of the Fulci films it is so obviously inspired by, the same sense of rambling and meandering that is hypnotic to some, and just boring to others, but that seems to be just the logical way to plot a film that is in part about the absence of the sort of order “tight” or just technically competent plotting would suggest.

The movie’s characters, all – as is tradition in Italian genre cinema – either chew scenery as if they’d never eaten anything better or seem passive and listless as if the only emotional reactions they have ever been able to show is sweating. And there’s a lot of sweating done by the whole cast, adding to the air of heaviness and oppression. Maya‘s script includes some minor attempts at giving its characters something akin to development, but most of it is buried under the murder scenes and the sweating, and obstructed by the film’s slow, slow rhythm.

I’ll certainly always prefer Fulci’s big three of gory, dream-like horror to Maya, for Fulci’s just a better, more daring director than Avallone.Maya, however, is still a minor pearl that puts such a heavy, honest emphasis on a mood of weirdness and slight alienation that it would be quit impossible for me not to love it.

The Horror!? is a weekly cult cinema column by Denis Klotz, an aficionado of the obscure and operator of the film blog of the same name.


Asesinos De Otros Mundos

August 5th, 2011 | article by | 2 Comments »
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Year: 1971    Runtime: 87′  Director: Rubén Galindo
Writers: Rubén Galindo, Ramón Obón  Cinematography: Raúl Martínez Solares   Music: Chucho Zarzosa
Cast: El Santo, Juan Gallardo, Sasha Montenegro, Carlos Agosti, Marco Antonio Campos, Carlos Suárez

A horrible monstrosity that looks a lot like a bunch of people crawling around under a tarp kills important leaders of Mexico’s industry. It’s so very very sad. The tarpster serves a certain Malkosh (Carlos Agosti) who uses his awesome ability to appear on a television in police chief O’Connor’s (Marco Antonio Campos) meeting room to try and blackmail Mexico into paying him a lot of money, or else, more “important” people will die.

Fortunately, the police has a not-so-secret weapon: El Santo (El Santo!), the idol of the masses, greatest man on Earth, Blue Demon’s secret nemesis (etc.) is on the case before you can even cry out in excitement. One might doubt the great man’s technique – getting himself overrun by Malkosh’s car after he has already gotten rid of the bad guy’s henchmen, and then caught – but his results are great.

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357 Magnum

April 22nd, 2011 | article by | No Comments »
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Year: 1979    Runtime: 88′   Director: Rubén Galindo
Writers: Rubén Galindo, Carlos Valdemar  Cinematography: Miguel Araña
Music: Manuel Esperón, Pedro Galindo   Cast: Mario Almada, Fernando Almada,
Ursula Prats, Roger Cudney, Carlos León, Jeanette Mass

(Don’t be like an IMDB reviewer and confuse this with any of the other movies of this or a slightly different name!)

The members of the improbably named “Brigade 357 Magnum” of the police are disturbing the work of a syndicate of weapons and drugs dealers only known as The Organization with a half successful raid on an arms deal with a Communist revolutionary group from a Central American country (whose boss, as we’ll later see, goes for classic Castro chic). The Organization is not pleased at all, so the whole gang – boss, favourite moll and all – stuff themselves into two cars and shoot Tony Murillo, the leading cop of the operation, his wife and his little daughter.

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La Dinastia Dracula

January 20th, 2011 | article by | No Comments »
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Year: 1980    Runtime: 91′   Director: Alfredo B. Crevenna
Writer: Jorge Patino    Cinematography: Javier Cruz   Cast: Fabian Aranza, Silvia Manriquez, Ruben Rojo, Magda Guzman

In Ye Olden Times of cheap school play conquistador costumes, the inquisition gets rid of the rather nasty noble vampire Duke Orloff who likes to transform into a dog and disregards the cultural and churchly rules about keeping one’s shirt buttoned in public. But woe! The men of the church completely ignore the vampire’s female partner and witch lover, despite her wearing a shirt with a flame imprint that can only come from the future.

Three hundred years later, in Ye Not Quite As Olden Times of school play late 19th century costumes, witch woman goes under the name of Madame Kostoff. She seems to have been absent from Mexico for the last few hundred years, but now returns to her former home with a coffin in her luggage and a revivification plan in her mind. She’ll just need to buy the mansion that stands close to the place where her vampire lover was buried, and everything will be set. It’s just a wee bit unfortunate that the Solórzano family living in the mansion now doesn’t want to sell.

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Prophecies of Nostradamus: Catastrophe 1999 (1974)

August 23rd, 2010 | article by | 1 Comment »
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Toho’s epic 1974 disaster-a-minute masterpiece needs no introduction to anyone familiar with this site, where our review of it remains one of our top-read month after month.  Directed by Toshio Masuda (Tokyo Blackout) and starring Tetsuro Tanba (Bohachi Boshido: Code of the Forgotten Eight), Toshio Kurosawa (Evil of Dracula), Kaoru Yumi (ESPY) and Yoko Tsukasa (Yojimbo), the film was pushed into production after the box office superstardom of 1973′s Submersion of Japan and took top honors in its release year of 1974.  Prophecies of Nostradamus: Catastrophe 1999 (original title, Nosutoradamusu no Daiyogen) remains a picture well ahead of its time in terms of concept, predating the nonsense mega-disaster hits of Roland Emmerich by several decades.

Though sold to me as a lobby card, this Mexican poster measures in at a considerably larger 16.5 x 21 inches.  Prophecies of Nostradamus: Catastrophe 1999 is another Toho effort produced with international distribution in mind, and included a lengthy English language sequence set in New Guinea, in which an investigative team goes out to hunt for one earlier lost only to discover that they have been reduced to a state of putrid living-death by a lingering radioactive fog.  This sequence would cause Toho considerable trouble shortly after release, when the shocking nature of both it and a late-film look into a post-apocalyptic future enraged advocates for survivors of Hiroshima and Nagasaki.  The offending footage was subsequently cut from Japanese release prints, with Toho banning the picture from screenings entirely after its initial theatrical run.

Nevertheless, the film made a pretty penny in international markets and left an indelible impression on my young mind when it finally made its way to domestic television in the early ’80s in its truncated The Last Days of Planet Earth form.  This poster showcases one of the film’s most memorable moments, featuring two stills from the controversial New Guinea sequence.  The rest of the artwork, including a ship on a frozen sea, a Concorde SST, a desolate war-ravaged Earth and a chillingly reflected cityscape, are culled from the original Japanese one-sheet design.  The title translates to The End of the World: The Prophecies of Nostradamus Fulfilled! (El Fin del Mundo: ¡Las Profecias de Nostradamus se Cumplen!).



Mision Suicida

July 9th, 2010 | article by | 2 Comments »
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company: Puerto Mexico Films
year: 1973
runtime: 78′
director: Federico Curiel
cast: El Santo, Lorena Velazquez,
Elsa Cardenas, Dagoberto Rodriguez,
Roxana Bellini
writer: Fernando Oses
cinematography: Augustin Jimenez
music: Guustavo C. Carrion
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Mexico City, during the Cold War. A Soviet spy ring – as we later learn under the leadership of Nazis with fitting names like Otto and Elke – kidnaps the Nazi war criminal and expert in brainwashing techniques Doctor Müller (Juan Gallardo). They need him to prepare the unsuspecting women populating their secret spy training camp in Santo Domingo for their real work. These women, you see, think they are just training (for who knows what?) at a very special gym that just happens to have a lot of swastikas in some of its rooms. In truth, they are meant to be the Soviet Union’s new elite spies who are supposed to start an awesome series of sabotage missions in the USA in the near future. They just need to be convinced, and that’s where Müller will fit in.

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Aventura al Centro de la Tierra

October 23rd, 2009 | article by | 3 Comments »
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a.k.a. Adventure at the Center of the Earth
Year: 1965   Company: Producciones Sotomayor   Country: Mexico   Runtime: 78′
Director: Alfredo B. Crevenna   Writer: Jose Maria Fernandez Unsain   Cinematography: Raul Martinez Solares
Music: Raul Lavista   Cast: Kitty de Hoyos, Javier Solis, Columbia Dominguez, Jose Elia Moreno, Carlos Cortes
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A woman survives an accident during a tour of some caverns and recounts a terrifying story – that something inhuman killed her husband.  Convinced that prehistoric animals must still exist beneath the surface of the Earth and believing the woman’s story to be evidence of just that, professor Diaz contracts a disparate band of adventurers to trek into the uncharted depths of the cavern system in which the man was killed . . .

Well this is certainly an odd one, though one should expect as much from production house Producciones Sotomayor – responsible for the delightfully bizarre musical comedy horror mash-up La Nave de los Monstruos five years earlier.  As with that effort, an homage to the 50′s monster boom that had occurred in America a few years previously that referenced everything from Invasion of the Saucer Men to The 7th Voyage of Sinbad, Aventra al Centro de la Tierra has inspirations from all over.

The most notable of these inspirations is Jules Verne’s classic fantasy novel Voyage au centre de la Terre from 1864, from which Aventura takes its title.  The barest of the basics of the plot are retained, with a scientist leading an expedition into the depths of the Earth and finding prehistoric animals there, but not without considerable tinkering.  Several points also seem to be taken from the 20th Century Fox film version of the story, Journey to the Center of the Earth, from 1959 – notably the discovery of the ruins of a sunken ancient civilization (which remain unexplored here out of budgetary necessity).

While its title indicates adventure, Aventra al Centro de la Tierra is more a straight monster-driven science fiction / horror film than anything else with nods to classic Universal efforts and more recent Roger Corman pictures to be found throughout.  Characterizations are typical for the genre – manly men, shrieking women, and a daft elderly professor to hold them all together.  The cast is kept busy through a number of diversions, like death-defying climbs along precipitous cave walls and even a poorly-devised love triangle, but it’s obvious that most of the large exploration party is here as monster fodder.

And there are monsters a-plenty to be seen.  On the low end are a few incidental creatures – some horribly unconvincing giant bats as well as some endearingly laughable floppy dinosaur puppets here seen alongside stock footage from One Million B.C. and Unknown Island.  That staple of the genre, the googly-eyed giant spider, is here as well, only with no ray-gun toting figure of square-jawed masculinity to stop it.

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The most satisfying of Aventra al Centro de la Tierra‘s monster assortment are a weird toothy cyclops (likely modeled after the one seen in La Nave de los Monstruos) that poses no end of pesky trouble as it mauls through the outer ranks of the research party and a more mysterious bat-person that seems derived, in personality and action at least, from the Gill-Man from The Creature From the Black Lagoon.  While only fully revealed in the final twenty minutes, the bat-person is seen stalking hottie Kitty de Hoyos from the moment the expedition starts, eventually kidnapping her and dragging her back to his lair (a process that, oddly, involves the bat-person swimming with his victim through a previously unseen waterway).  His demise likewise echos that of Gill-Man’s from the first Creature film, though there’s little in the way of ambiguity to this army-assisted bullet-heavy ending.

Aventra al Centro de la Tierra is a reasonably produced effort that makes the most of its vast cavern locales (the only sets to speak of are offices early on, and the film lingers on them only briefly) and sparse effects budget, cleverly (and sometimes not so cleverly) intermingling more expensive library effects footage with its own bargain basement variety.  Even with apt direction from the prolific Alfredo B. Crevenna (La Loba) and a cast of bankable Mexican genre regulars, it’s the uncredited effects crew that’s really the star of the show.  The suit work on display is in league with the similar work done by Paul Blaisdell in the States and the close-up creature make up for the bat person, which allows for a good range of emotion the less animated suit can’t provide, is pretty fantastic.

009Thanks to the growth of the immigrant population in America and increasing demand for Spanish language entertainment, the number of obscure Mexican genre treasures available on home video here has grown drastically over the past five years or so.  Aventra al Centro de la Tierra has been released to these shores by Xenon in a bare-bones and, unfortunately, subtitles-free edition that is blessedly inexpensive if one is able to avoid the ridiculously marked up Amazon retail price.  Transfer quality is on par with similar low-rent releases – a full-frame combo job that’s slightly zoomed in but that still offers an excess of headroom at the top of the frame.  The SD transfer looks to be from tape and is a bit soft, but is certainly watchable.

This is another little-known creature feature that I’m perfectly happy to have stumbled upon.  While certainly nothing special Aventra al Centro de la Tierra is a fun and surprisingly graphic (for 1965) genre romp that will be a real treat for those monster fans un-daunted by the language barrier it poses.  I say see it.

This review is part of the October Monster Mayhem roundtable:
BANNER



El Trono del Infierno

September 25th, 2009 | article by | No Comments »
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Goyri y Lopez Asociados SA [1994] 93′
country: Mexico
director: Sergio Goyri
cast: Telly Filippini, Jorge Luke,
Sergio Goyri, Roberto Ballesteros
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During archeological excavations with the typically destructive tools film archeologists are wont to use, Dr. Rosa Maria Castro (Telly Filippini) and her team make a very exciting find.

Hidden under a peculiar seal made from pure gold is an offering jar that contains an idol picturing a demon and some kind of omen-o-matic that causes a short eclipse of the sun and an earthquake. We will later learn some rather strange facts about the seal itself, for example that it is marked with a European design once used by the Templars, but must have been made before the building of Tenochtitlan.

Right now, we have to note that the dig’s foreman Jose Juan Jimenez (Roberto Ballesteros) accidentally breaks the jar through the influence of EVIL and breathes in some red gas that was floating around the idol. We all know where this sort of thing always leads, and sure, a few days later Jimenez is doing some fierce “I am possessed” mugging and throwing a priest out of a window. Afterwards JJJ goes on the run, trying to bring the idol in his possession and put it on its throne in hell to start the reign of Satan. Yes, the small statue is Satan itself. And by the way, hell’s location is written down in the Popol Vuh. No, I don’t think the film is consciously kidding.

Fortunately, the Catholic church is on the ball and sends a beardy, extensively mulleted man only called El Hombre (director Sergio Goyri himself casting himself with greatest humility as the saviour of humankind) with his trusty sword Excalibur to use the seal and the other six seals which have been found during the course of human history to put Satan away forever. El Hombre, the Excalibunator, isn’t all he’s cracked up to be, though. He spends most of his time floating in meditation and walking on water, and when he finally takes action, he turns out to be the sort of crap fighter who even has problems to kill a troll armed with a wobbly rubber club. My RPG characters are mocking him.

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For this reason, we don’t spend too much time with him. Instead, we follow the investigations of Dr. Castro and the also quite awesomely mulleted police lieutenant Moran (Jorge Luke, who needs the mullett badly to distract from his face and acting abilities) who are going to puzzle together all the stupid exposition I just explained. Then, they are going to find even more stupid exposition and lend our man El Hombre a hand.

Now, if I tell you that El Trono Del Infierno contains everything I just told you, and additionally an exploding cop partner, awesome animal imitations on the soundtrack whenever JJJ is on screen (he is “The Beast”, you understand), an evil empty plate mail armour and a home-made crucifixion, you’ll probably want to just run out and acquire a copy of this masterpiece. You better not run too fast, for moving very slow and delibaretely will put you in the right frame of mind for experiencing the movie as it was meant to be watched.

Goyri, foremost a veteran actor in all kinds of genre films and just a dabbler in the director’s chair has learned quite an important thing about making a cheap movie. It is the following main rule pulled directly from Making Movies For Dummies: “Viewers are of a weak constitution and therefore need to be prepared for scenes of potential awesomeness by first letting them walk the slow and delibarete road of utter boredom”. And boy, does he ever follow this rule.

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For every minute of silly fun, there are five minutes of inane, badly written and acted exposition, that usually explain everything two or three times and another five minutes of glorious, glorious filler. You probably know the sort. It is the dreaded transitional scene cancer, when all transitions are shown, however unneccessary they might be and when each and every scene in which nothing at all happens drags on and on and on. See the airplane in the sky! See the priest waiting for the plane! See the airplane! See the priest again! See the airplane land! See the runway stairs rolled to the plane! See the plane door open! And so on, and so on. The film even does this in scenes that should by all rights be more interesting (poor exploding policeman!), but at least not as much.

Still, there are some positive things to say about El Trono Del Infierno – the camera is mostly in focus, the editing does at least make more sense than the plot, the acting is absolutely atrocious, but JJJ is an excellent scene chewer, Jorge Luke knows how to sweat and look constipated like no other and Telly Fillippini is kinda cute in her earnest scientist garb. And, you know, there are at least thirty minutes of fun tucked away between the insane repetition and the outright boredom.

However, I don’t believe too many people will be willing and able to excavate these minutes of fun from among the dross. Of course, I count myself among the number of people who do exactly that, and seen from this position, I’d even call the film mildly entertaining.

Just don’t say I didn’t warn you.

For more bizarre movie goodness, be sure
to visit Denis’ excellent review blog The Horror!?