Ajouter une intrigue dans votre langueAn Indian mystic uses magical chants to raise women from the dead, then sends them out to perform revenge killings for him.An Indian mystic uses magical chants to raise women from the dead, then sends them out to perform revenge killings for him.An Indian mystic uses magical chants to raise women from the dead, then sends them out to perform revenge killings for him.
Romy
- Elvire Irving
- (as Rommy)
María Kosty
- Elsie
- (as Maria Kosti)
Luis Ciges
- MacMurdo
- (as Louis Ciges)
Montserrat Julió
- Flora
- (as Monserrat Julió)
Ramón Lillo
- Basehart
- (as Ramon Lillo)
Norma Kastel
- Gloria Irving
- (as Norma Kastell)
Asunción Molero
- Muerta
- (as Asuncion Molero)
Fernando Sánchez Polack
- Augusto
- (as Fernando Sanchez-Polak, Fernando S. Polack)
Víctor Barrera
- Dr. Lawrence Radcliffe
- (as Vic Winner)
Histoire
Le saviez-vous
- GaffesWhen Elvire is removed from her bed, the bed sheet clings to her, but in the immediately following shot it is gone.
- Générique farfeluBackground music of the scene then playing ends abruptly mid-phrase for brief silence under the title card, then picks up where it left off, mid-phrase, when it returns back under the interrupted scene.
- Autres versionsU.S. distributor Independent Artists released the film under the title "Walk of the Dead," adding a "Shock Notice" gimmick where red warning flashes preceded each gory murder.
Commentaire en vedette
An Indian mystic (Paul Naschy) uses magical chants to raise women from the dead, then sends them out to perform revenge killings for him.
As with many (most?) of Naschy's films, he wrote his own script. In other reviews, you might see people complain about the mix of voodoo and Hindu mysticism, which are two very different, unrelated things. And while that may be a fair critique, it distracts from a bigger point: it does not matter, so long as the movie is enjoyable. (When Naschy mixed his werewolf with Elizabeth Bathory, was there outrage that Bathory -- historically -- never met a werewolf?)
But Naschy himself was aware that the blend -- and its finished product -- were strange and unconventional. He later wrote, "I must have been under the effects of hashish or, like Bram Stoker, I had one hell of a nightmare." The true origin of the tale is up to viewers to decide. And directing is Naschy's long-time collaborator, Leon Klimovsky, who had recently directed Nashy in "Werewolf Shadow" (1970).
The film, as far horror goes, is quite good with its shady characters, dark plots and plenty of blood. The makeup is excellent, both on the zombie women but even more so on Naschy's satyr character. The makeup effects person, Miguel Sese, should be better known; he was thrice nominated for a Goya and won with "Juana la Loca" (2001), but does not seem to have gained much traction outside of Spain.
One of the strange things about Euro-horror films is the path they take on the festival circuit and beyond. The cuts, the multiple name changes. In America, one of the men responsible for bringing the film to theaters was John J. Burzichelli, the son of a New Jersey politician and a politician in his own right. Who knew the world of Democratic politics overlapped with screening sleazy Spanish films?
Now (2017) Scream Factory brings us the film on Blu-ray, looking and sounding better than ever. We also have the option to watch it with clothed sequences or not. Unfortunately, this is one of the two films in the Paul Naschy set not to have an audio commentary, but the movie really does speak for itself and should be enjoyed no less just because we cannot hear scholars ramble over the top of it.
As with many (most?) of Naschy's films, he wrote his own script. In other reviews, you might see people complain about the mix of voodoo and Hindu mysticism, which are two very different, unrelated things. And while that may be a fair critique, it distracts from a bigger point: it does not matter, so long as the movie is enjoyable. (When Naschy mixed his werewolf with Elizabeth Bathory, was there outrage that Bathory -- historically -- never met a werewolf?)
But Naschy himself was aware that the blend -- and its finished product -- were strange and unconventional. He later wrote, "I must have been under the effects of hashish or, like Bram Stoker, I had one hell of a nightmare." The true origin of the tale is up to viewers to decide. And directing is Naschy's long-time collaborator, Leon Klimovsky, who had recently directed Nashy in "Werewolf Shadow" (1970).
The film, as far horror goes, is quite good with its shady characters, dark plots and plenty of blood. The makeup is excellent, both on the zombie women but even more so on Naschy's satyr character. The makeup effects person, Miguel Sese, should be better known; he was thrice nominated for a Goya and won with "Juana la Loca" (2001), but does not seem to have gained much traction outside of Spain.
One of the strange things about Euro-horror films is the path they take on the festival circuit and beyond. The cuts, the multiple name changes. In America, one of the men responsible for bringing the film to theaters was John J. Burzichelli, the son of a New Jersey politician and a politician in his own right. Who knew the world of Democratic politics overlapped with screening sleazy Spanish films?
Now (2017) Scream Factory brings us the film on Blu-ray, looking and sounding better than ever. We also have the option to watch it with clothed sequences or not. Unfortunately, this is one of the two films in the Paul Naschy set not to have an audio commentary, but the movie really does speak for itself and should be enjoyed no less just because we cannot hear scholars ramble over the top of it.
- gavin6942
- 19 juin 2017
- Lien permanent
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Détails
- Date de sortie
- Pays d’origine
- Langue
- Aussi connu sous le nom de
- Vengeance of the Zombies
- Lieux de tournage
- Elizabeth Tower, Houses of Parliament, Parliament Square, Westminster, Greater London, Angleterre, Royaume-Uni(opening shot after credits)
- société de production
- Consultez plus de crédits d'entreprise sur IMDbPro
- Durée1 heure 29 minutes
- Mixage
- Rapport de forme
- 1.33 : 1(original ratio, open matte)
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By what name was La rebelión de las muertas (1973) officially released in India in English?
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