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Doctor of Doom

Original title: Las luchadoras contra el médico asesino
  • 1963
  • 1h 20m
IMDb RATING
4.9/10
416
YOUR RATING
Doctor of Doom (1963)
ActionCrimeHorrorSci-Fi

A mad doctor abducts women with his ape-man helper for cruel brain experiments. A female wrestler seeks revenge after her sister becomes a victim.A mad doctor abducts women with his ape-man helper for cruel brain experiments. A female wrestler seeks revenge after her sister becomes a victim.A mad doctor abducts women with his ape-man helper for cruel brain experiments. A female wrestler seeks revenge after her sister becomes a victim.

  • Directors
    • René Cardona
    • Manuel San Fernando
  • Writer
    • Alfredo Salazar
  • Stars
    • Lorena Velázquez
    • Armando Silvestre
    • Elizabeth Campbell
  • See production info at IMDbPro
  • IMDb RATING
    4.9/10
    416
    YOUR RATING
    • Directors
      • René Cardona
      • Manuel San Fernando
    • Writer
      • Alfredo Salazar
    • Stars
      • Lorena Velázquez
      • Armando Silvestre
      • Elizabeth Campbell
    • 17User reviews
    • 21Critic reviews
  • See production info at IMDbPro
  • See production info at IMDbPro
  • Photos54

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    Top cast28

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    Lorena Velázquez
    Lorena Velázquez
    • Gloria Venus
    • (as Lorena Velazquez)
    Armando Silvestre
    Armando Silvestre
    • Armando Campos
    Elizabeth Campbell
    • Golden Rubi
    Roberto Cañedo
    Roberto Cañedo
    • Prof. Ruiz
    • (as Roberto Canedo)
    Sonia Infante
    • Alicia
    Chucho Salinas
    • Chema
    Chabela Romero
    • Carmela Camacho "Vendetta"
    Martha 'Güera' Solís
    • Luchadora
    • (as Martha 'Guera' Solis)
    Magdalina Caballero
    • Luchadora
    • (as Magdalena Caballero)
    Tona La Tapatia
    • Luchadora
    • (as Tona 'La Tapatia')
    Irma Gonzales
    • Luchadora
    • (as Irma Rodrigues)
    Jesús Murcielago Velázquez
    • Marcado
    • (as 'Murcielago' Velazquez)
    Cavernario Galindo
    • Luchador
    • (as 'Cavernario' Galindo)
    Reyes Oliva
    • Luchador
    Raúl Reyes
    • Luchador
    Gori Casanova
    • Luchador
    Mario Texas
    • Luchador
    Gerardo Zepeda
    Gerardo Zepeda
    • Gomar
    • (as Gerardo 'El Romano')
    • Directors
      • René Cardona
      • Manuel San Fernando
    • Writer
      • Alfredo Salazar
    • All cast & crew
    • Production, box office & more at IMDbPro

    User reviews17

    4.9416
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    Featured reviews

    6macabro357

    Mexo-babes kick some ass

    (aka: DOCTOR OF DOOM)

    Hey, I like this gordida stuff. They don't make 'em like they used to.

    Mad doctor kidnaps woman for his brain transplant experiments. He even keeps a creature down in his basement named Gomar who is a man with a gorilla's brain, the result of an earlier experiment.

    So far, his transplants of human brains into other humans have failed, so then the doctor then kidnaps the pretty sister of a famous female wrestler Golden Venus (Lorena Velazquez) and winds up killing her on the operating table. Venus finds out about what happened and vows revenge, and herself and fellow wrestler Golden Rubi (Elizabeth Campbell) go after the mad doctor.

    They wind up getting captured by the mad doctor and two cops who are assigned to help them, save them. Then later when the two incompetent cops are themselves captured by the doctor, then they are saved by our two brave kick-ass babes. Back & forth, back & forth

    The mad doctor then creates a new masculine-looking female monster named Vendetta who disguised as a wrestler, fights Venus and Ruby in the ring. All kinds of babe flesh fly. Not bad. Not bad at all.

    The whole thing ends on a water tower where the mad doctor and Vendetta are trapped. They almost kill a cop and are then in turn, shot down. The bodies fall...(thump...)

    The Something Weird video is doubled up with WRESTLING WOMEN VS. THE AZTEC MUMMY and has tons of extras including many trailers for other Mexican horror films they have in their library. Although the b/w print shows it's age, it's far better than the old grainy VHS tape. And the print I saw had an AIP logo in the titles instead of K. Gordon Murray's.

    Excellent badly-dubbed cheddar cheese. It's funny.

    6 out of 10
    Michael_Elliott

    Silly But Fun

    Doctor of Doom (1963)

    ** (out of 4)

    Very silly but entertaining Mexican horror film about a mad scientist who is putting the hearts of apes into the bodies of females. When all of the females keep dying the doctor decides to use a stronger body, that of a female wrestler, and by doing so he plans on using her to kill a couple other female wrestlers who blew up his laboratory. If you're wanting some sort of art picture then I'd recommend several films by Luis Bunuel because that's not what you're going to be getting out of this picture. DOCTOR OF DOOM makes very little sense, the special effects aren't that special and the performances rank just above a middle-school production but all of this just adds to the charm. I think what makes the film work so well is that the pacing is pretty fast and there's always something crazy going on. It's funny hearing dialogue early on talking about how women are "too weak" to be experimented on and yet the doctor just keeps using them. He blames women for not being strong enough to live through his operations but then he sends his men out to get another woman. We also have an accident of the doctors, which is a half man, half ape creation who does the majority of the dirty work. You can tell that didn't have too much money to fix him us as he's just got a few patches of hair scattered around his body. In the English dubbed version we get some hilarious heavy breathing from the creature, which makes him more charming than scary. Then, of course, you have the downright silly wrestling scenes that add nothing and I'm still trying to figure out why they were so important in the first place. Naturally these must have been very popular in the day but today it just comes off rather silly and childish. While there's no tension or drama, the director at least keeps the pace rather fast and it's funny seeing the various ways that the story changes for no reason or watching things happen, which couldn't have possibly happened. Just check out the highlight when a couple cops are about to be smashed to death in a secret room (think THE RAVEN torture trap) and the wall is just a foot or so away from them. They use their watches to call out for help and the female wrestlers, in a different location, have time to drive to them, walk around the house slowly and then finally track them down. Seeing this scene play out is a non-stop laugh and one of the reasons the film remains entertaining.
    6Sterno-2

    Thank you, K. Gordon Murray!

    It is seldom that B-movie lovers get a treat like this. K. Gordon Murray, the man who delivers Mexican wrestling flicks for our consumption, brings us "Rock & Roll Wrestling Women vs. The Aztec Ape." I can honestly say that this is truly a guilty pleasure.

    This movie involves your typical Mad Scientist (MS), who is working on transplanting brains for reasons not explained. He has already transplanted an ape's brain into a man, giving us a man slowly turning into an ape. The purpose of this is not entirely clear either, but thankfully said MS has a hypnotic trance over him. Heaven knows we can't afford to have half man/half apes walking around willy-nilly.

    Anyhow, since the young, less educated women don't seem to be surviving these transplants (gee, I wonder why?), MS decides to abduct and operated on a pretty young lady who is a scientist. Sadly, she dies on the table. Next, MS decides he needs more athletic women -- so he decides to find a wrestler. Unfortunately, the woman he goes after is Venus, the sister of the pretty scientist MS just killed.

    This flick is enjoyable in every area except for the soundtrack, which should have been stopped at the border, strip searched, and held on trumped-up charges. The wrestling scenes are well done, and the acting is much above the norm. Plus, I love Venus! She is absolutely fabulous as both an actress & as a wrestler. She puts Peaches Page to shame.

    This movie also doesn't take itself too seriously, and tells a good story without cutting corners or relying on an overuse of stock footage. Plus, it doesn't insult my Suspension of Disbelief or cause it to slap me for my poor choice in movies.

    Sterno says flick your Bics for "Rock & Roll Wrestling Women".
    Gomar

    A ridiculous, riotous rasslin' romp

    A mad doctor is running amok on the backlot of Azteca Studios. He has successfully transplanted the brain of a gorilla into the body a male human, who has developed an un-gorilla-like taste for raw meat and is sporting thick hunks of glued-on fur on his back and arms. Now the Mad Doctor seeks---for reasons naturally unexplained--to transplant a female human brain into the body of another female human. Along the way, the Mad Doc--accompanied by his evil henchmen and the ape-man--botches several transplant attempts, and earns the wrath of babe-a-licious luchadora champeen Gloria Venus (after he offs her chemist sister in a brain-swap-gone-bad) and her police detective boyfriend.

    So why's the Doc goin' to all this trouble? Perhaps he wants a companion for Gorilla Boy? Heck, we don't know, but it's the setup for the rest of the picture, which is one of the most humorous and high-spirited of the Mexican Wrestling genre. As with most K. Gordon Murray Mexi-horror fare, the dubbing is always awkward, and often hilarious, though the actors seem to be enjoying themselves (especially Mad Doc, who gets to chew major scenery for the last half hour), and the direction by Rene Cardona the Elder gets progressively tighter as the film progresses--this is one of the few Mexi-Horror flicks that actually gets better the longer you watch it. There are at least two "trick" endings, a wild plot twist in the last 15 minutes (an evil lady wrestler with a gorilla's brain? Nah), and a predictably ludicrous ending. The only caveat to offer is the tampering with the soundtrack, presumably by Johnny Legend. For a couple of fight scenes---maybe 10 minutes in all--the delightfully cheesy original score is dubbed out in favor of some tepid late-'80s Rockabilly Twang music. It's not too distracting, but you have to wonder the anyone even bothered in the first place. But if you're an aficionado of Mexi-Horror or Wrestling Pictures, you will want to check out this film. It was the first of the "Wrestling Women" series, and one of the most successful. Forty years later, it's easy to see why
    4kevinolzak

    Seen on Pittsburgh's Chiller Theater in 1968

    After 30 years of masked wrestlers and just a few feature films starring the renowned Santo, somebody had the bright idea to duplicate those rasslin' moves with gorgeous gals instead of masked marauders in a short lived series of six films, kicking off with 1962's "Las Luchadoras Contra el Medico Asesino," better known in its initial dubbed US form as "Doctor of Doom," more recently granted the title "Sex Monster" perhaps in a nod to its 1968 remake "Night of the Bloody Apes" (Rhino's redubbed take from the 80s was called "Rock 'n' Roll Wrestling Women vs. the Aztec Ape"). Like Santo, Lorena Velasquez as Gloria Venus and Elizabeth Campbell as the Golden Rubi are essentially two fisted action heroines right out of an old movie serial, the costumed and hooded villain conveniently identified as 'The Mad Doctor' having transplanted the brain of a gorilla into a human being, the final ape-like result Gomar (Gerardo Zepeda) kept locked in a cage for periodic feeding, and quite a meat eater. From there the MD decides that low IQ females should be his next targets for brain experimentation but they lack the stamina to survive the operations, guess who he figures will be next to be kidnapped? For the unenlightened the wrestling scenes that are so integral to the genre merely grind the picture to a halt, Gomar goes out on the hunt on just two occasions, the last dressed in an impregnable outfit impervious to bullets, finally disposed of when his brain is encased in the skull of a wrestling rival known as Vendetta, born to beat the tar out of Gloria Venus. The final reveal of 'The Mad Doctor' wouldn't surprise a 5 year old, who might at least find it amazing how much action gets crammed into an 80 minute running time, the most hilarious death trap a spiked wall that tries to crush its victims before Gomar can get them first. It's a novelty to see helpless males rescued by fist fighting femme fatales, lacking only the 'BAM!' 'POW!' later popularized by BATMAN, with one direct sequel for the same two leads, "The Wrestling Women vs the Aztec Mummy."

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    Related interests

    Bruce Willis in Die Hard (1988)
    Action
    James Gandolfini, Edie Falco, Sharon Angela, Max Casella, Dan Grimaldi, Joe Perrino, Donna Pescow, Jamie-Lynn Sigler, Tony Sirico, and Michael Drayer in The Sopranos (1999)
    Crime
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    Horror
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    Sci-Fi

    Storyline

    Edit

    Did you know

    Edit
    • Trivia
      The first film blending elements of the lucha libra and horror genres.
    • Goofs
      There is an obvious double for Lorena Velázquez used in most of the fight scenes in this film.
    • Alternate versions
      The version entitled Rock 'n' Roll Wrestling Women Vs. the Aztec Ape has a rock and roll sound track replacing the original track
    • Connections
      Edited into The Wrestling Women vs. the Aztec Mummy (1964)

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    FAQ11

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    Details

    Edit
    • Release date
      • May 24, 1963 (Mexico)
    • Country of origin
      • Mexico
    • Language
      • Spanish
    • Also known as
      • Las luchadoras contra el médico asesino
    • Filming locations
      • Estudios Churubusco Azteca, Mexico City, Distrito Federal, Mexico(Studio, as Churubusco-Azteca, Mexico)
    • Production companies
      • Young America Productions Inc.
      • Cinematográfica Calderón S.A.
    • See more company credits at IMDbPro

    Tech specs

    Edit
    • Runtime
      • 1h 20m(80 min)
    • Color
      • Black and White
    • Sound mix
      • Mono
    • Aspect ratio
      • 1.37 : 1

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