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La momia azteca

  • 1957
  • TV-PG
  • 1 Std. 20 Min.
IMDb-BEWERTUNG
4,6/10
366
IHRE BEWERTUNG
La momia azteca (1957)
DramaEntsetzenMysterium

Füge eine Handlung in deiner Sprache hinzuExperimenting in hypnotic regression to past lives, Dr. Almada discovers that his fiancée, Flor, is the reincarnation of an Aztec maiden who was put to death for loving an Aztec warrior, her... Alles lesenExperimenting in hypnotic regression to past lives, Dr. Almada discovers that his fiancée, Flor, is the reincarnation of an Aztec maiden who was put to death for loving an Aztec warrior, her body placed at the entrance to a hidden chamber in the Great Pyramid of Yucatan where the... Alles lesenExperimenting in hypnotic regression to past lives, Dr. Almada discovers that his fiancée, Flor, is the reincarnation of an Aztec maiden who was put to death for loving an Aztec warrior, her body placed at the entrance to a hidden chamber in the Great Pyramid of Yucatan where the treasures of the Aztecs were hidden, and her lover mummified but cursed to remain alive a... Alles lesen

  • Regie
    • Rafael Portillo
  • Drehbuch
    • Guillermo Calderón
    • Alfredo Salazar
  • Hauptbesetzung
    • Ramón Gay
    • Rosita Arenas
    • Crox Alvarado
  • Siehe Produktionsinformationen bei IMDbPro
  • IMDb-BEWERTUNG
    4,6/10
    366
    IHRE BEWERTUNG
    • Regie
      • Rafael Portillo
    • Drehbuch
      • Guillermo Calderón
      • Alfredo Salazar
    • Hauptbesetzung
      • Ramón Gay
      • Rosita Arenas
      • Crox Alvarado
    • 19Benutzerrezensionen
    • 14Kritische Rezensionen
  • Siehe Produktionsinformationen bei IMDbPro
  • Siehe Produktionsinformationen bei IMDbPro
  • Fotos3

    Poster ansehen
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    Topbesetzung21

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    Ramón Gay
    Ramón Gay
    • Dr. Eduardo Almada
    Rosita Arenas
    Rosita Arenas
    • Flor Sepúlveda…
    Crox Alvarado
    Crox Alvarado
    • Pinacate
    Luis Aceves Castañeda
    Luis Aceves Castañeda
    • Dr. Krupp
    Jorge Mondragón
    • Dr. Sepúlveda
    Arturo Martínez
    • Tierno
    Emma Roldán
    Emma Roldán
    • Criada
    Julián de Meriche
    • Doctor conferencia
    • (as Julien de Meriche)
    Salvador Lozano
    • Doctor Ríos
    Jaime González Quiñones
    • Pepe Almada
    • (as Jaime Quiñones)
    Ángel Di Stefani
    • Popoca
    • (as Angelo De Steffani)
    Jesús Murcielago Velázquez
    • El Murciélago
    • (as Murcielago Velazquez)
    Enrique Llanes
    • Esbirro del Murciélago
    • (as Enrique Yáñez)
    Guillermo Hernández
    • Lobo
    • (as Lobo Negro)
    Alberto Yáñez
    • Esbirro del Murciélago
    Firpo Segura
    • Esbirro del Murciélago
    Sergio Llanes
    • Esbirro del Murciélago
    • (as Sergio Yáñez)
    Estela Inda
    Estela Inda
    • Aztec Chanteuse
    • (as Stella Inda)
    • Regie
      • Rafael Portillo
    • Drehbuch
      • Guillermo Calderón
      • Alfredo Salazar
    • Komplette Besetzung und alle Crew-Mitglieder
    • Produktion, Einspielergebnisse & mehr bei IMDbPro

    Benutzerrezensionen19

    4,6366
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    Empfohlene Bewertungen

    4meddlecore

    A Mexican Horror That Combines The Vampire Bat & Tale About Tutankhamun's Curse.

    The plot of this vintage Mexican horror film revolves around a scientist who develops a technique to help people recall their past lives.

    Using his daughter as a guinea pig to test his hypothesis, he undertakes the procedure, and she recalls being an Aztec woman who get's sacrificed to the Gods, for having an illicit affair with a warrior.

    Not only is she killed- wearing a golden bracelet and breastplate- he is sentenced to be buried alive alongside her, to protect the secrets that surround their ritual deaths.

    In order to prove to his theory to his peers, the scientist follows his daughter's directions, to retrieve the golden breastplate, which he plans to use as evidence that his claims are sound.

    But, upon doing so, he awakens the mummy sworn to protect it...and initiated it's curse.

    A subplot, meanwhile, plays out alongside this, concerning a local villain named the bat, who follows the scientist's every move, with plans to use him to track down a lost Aztec treasure...so he can steal it.

    But it plays out rather awkwardly...and seems almost unnecessary...other than to lengthen the runtime a bit.

    That aside, it's a pretty decent film, with a message similar to that of The Vampire Bat, which clearly had an influence on this film.

    Hence The Bat character as a representation of the Bat God of the Aztecs (itself derived from the Mayan God of the Popul Vuh).

    The film conveys a very similar message- as does that film- spun together with the story about Tutankhamun's curse.

    The most standout portion of this film, is definitely the great scenery.

    Having been shot on location at temples in Mexico City.

    And the mummy is pretty cool, as well..with a demeanour similar to that of the monsters from the Blind Dead series.

    In the end, it's actually a pretty decent little film, even if it does repackage and repurpose previously established storylines.

    And it would go on to spawn it's own trilogy...though...the latter films did not garner the same praise as this one did.

    4 out of 10.
    6Bunuel1976

    THE AZTEC MUMMY (Rafael Portillo, 1957) **1/2

    I didn't quite know what to expect from the "Aztec Mummy" trilogy, a typically wacky Mexican variant on a classic horror theme. This first entry proved quite a surprise: a highly entertaining confection which, apart from delving into ancient Aztec lore, also incorporates elements of science-fiction and gangster dramas into the fray!

    The distinctive Aztec temples and (overstretced) rituals seen here provide an exotic alternative to the Egyptian examples we'd seen in previous Mummy movies. The background to the curse is still the same, however – a girl intended for sacrifice (played by Rosita Arenas, whose other Mexi-horror titles include starring roles in classics such as THE WITCH'S MIRROR [1960] and THE CURSE OF THE CRYING WOMAN [1961]) is caught in the arms of a warrior, for which he's condemned to be buried alive; centuries later, when his lover's tomb is desecrated, he awakens to eliminate those responsible.

    The sci-fi trappings are put across with a good deal of persuasion (since they involve reincarnation, this section bears a striking resemblance to Roger Corman's contemporaneous THE UNDEAD [1957]), while the crime-lord involved is a masked figure referred to as "The Bat" (most probably inspired by the 1926 Roland West film of that name or its sound remake, THE BAT WHISPERS [1930]) – his presence is initially intriguing, but the ultimate revelation of his identity beggars belief. Among the secondary characters, then, are a cowardly medical student who acts as comedy relief and is quite amusing (even so, the very need for it betrays the fact that the Mexican horror film was still in its infancy at this point in time), and a kid – ostensibly the hero's (much) younger brother – who brings absolutely nothing to the table except that he's always being scolded by his elders for following them around!

    Unfortunately, my enthusiasm for the film was considerably dissipated by the dire quality of the print included on BCI/Eclipse's 3-Disc Set. I didn't mind so much the softness of the image, the rather low audio or the occasional missing frame – but, then, I was intensely annoyed by scenes that were set in complete darkness where it was virtually impossible to tell what was going on. Considering that these include the exploration of the tomb, all the footage of the rampaging mummy and the climax, it felt like I only watched half a film…without even the benefit of getting a good look at the titular creature!!
    8EdgarST

    Aztec Mummy

    When I first saw this I was 6 years old and it scared the hell out of me! Even though the trilogy ended a few months later (in 1958) I remember I was disappointed with the "human robot" ending of the Aztec mummy trilogy. I still think that this mummy could have been better exploited in films, but I guess that even for the producers it was such a discovery that when they realized what they had in hand, they had already blown it apart, with the lowest budgets and the retelling with minimum variations of the same story in parts 2 and 3 ("The Curse of the Aztec Mummy", and the awful "The Aztec Mummy Against the Humanoid Robot"). Maybe the reason is that its main writer, Alfredo Salazar (brother of producer-actor Abel Salazar, the man behind Fernando Méndez' 1957 classic "The Vampire") was marginally interested in horror films. Even if he also has to his credited the original script for Benito Alazraki's "Devil Doll Men" (1961), most of the movies Alfredo wrote were about wrestling stars, fighting the occasional monster. As frequent in Mexican horror films, there is also a mystery here: nobody seems to know the name of the little girl who played Dr. Almada's daughter.
    Michael_Elliott

    Aztec Mummy

    Momia Azteca, La (1957)

    ** 1/2 (out of 4)

    Mexican horror film about a scientist (Raymond Gay) who uses hypnosis to look into people's past lives. He experiments on his girlfriend and learns she was a sacrificed princess who was buried with a golden breastplate. The scientist decides to go looking for it and eventually runs into the title character as well as a master thief known as The Bat. Here's a good idea to all future filmmakers if you're going to make a movie called The Aztec Mummy. Make sure the mummy is in the picture for more than three minutes. Technically speaking this is a fairly well made film but one can't help but be letdown since the title character hardly gets any screen time.
    AlanSmithee0

    Proof that Egypt doesn't have the most terrifying mummies!

    The horror and terror of the Aztec Mummy is shown in this classic Mexi-horror film! This is the first and most profound movie in the "Aztec Mummy" trilogy of the late 50s as we see the Mummy in all his bandaged and bulky horror.

    The Mummy is the cursed spirit of a warrior named Popoca who was buried alive for loving a maiden and cursed to always protect her remains and the valuable bracelet and breastplate left with her that reveals the location of a vast cache of Aztec gold. Soon, the wounded warrior is awakened and sets off to find the stolen items and Flora, the reincarnation of his deceased love. But Flora's boyfriend, Dr. Almada who was responsible for bringing the Mummy to life is out to stop him and save his fiance. Almada also has the trouble of the nefarious Bat, a masked wreslter who also is a major player in the criminal underworld who seeks the Aztec treasure. Will Flora be saved? Can Almada overcome his foes? Will the Bat steal the treasure? Will poor Popoca find eternal rest?

    Definately worth checking out and better than the two Aztec Mummy movies that followed!

    I give it 7/10!

    Handlung

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    • Wissenswertes
      This was the first film in a trilogy of "Aztec Mummy" films that were shot back to back with the same cast and crew and location footage being shot for all three films at the same time.
    • Verbindungen
      Edited into Der Fluch der aztekischen Mumie (1957)

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    Details

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    • Erscheinungsdatum
      • 13. November 1957 (Mexiko)
    • Herkunftsland
      • Mexiko
    • Sprachen
      • Spanisch
      • Nahuatl
    • Auch bekannt als
      • The Aztec Mummy
    • Drehorte
      • Estudios CLASA, Mexico City, Distrito Federal, Mexiko(Studio)
    • Produktionsfirma
      • Cinematográfica Calderón S.A.
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    Technische Daten

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    • Laufzeit
      1 Stunde 20 Minuten
    • Farbe
      • Black and White
    • Sound-Mix
      • Mono
    • Seitenverhältnis
      • 1.37 : 1

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