Añade un argumento en tu idiomaA deranged 15th Century prison colony chaplain exploits his power to get money for his church including murder and grave robbing committed by his vampire mistress and one-eyed hunchback assi... Leer todoA deranged 15th Century prison colony chaplain exploits his power to get money for his church including murder and grave robbing committed by his vampire mistress and one-eyed hunchback assistant.A deranged 15th Century prison colony chaplain exploits his power to get money for his church including murder and grave robbing committed by his vampire mistress and one-eyed hunchback assistant.
Gerald Jacuzzo
- Father Polanski
- (as Jeremy Brooks)
Joe Pichette
- Parishioner
- (as Joseph Pichette)
Reseñas destacadas
I recently watched Guru, The Mad Monk (1970) on Tubi. The storyline follows a 1400s European priest who runs a church and prison. He has several assistants, including a hunchback, a vampire, and a groundskeeper. When a young woman is tricked into being held in his prison, the odds seem impossible for her to overcome and escape. Is there any hope of her accomplishing her goal of escaping to freedom?
This film is written and directed by Andy Milligan (The Naked Witch) and stars Neil Flanagan (Fleshpot on 42nd Street) Jaqueline Webb, Judith Israel, Jack Spencer (Wildlife Icons) and Paul Lieber (What Just Happened).
This is an extremely low-budget production, with sets, attire, dialogue, and acting that feel more like an amateur theater play than a movie. It features one of the wildest Igors I've ever seen. The acting is overdone and feels inconsistently authentic. The horror elements are just okay, with some fun cult sequences. The storyline has a few twists and turns, and the ending reveal was more fun than good.
In conclusion, Guru, The Mad Monk is a film that can't get past its low-budget feel to make the content worthwhile. I would score this a 3/10 and recommend skipping it.
This film is written and directed by Andy Milligan (The Naked Witch) and stars Neil Flanagan (Fleshpot on 42nd Street) Jaqueline Webb, Judith Israel, Jack Spencer (Wildlife Icons) and Paul Lieber (What Just Happened).
This is an extremely low-budget production, with sets, attire, dialogue, and acting that feel more like an amateur theater play than a movie. It features one of the wildest Igors I've ever seen. The acting is overdone and feels inconsistently authentic. The horror elements are just okay, with some fun cult sequences. The storyline has a few twists and turns, and the ending reveal was more fun than good.
In conclusion, Guru, The Mad Monk is a film that can't get past its low-budget feel to make the content worthwhile. I would score this a 3/10 and recommend skipping it.
GURU, THE MAD MONK is another dismally delightful offering from Director Andy Milligan. The basic story is about Father Guru (Neil Flanagan), who needs cadavers for his experiments. Luckily, he knows someone at the local prison, where there are plenty of executions to keep him supplied with subjects.
All of the requisite, Milligan trademarks are here: Non-actors "acting" in a style akin to mannequins on wires; painful, unrehearsed, just-wing-it dialogue; petrified pacing; thrift store costumes; a nonsensical "plot"; and sub-home movie filming techniques. The torture / death scenes are particularly rib-tickling!
Guru himself is a living absurdity, with his garage sale wig and paper pope suit. His conversation with himself in the mirror is a marvel of idiot cinema! Thankfully, this movie isn't quite as brain-smashingly dull as most Milligan output. It profits greatly from its ineptitude, making it a laugh-out-loud classic!
Guru's hunchback sidekick, Igor, is the best imbecile since MANOS' Torgo. The way he bobbles along is almost musical! There's also the cranky old vampire woman, Olga, who runs around in some otherworldly headdress, apparently made from curtains and pot holders!
Nothing can possibly prepare you for the dunderheaded, bellringing finale!
Mr. Milligan, we salute you!...
All of the requisite, Milligan trademarks are here: Non-actors "acting" in a style akin to mannequins on wires; painful, unrehearsed, just-wing-it dialogue; petrified pacing; thrift store costumes; a nonsensical "plot"; and sub-home movie filming techniques. The torture / death scenes are particularly rib-tickling!
Guru himself is a living absurdity, with his garage sale wig and paper pope suit. His conversation with himself in the mirror is a marvel of idiot cinema! Thankfully, this movie isn't quite as brain-smashingly dull as most Milligan output. It profits greatly from its ineptitude, making it a laugh-out-loud classic!
Guru's hunchback sidekick, Igor, is the best imbecile since MANOS' Torgo. The way he bobbles along is almost musical! There's also the cranky old vampire woman, Olga, who runs around in some otherworldly headdress, apparently made from curtains and pot holders!
Nothing can possibly prepare you for the dunderheaded, bellringing finale!
Mr. Milligan, we salute you!...
Neil Flanagan is a good son of the Church on an island where there are a few aristocrats, a prison, him and his church and his hunchback assistant who is, of course, named Igor. To make money to decorate his church an his vestments for the glory of G*d, he does a few favors for the locals, including grave-robbing, draining blood, and other light work.
Were anyone with anything approaching a sense of humor involved in this production, it would have made a heckuva burlesque of the sort of movie that Karloff and Lugosi starred in as the Universal horror franchise wound down into in the late 1930s. It also could have made a savage satire of the politics of the Catholic Church or any organized religion. However, while that thought might have occurred to someone involved in the shoot, there is no sign on the screen that he or she had this impulse. Neither is there any effort to show the disgusting things that this implies.
Not that I'm complaining about that. Just about wasting almost an hour of time.
Were anyone with anything approaching a sense of humor involved in this production, it would have made a heckuva burlesque of the sort of movie that Karloff and Lugosi starred in as the Universal horror franchise wound down into in the late 1930s. It also could have made a savage satire of the politics of the Catholic Church or any organized religion. However, while that thought might have occurred to someone involved in the shoot, there is no sign on the screen that he or she had this impulse. Neither is there any effort to show the disgusting things that this implies.
Not that I'm complaining about that. Just about wasting almost an hour of time.
Guru the Mad Monk (1970)
BOMB (out of 4)
Another film from the infamous Andy Milligan. Guru is the monk at a local prison where prisoners are beaten, executed and so on. Blah, blah, blah. The entire film runs 56-minutes and I was wanting to hit the FF button each and every single minute. The film is horribly made with horrible acting, horrible directing and everything else is equally horrible. Milligan has the reputation of being one of the worst directors ever and I'd certainly have to agree with that. The movies has no pacing and really doesn't have anything going for it.
BOMB (out of 4)
Another film from the infamous Andy Milligan. Guru is the monk at a local prison where prisoners are beaten, executed and so on. Blah, blah, blah. The entire film runs 56-minutes and I was wanting to hit the FF button each and every single minute. The film is horribly made with horrible acting, horrible directing and everything else is equally horrible. Milligan has the reputation of being one of the worst directors ever and I'd certainly have to agree with that. The movies has no pacing and really doesn't have anything going for it.
5tavm
I just went on Google Video to watch this, one of a double feature presented on Torgo's Drive-In (the other feature being I Drink Your Blood which I have yet to see). At 56 minutes, I found this Andy Milligan-directed horror movie fascinating with the constant pounding score and Dragnet-like stilted dialogue abounding throughout. Having said that, I actually found the story pretty entertaining and I found myself partially caring for the sympathetic characters. Many of the gore scenes, while very amateurish, were also fun to watch in a can-you-believe-their-doing-this way. And having a hunchback that sometimes speaks clearly was also a hoot! So on that note, I'm recommending Guru, the Mad Monk to bad movie buffs everywhere. P.S. On Torgo's Drive-In, this movie was preceded by some ads for the concession stand and previews of Carnival of Blood, The Thing with Two Heads, and Teenage Mother. Oh, and the print I saw had the synchronization off by several seconds.
¿Sabías que...?
- CuriosidadesThis was Andy Milligan's first film that he shot with a 35mm Arriflex camera and his first film since returning from working in England.
- PifiasAt 37:34 Father Guru is speaking with Bishop (Father) Kobel and Father Polanski in front of the "Lost Souls" sign, you can see a white motor scooter parked just inside the fence.
- ConexionesFeatured in Dusk to Dawn Drive-In Trash-o-Rama Show Vol. 5 (1998)
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- Presupuesto
- 11.000 US$ (estimación)
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By what name was Guru, the Mad Monk (1970) officially released in Canada in English?
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