Añade un argumento en tu idiomaA withered old hag turns into a beautiful young woman after drinking a youth formula.A withered old hag turns into a beautiful young woman after drinking a youth formula.A withered old hag turns into a beautiful young woman after drinking a youth formula.
- Dirección
- Guión
- Reparto principal
Pino Polidori
- Albert
- (as Joe Atlanta)
Guido Barlocci
- Croupier
- (sin acreditar)
Reseñas destacadas
A brilliant scientist by the name of "Professor Greaves" (Nerio Bernardi) has just invented a serum that rejuvenates cells and reverses the aging process. His assistant, "Dr. Marny Bannister" (Magda Konopka) desperately wants the formula due to the fact that she is scarred and ugly. However, Professor Greaves is cautious and wants to do more research before even attempting to try it out on a human being. Dr. Bannister then kills Professor Greaves and ingests the serum which turns her into the young and beautiful woman she always wanted to be. But there are two important factors which Dr. Bannister failed to take into account. First, the formula unleashes savage and primordial desires into whoever takes it. The second factor is that the serum wears off after a period of time and the person reverts back to their previous form. What follows is a murderous rampage by Dr. Bannister who is not averse to using her beauty to further her evil desires. Although it was originally filmed in Italian, the English dubbing was very noticeable. Also quite noticeable was the fact that a scene or two was cut rather abruptly. This gave the film a kind of choppy feel. Still, Magda Konopka looked great and the film had a nice late-60's atmosphere to it. All things considered I give it an average rating.
Starting from a fairly common inspiration, we see Dr. Marnie Bannister (Magda Konopka) kill a scientist to recover the formula for a potion that brings new youth. She then becomes the young and beautiful Satanik. Then Dr. Bannister transforms into Satanik after drinking the potion: not only does she change her appearance, but the potion also changes her clothes and covers her with makeup and false eyelashes. Police Inspector Trent (Julio Peña) and Commissioner González (Armando Calvo) and on their heels. Based on the fumetti of Magnus and Max Bunker, highlighting Satanik's vengeful personality, his thirst for revenge against those who have wished him harm. A true heroine of evil, although her name is never spoken!
After the success of Fantomas and later Danger Diabolik, an adaptation of fumetti (Italian comic) and others, the producers felt that they had to continue with the vein. Until 1970, Italian screens were flooded with masked heroes, from the two Kriminales, the most extravagant ones like Superargo vs Diabolikus and Baba Yaga, to the parody Arriva Dorellik, an unequivocal sign of the end of a cycle. These films were entertaining and fun with twisted plots that combined a Mexican-type masked wrestler with the James Bond-style European spy subgenre. The heroines were missing, which is why Satanik appeared on the screen. It is a somewhat monotonous adaptation based on comics, known in Italy as Fumetti, based on a script in which elements from the previous films intervene here and there. Kriminal's cinematic counterpart, Satanik, addresses a theme of physical transformation that we have already seen in theaters through B movies like Wasp Woman and Leech Woman. Mixing here the classic myths of Dr. Jekyll and Mr. Hyde or even the Picture of Dorian Gray, but counting on the pragmatism of the authors of transalpine comics, who allow themselves the transgressive power that modern times offer, we have the right to excesses without precedents. . But unfortunately this adaptation is of mediocre quality, because Satanik suffers from comparison with Danger Diabolik and, unfortunately, is of less interest. It must be taken into account that in France fumetti is also known as "Demoniak", Satanik being the French version of the Italian "Killing".
It is the qualitative and creative opposite of Fantomas, the film inevitably belongs to the criminal genius genre. There is a certain imbalance during the 81 minutes, as if the authors had wanted to suddenly precipitate the action and quasi-eroticism of the end of the film. Between the decisions of an apathetic police force and the lack of real stakes, director Vivarelli fails to give depth to the film. Apart from deliberate or unintentional atrocities, such as The sensuality, mystery, danger and symbiosis that emanated from the adventures of the Diabolik/Eva Kant couple, for example, are almost absent here. Even the absence of morality, which is also a big part of fumetti's charm, is cemented as a lesson in virtue for the audience. Satanik's seductive outfits and vague zooms of him don't make much of an impression and the film ends up being a parable about waste. Instead of transcending the pop material, the film embraces a linearity and little imagination in the images that will disappoint more than one. Aside from a fun striptease scene and the rarity of the product for lovers of vintage Italian cinema from the '60s, Satanik may not excite many people.
There is atmospheric retro-pop-lounge music by Manuel Parada , which will delight fans, some unconventional images and along with the inevitable flamenco scene (mandatory Spanish co-production), adding endless jazz pieces. Produced by Eduardo Manzanos Brochero, who wrote/financed several Spanish-Italian co-productions. Manzanos built a small western town in Hoyo De Manzanares (Madrid) where shot uncountable Spaghettis with sets by Jaime Pérez Cubero and José Luis Galicia, who were also in charge of Satanik's sets. To play Satanik, Vivarelli turns to the beautiful Magda Konopka, who, coincidentally or not, bears a certain resemblance to Marisa Mell, who plays Eva Kant in Danger Diabolik. Like the countless shooting stars of popular cinema, he had his moment of glory in the particularly rich decade of 1965/1975. Satanik is probably his most striking work, although we already saw it in the credits of ¨When the Dinosaurs Ruled the Earth¨, ¨Lucky Luciano¨ and the classic Spaghetti ¨The Blind Man¨, before slowly sliding through its twilight, sailing between light thrillers as ¨Diabolicamente...Letizia¨ and subgenres like Nunsploitation, softcore and cheap Giallos. Here, she carries out the task with class and firmness, giving Bannister/Satanik different personalities, and co-stars Spaniards like Julio Peña as a bloodhound police inspector, Antonio Pica and former 1940s heartthrob Armando Calvo.
The film was average but professionally directed by Piero Vivarelli. At times using pseudonym Donald Murray, only had limited resources at his disposal, and we're left with a fairly flat and unengaging adventure that often seems to be little more than a standard crime movie with a comic book character attached. He also tried his luck with Mister X , but that project still suffered from some of the same shortcomings and failures. A screenwriter since the early 1950s, Vivarelli stepped behind the camera in 1960 for a very opportunistic San Remo La grande Sifida, about the San Remo Song Festival. Passing the stage of collaborating on the script for Django, he also posted Emanuelle in America, Emanuelle Nera: Orient Reportage, and directed some secondary films such as El Dio serpente, El Decameron negro, La Rumbera, Provocazione. And Piero makes a small appearance here under the guise of Inspector Leduc. For the curiosities of the credits, it is Benito Mussolini's son who produced the film and the assistant director is none other than Pupi Avati. The film was a public and critical failure, and it's easy to see why in retrospect.
After the success of Fantomas and later Danger Diabolik, an adaptation of fumetti (Italian comic) and others, the producers felt that they had to continue with the vein. Until 1970, Italian screens were flooded with masked heroes, from the two Kriminales, the most extravagant ones like Superargo vs Diabolikus and Baba Yaga, to the parody Arriva Dorellik, an unequivocal sign of the end of a cycle. These films were entertaining and fun with twisted plots that combined a Mexican-type masked wrestler with the James Bond-style European spy subgenre. The heroines were missing, which is why Satanik appeared on the screen. It is a somewhat monotonous adaptation based on comics, known in Italy as Fumetti, based on a script in which elements from the previous films intervene here and there. Kriminal's cinematic counterpart, Satanik, addresses a theme of physical transformation that we have already seen in theaters through B movies like Wasp Woman and Leech Woman. Mixing here the classic myths of Dr. Jekyll and Mr. Hyde or even the Picture of Dorian Gray, but counting on the pragmatism of the authors of transalpine comics, who allow themselves the transgressive power that modern times offer, we have the right to excesses without precedents. . But unfortunately this adaptation is of mediocre quality, because Satanik suffers from comparison with Danger Diabolik and, unfortunately, is of less interest. It must be taken into account that in France fumetti is also known as "Demoniak", Satanik being the French version of the Italian "Killing".
It is the qualitative and creative opposite of Fantomas, the film inevitably belongs to the criminal genius genre. There is a certain imbalance during the 81 minutes, as if the authors had wanted to suddenly precipitate the action and quasi-eroticism of the end of the film. Between the decisions of an apathetic police force and the lack of real stakes, director Vivarelli fails to give depth to the film. Apart from deliberate or unintentional atrocities, such as The sensuality, mystery, danger and symbiosis that emanated from the adventures of the Diabolik/Eva Kant couple, for example, are almost absent here. Even the absence of morality, which is also a big part of fumetti's charm, is cemented as a lesson in virtue for the audience. Satanik's seductive outfits and vague zooms of him don't make much of an impression and the film ends up being a parable about waste. Instead of transcending the pop material, the film embraces a linearity and little imagination in the images that will disappoint more than one. Aside from a fun striptease scene and the rarity of the product for lovers of vintage Italian cinema from the '60s, Satanik may not excite many people.
There is atmospheric retro-pop-lounge music by Manuel Parada , which will delight fans, some unconventional images and along with the inevitable flamenco scene (mandatory Spanish co-production), adding endless jazz pieces. Produced by Eduardo Manzanos Brochero, who wrote/financed several Spanish-Italian co-productions. Manzanos built a small western town in Hoyo De Manzanares (Madrid) where shot uncountable Spaghettis with sets by Jaime Pérez Cubero and José Luis Galicia, who were also in charge of Satanik's sets. To play Satanik, Vivarelli turns to the beautiful Magda Konopka, who, coincidentally or not, bears a certain resemblance to Marisa Mell, who plays Eva Kant in Danger Diabolik. Like the countless shooting stars of popular cinema, he had his moment of glory in the particularly rich decade of 1965/1975. Satanik is probably his most striking work, although we already saw it in the credits of ¨When the Dinosaurs Ruled the Earth¨, ¨Lucky Luciano¨ and the classic Spaghetti ¨The Blind Man¨, before slowly sliding through its twilight, sailing between light thrillers as ¨Diabolicamente...Letizia¨ and subgenres like Nunsploitation, softcore and cheap Giallos. Here, she carries out the task with class and firmness, giving Bannister/Satanik different personalities, and co-stars Spaniards like Julio Peña as a bloodhound police inspector, Antonio Pica and former 1940s heartthrob Armando Calvo.
The film was average but professionally directed by Piero Vivarelli. At times using pseudonym Donald Murray, only had limited resources at his disposal, and we're left with a fairly flat and unengaging adventure that often seems to be little more than a standard crime movie with a comic book character attached. He also tried his luck with Mister X , but that project still suffered from some of the same shortcomings and failures. A screenwriter since the early 1950s, Vivarelli stepped behind the camera in 1960 for a very opportunistic San Remo La grande Sifida, about the San Remo Song Festival. Passing the stage of collaborating on the script for Django, he also posted Emanuelle in America, Emanuelle Nera: Orient Reportage, and directed some secondary films such as El Dio serpente, El Decameron negro, La Rumbera, Provocazione. And Piero makes a small appearance here under the guise of Inspector Leduc. For the curiosities of the credits, it is Benito Mussolini's son who produced the film and the assistant director is none other than Pupi Avati. The film was a public and critical failure, and it's easy to see why in retrospect.
Greetings And Salutations, and welcome to my review of Satanik; here's the breakdown of my ratings:
Story: 0.50 Direction: 0.75 Pace: 0.75 Acting: 0.75 Enjoyment: 0.75
TOTAL: 4.00 out of 10.00
The primary element that ruins Satanik is the story - or the lack of one. There's little a director could do when the narrative was defunct. Nowadays, he trusts the CGI Director and their artists to fill in with overly-long eye candy fight sequences, like Justice League. However, in the sixties, all they could turn to was stock footage for stuffing, and that usually had to follow the storyline.
The concept is a passable one. An elderly scientist who has been visibly scared by life is offered a second chance at youth and beauty. One of her colleagues has been working on a fountain of youth serum. However, he's not ready for human trials though it works on the captive animals. There is one flaw. The mutated animals are not merely changed visually; they're mentally altered - they become aggressively violent. Dr Marnie Bannister cannot wait for her fellow researcher to change his mind, so she decides to take matters into her own hands. She kills him and goes all Dr Jeckyll and Mr Hyde. The grim turn of events should have given the writer carte blanche to deliver a dark and moody thriller. Sadly, the writer was lacking in imagination and skill. From the moment Dr Bannister awakens as the glamourpuss Satinik the story takes a steep nosedive into insipidity. Five minutes later, my attention shifted from the youthful reincarnation to other things. I'm unsure if Satanik is a dark force that does good or evil. That is how poor the story is. Even when the writer introduces the drug dealers and Satanik's infiltration of the gang, it's ambiguous as to what her goals are. Is she trying to stop them or trying to take over the business?
The direction is only slightly better. Regrettably, Piero Vivarelli isn't a maestro behind the camera. His cinematography borders on the mundane. Luckily for the audience, he does throw in a few semi-decent compositions. But as one reviewer states, when the action shifts to Geneva, we get a lot of "Holiday" footage showing how beautiful the city is, but nothing of import to the story.
The cast is abysmal, though that could come down to the direction. Magda Konopka is better and more credible as Dr Bannister than she is as Satanik. Satanik is a beautiful but blank individual with next to no personality, whereas Bannister is anxious and worried because she killed Professor Greaves.
I'd advise everyone to stay away from this poor excuse of a story. There are many better and more entertaining thrillers out there. But should you have watched them all, I suggest picking up a book and having a gander at the printed page instead of watching Satanik.
When the kick from the Serum Of Youth wears off, please visit my Killer Thriller Chillers and The Final Frontier lists to see where I ranked Satanik.
Take Care & Stay Well.
Story: 0.50 Direction: 0.75 Pace: 0.75 Acting: 0.75 Enjoyment: 0.75
TOTAL: 4.00 out of 10.00
The primary element that ruins Satanik is the story - or the lack of one. There's little a director could do when the narrative was defunct. Nowadays, he trusts the CGI Director and their artists to fill in with overly-long eye candy fight sequences, like Justice League. However, in the sixties, all they could turn to was stock footage for stuffing, and that usually had to follow the storyline.
The concept is a passable one. An elderly scientist who has been visibly scared by life is offered a second chance at youth and beauty. One of her colleagues has been working on a fountain of youth serum. However, he's not ready for human trials though it works on the captive animals. There is one flaw. The mutated animals are not merely changed visually; they're mentally altered - they become aggressively violent. Dr Marnie Bannister cannot wait for her fellow researcher to change his mind, so she decides to take matters into her own hands. She kills him and goes all Dr Jeckyll and Mr Hyde. The grim turn of events should have given the writer carte blanche to deliver a dark and moody thriller. Sadly, the writer was lacking in imagination and skill. From the moment Dr Bannister awakens as the glamourpuss Satinik the story takes a steep nosedive into insipidity. Five minutes later, my attention shifted from the youthful reincarnation to other things. I'm unsure if Satanik is a dark force that does good or evil. That is how poor the story is. Even when the writer introduces the drug dealers and Satanik's infiltration of the gang, it's ambiguous as to what her goals are. Is she trying to stop them or trying to take over the business?
The direction is only slightly better. Regrettably, Piero Vivarelli isn't a maestro behind the camera. His cinematography borders on the mundane. Luckily for the audience, he does throw in a few semi-decent compositions. But as one reviewer states, when the action shifts to Geneva, we get a lot of "Holiday" footage showing how beautiful the city is, but nothing of import to the story.
The cast is abysmal, though that could come down to the direction. Magda Konopka is better and more credible as Dr Bannister than she is as Satanik. Satanik is a beautiful but blank individual with next to no personality, whereas Bannister is anxious and worried because she killed Professor Greaves.
I'd advise everyone to stay away from this poor excuse of a story. There are many better and more entertaining thrillers out there. But should you have watched them all, I suggest picking up a book and having a gander at the printed page instead of watching Satanik.
When the kick from the Serum Of Youth wears off, please visit my Killer Thriller Chillers and The Final Frontier lists to see where I ranked Satanik.
Take Care & Stay Well.
They call this film "euro trash horror".
Well, it's not horror. The film takes place in Europe, so yes, it's "euro". Trash? Ah yes, it's trash all right.
You know you're in for a great movie when, right at the beginning, the DVD gives you text on the screen apologizing for the quality of the print you're about to watch. Expect crackles, odd jarring cuts, and for the movie not to fit the screen. Plus there's the sound -- at first I thought I was watching a dubbed film. Then, watching the lips carefully, I realized that, no, it's that the sound quality is embarrassingly bad and out of synch.
The plot itself is fairly goofy -- an old, disfigured woman named Dr Bannister kills a scientist for his youth formula. I'm not giving much away because when you see the "old woman" it's pretty obvious she's under a layer of thick, badly applied make-up. Anyone with a lick of sense, seeing the fake old age, knows what's coming next.
Yes, the "old crone" is miraculously transformed into a beautiful young woman -- complete with face make-up and a long wig of hair! Zounds!
When I say the old woman is disfigured, I mean she has cornflakes glued to her face. The film makes no attempt to explain how the cornflakes got there. For that matter, there is no attempt to explain anything at all relating to any of the characters. They're never developed beyond the level of finger puppets.
The two policemen pursuing our anti-heroine just wander about, apparently baffled by the simplest clues. The murdered scientist was working on a youth serum, the old woman has disappeared, and we keep running into a young woman -- how do these pieces fit together?! What does it all mean?! One of the cops sweats a lot and pats his face with a cloth. The other smokes a pipe. That's pretty much all we get, character-wise.
Dr Bannister (the crone, now a beauty) goes around wearing odd costumes and then taking them off so we can see her flesh. She has affairs with men. She gets in a catfight with a young woman in a nightgown. She goes to Geneva so we can see the lake there. She water- skis a bit, then takes off her wet suit to reveal a strange bead-curtain bikini. She takes off her clothes again in a strange ninja costume striptease.
The ending? Well, without giving anything away, it's just a bizarre, tacked on conclusion that makes about as little sense as the rest of the picture. It's the sort of thing a writer comes up with when the director wakes him up at 4 AM and says, "Quick! We need an ending for our movie! What happens next?"
The writer mumbles something half awake, and the director runs with it.
What's good about this movie? Some of the music is campy and fun. That classic 60s organ music that's so corny it's enough to make you laugh out loud. There are some odd seduction scenes, bizarre dialogue, goofy moments.
It's very close to being so bad it's good. I did manage to watch it from start to finish without gouging out my eyes or sobbing. I guess that's praise, of sorts.'
Well, it's not horror. The film takes place in Europe, so yes, it's "euro". Trash? Ah yes, it's trash all right.
You know you're in for a great movie when, right at the beginning, the DVD gives you text on the screen apologizing for the quality of the print you're about to watch. Expect crackles, odd jarring cuts, and for the movie not to fit the screen. Plus there's the sound -- at first I thought I was watching a dubbed film. Then, watching the lips carefully, I realized that, no, it's that the sound quality is embarrassingly bad and out of synch.
The plot itself is fairly goofy -- an old, disfigured woman named Dr Bannister kills a scientist for his youth formula. I'm not giving much away because when you see the "old woman" it's pretty obvious she's under a layer of thick, badly applied make-up. Anyone with a lick of sense, seeing the fake old age, knows what's coming next.
Yes, the "old crone" is miraculously transformed into a beautiful young woman -- complete with face make-up and a long wig of hair! Zounds!
When I say the old woman is disfigured, I mean she has cornflakes glued to her face. The film makes no attempt to explain how the cornflakes got there. For that matter, there is no attempt to explain anything at all relating to any of the characters. They're never developed beyond the level of finger puppets.
The two policemen pursuing our anti-heroine just wander about, apparently baffled by the simplest clues. The murdered scientist was working on a youth serum, the old woman has disappeared, and we keep running into a young woman -- how do these pieces fit together?! What does it all mean?! One of the cops sweats a lot and pats his face with a cloth. The other smokes a pipe. That's pretty much all we get, character-wise.
Dr Bannister (the crone, now a beauty) goes around wearing odd costumes and then taking them off so we can see her flesh. She has affairs with men. She gets in a catfight with a young woman in a nightgown. She goes to Geneva so we can see the lake there. She water- skis a bit, then takes off her wet suit to reveal a strange bead-curtain bikini. She takes off her clothes again in a strange ninja costume striptease.
The ending? Well, without giving anything away, it's just a bizarre, tacked on conclusion that makes about as little sense as the rest of the picture. It's the sort of thing a writer comes up with when the director wakes him up at 4 AM and says, "Quick! We need an ending for our movie! What happens next?"
The writer mumbles something half awake, and the director runs with it.
What's good about this movie? Some of the music is campy and fun. That classic 60s organ music that's so corny it's enough to make you laugh out loud. There are some odd seduction scenes, bizarre dialogue, goofy moments.
It's very close to being so bad it's good. I did manage to watch it from start to finish without gouging out my eyes or sobbing. I guess that's praise, of sorts.'
This Spanish-Italian co-production tells an interesting and weird story about Dr. Bannister, a woman that not only has the best years behind her, but also has a scarred face that makes her look like a freak. But in Madrid, a professor she knows has conducted some experiments on animals with a substance which regenerates cells. The experiments were successful, but the animals became aggressive. Because the professor won't allow Dr. Bannister to be the first human guinea pig, she kills him and consumes the substance. She becomes a beautiful young woman, but also a vicious killer when it comes to keep her secret a secret.
The plot of the film is great fun, but Piero Vivarelli had not enough skills and money to make a cool movie out of it. Also, the film becomes boring after a good start and doesn't manage to regain a fast pace even though the film's running time doesn't exceed 83 minutes. And as the setting changes to Swiss city Geneva for the last third of the film, it sometimes even looks like a vacation movie as we see how beautiful Geneva is (which it is indeed - but it doesn't help to push the plot forward...). So, with a more talented director, better actors and a bigger budget, "Satanik" could have become an obscure Italian classic. But, as it is, it's just a lacklustre and boring crime film that isn't really worth looking for. Rating: 3 out of 10.
The plot of the film is great fun, but Piero Vivarelli had not enough skills and money to make a cool movie out of it. Also, the film becomes boring after a good start and doesn't manage to regain a fast pace even though the film's running time doesn't exceed 83 minutes. And as the setting changes to Swiss city Geneva for the last third of the film, it sometimes even looks like a vacation movie as we see how beautiful Geneva is (which it is indeed - but it doesn't help to push the plot forward...). So, with a more talented director, better actors and a bigger budget, "Satanik" could have become an obscure Italian classic. But, as it is, it's just a lacklustre and boring crime film that isn't really worth looking for. Rating: 3 out of 10.
¿Sabías que...?
- CuriosidadesPupi Avati, who worked on a film as an assistant director, declared that watching Piero Vivarelli at work taught him how to not direct a movie.
- ConexionesFeatured in Late Movie 18: Satanik (1980)
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- How long is Satanik?Con tecnología de Alexa
Detalles
- Duración1 hora 26 minutos
- Mezcla de sonido
- Relación de aspecto
- 2.35 : 1
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By what name was Satanik (1968) officially released in India in English?
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