Una joven escapa del sacrificio vudú de sus padres en una isla tropical. Años después, se ve obligada a regresar con su familia. Los lugareños la veneran como a una diosa vudú, volviéndola l... Leer todoUna joven escapa del sacrificio vudú de sus padres en una isla tropical. Años después, se ve obligada a regresar con su familia. Los lugareños la veneran como a una diosa vudú, volviéndola loca y provocando la muerte de la familia.Una joven escapa del sacrificio vudú de sus padres en una isla tropical. Años después, se ve obligada a regresar con su familia. Los lugareños la veneran como a una diosa vudú, volviéndola loca y provocando la muerte de la familia.
- Welfare Worker
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- Kala
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- Black House Servant
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- Langa
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- Girl Sacrificed by Mother
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- Black House Servant
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- Sacrificed Girl
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- Black House Servant
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- Psychiatrist
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- Native
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- Black House Servant
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- Dirección
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Opiniones destacadas
When the wife (Dorothy Burgess), under the influence of a Voodoo curse, returns to her childhood home in the West Indies, Lane's secretary (Fay Wray) accompanies her. Lane (Jack Holt) soon follows. Here the secretary becomes a substitute mother for Stephen's child, recalling a similar relationship between Jane Eyre and Edward Rochester's ward Adele. Also, Stephen, like Edward Rochester, can finally have the woman he truly loves only when his wife dies as a result of her madness, in this case leading a native uprising.
Judging from other comments about this being a good example of pre-code horror, my expectations were high. But the director and writers never adequately explored the terror of situations. There are no build-ups of suspense. Things just happen. People are found dead after the fact. Killings and Voodoo sacrifices that happen on-screen are clumsily directed. Nevertheless, performances are uniformly good, the script is literate, and there are a few moments of cinematic art. The print I saw on Turner Classic Movies is very clean; and I was impressed by Joe August's cinematography in the scene in the tower as it filled with smoke from the burning tunnel. The interplay of light and smoke created an eerie atmosphere that I wish had been made more of.
I'm not surprised that Lewton's I Walked With A Zombie (1943) references this film in its screenplay (IMDB). There are many parallels, especially in mood and setting. Moon, however, lacks the coherence and general impact of the later film. Nonetheless, there are many unsettling moments—the first voodoo ceremony where Burgess twists and leaps to the accompaniment of a resounding drum beat. In fact, the crowd scenes featuring natives in synchrony to the incessant beat are especially effective. However, the story itself never really gels into a riveting whole. Perhaps that's because the focus shifts too often, splitting the story into threads that tend to scatter the suspense.
Still, the movie's definitely worth catching up with, and may even surprise viewers considering its general obscurity.
This is one of the last of the pre-code pictures and it hold nothing back. Jack Holt, Dorothy Burgess and, especially, Fay Wray give fine performances. No comic relief here; this is all played for horrors and suspense! Director Roy William Neill (of "Frankenstein Meets the Wolf Man" fame) does a commendable job of keeping the pace of the film frantic, yet tight. Too many "zombie" pictures just sort of plod along, but this one (though technically "voodoo", rather than "zombie"-themed) is non-stop, edge of your seat kind of fare.
As a fan of the genre, what a delight to "find" this movie and more so to have it exceed all of my expectations. Fay Wray made several other renown horror films in the 2 year period preceding "Black Moon": "The Most Dangerous Game", "Doctor X", "The Vampire Bat", "Mystery of the Wax Museum", "The Clairvoyant", and, oh yes, a little movie called "King Kong". "Black Moon" holds its own along with all of the aforementioned films.
¿Sabías que…?
- TriviaThe language spoken by the native characters, and by Juanita (Dorothy Burgess) when she addresses them directly, is Kreyol (also spelled Creole), the African-influenced dialect of French that is the common language of Haiti.
- Citas
Stephen Lane: Who is he? What's he like?
Gail Hamilton: He's the most wonderful man in the world.
Stephen Lane: They all say that; but, has he got a job?
Gail Hamilton: Yes. A good job.
Stephen Lane: When's the wedding?
Gail Hamilton: No wedding.
Stephen Lane: What's wrong?
Gail Hamilton: What's wrong with all the wonderful men? Just one little thing a girl keeps running into. They're married.
Stephen Lane: What are you gonna do about it?
Gail Hamilton: Well, I'm not going to live in sin. Partly because he hasn't asked me to. And partly because I'm not cut out for that sort of thing. And I doubt very much that I'll kill myself. So, I'm ducking.
- ConexionesFeatured in The Lady with the Torch (1999)
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Detalles
- Tiempo de ejecución
- 1h 8min(68 min)
- Color
- Relación de aspecto
- 1.37 : 1