Una actriz rica que se ha hecho demasiado vieja para los papeles protagonistas contrata a un científico que está trabajando en una fórmula para la eterna juventud, que contiene ciertos fluid... Leer todoUna actriz rica que se ha hecho demasiado vieja para los papeles protagonistas contrata a un científico que está trabajando en una fórmula para la eterna juventud, que contiene ciertos fluidos del cerebro humano.Una actriz rica que se ha hecho demasiado vieja para los papeles protagonistas contrata a un científico que está trabajando en una fórmula para la eterna juventud, que contiene ciertos fluidos del cerebro humano.
- Dirección
- Guionistas
- Elenco
- Dr. Germaine
- (as Marcus Powell)
- Tony the Guard
- (as Louis F. Homyak)
Opiniones destacadas
A doctor has been working on an anti-aging serum forever, but he hasn't been working fast enough to please one of his biggest financial benefactors - an aging actress whose career could use a refreshing. Even though he's nervous about it, he agrees to shoot her up with the serum, telling her all the risks and that she'll need multiple doses of the serum or else the entire thing will reverse. The only problem is that he needs human brain tissue to make more serum and he's running out of cadavers.
The special makeup effects are top notch, the performances are spirited with just enough camp appeal given the subject matter, and the script is smarter and better written that other films of this type and budget. This is a film that could benefit from a new Blu-Ray release.
Premise is the old reliable use of a woman seeking to regain her youth: former movie star Ruth Warren (Jessica Dublin), who funds the research of Dr. Gregory Ashton (John MacKay). He discovers the part of the brain controlling aging, and via lab experiments with rats, comes up with a serum to reverse the aging process.
Warren eagerly volunteers to act as a human guinea pig and is turned into her younger self (actress Vivian Lanko taking over the role in second reel), dubbing herself Elizabeth Warren, her own fictitious niece. Problem is that she turns into a hideous monster, requiring increasing dosages of the serum to be brought back to normal youth.
Ashton breaks the law to acquire numerous cadavers to prepare the serum, derived from human brains. In her monstrous state, Warren takes to killing innocents in order to survive, ultimately discovering how to get the same rejuvenation effect directly from a victim's brain (for lunch) without resorting to the doc's serum. He eventually develops a synthetic serum but by then it is too late.
Low-budgeter works because it is played absolutely straight, with campy elements, such as the obvious references to "Sunset Blvd." (Warren even has a Stroheim-like butler from the old days), allowed to blossom unforced. Adroit casting has Jessica Dublin and Vivian Lanko physically matched in the central role, each playing it in an appropriately florid and meanie manner. John MacKay and the Sandy Dennis-like Katell Pleven as his assistant are utterly earnest and believable as the scientists, while James Hogue plays Warren's butler/former lover with panache.
Highlight of the production is Edward French's elaborate makeup effects, moving from the routine expanding bladders under the skin to an original design of Medusa-like proportions as her head expands to monster scale. Tightly directed by Brian Thomas Jones, pic is designed to appeal to B-movie connoisseurs who can tolerate the explicit violence of contemporary horror efforts.
Given that it's an eighties horror film, you've got to expect rather a lot of silliness and tacky special effects, which the film has in droves; but it has to be said that the plot is carried off really well, and despite being cheap and nasty, the special effects fit the film and are a hell of a lot more believable than the CGI that would infect The Rejuvenator if it were made nowadays. The characters aren't exactly well defined, but a film like this needs the audience to care at least somewhat for them otherwise the story won't hold any weight, and director Brian Thomas Jones obviously knows that as he ensures that the situation feels as real as possible. The acting isn't bad, and sees Vivian Lanko doing well in the double central role, and while John MacKay doesn't exactly convince as a genius doctor - he's at least fun to watch, and the two have some chemistry together. The film is interesting throughout, and while there's no out and out standout moments, there's enough going on for it to remain interesting. Overall, The Rejuvenator might not appeal to everyone, but if you like your eighties horror cheesy and imaginative - I'm pretty sure you'll enjoy this!
"Rejuvenatrix", a.k.a. "The Rejuvenator" (1988), is a great horror B-movie about the side effects of a research to find the fountain of youth. The screenplay is well written and, despite the low-budget, has great make-up and special effects. Dr. Ashton is hurried in his experiment by the lead donor of his funds and is forced to test his serum in her, despite his warnings. The conclusion is gore and gruesome, with a hook for a sequence. My vote is seven.
Title (Brazil): "Rejuvenator"
¿Sabías que…?
- TriviaVivian Lanko's debut.
- ErroresWhen the woman is running around as a creature, you can see her extended fingers are wiggling and shaking as if rubber prosthetics.
- Citas
[Dr. Ashton is horrified to discover Elizabeth has turned monster, killing Stella:]
Dr. Gregory Ashton: Stella! STELLA!
Elizabeth Warren/The Monster: Your Brando needs work, darling.
- ConexionesReferenced in Splatterhouse (1988)
- Bandas sonorasNice Boy
Written and Performed by Poison Dolly's
Selecciones populares
- How long is The Rejuvenator?Con tecnología de Alexa