NOTE IMDb
7,4/10
834
MA NOTE
Cette reprise "féministe" du classique M de Fritz Lang se concentre sur les mères d'enfants traqués par un pédophile dérangé.Cette reprise "féministe" du classique M de Fritz Lang se concentre sur les mères d'enfants traqués par un pédophile dérangé.Cette reprise "féministe" du classique M de Fritz Lang se concentre sur les mères d'enfants traqués par un pédophile dérangé.
- Réalisation
- Scénario
- Casting principal
Avis à la une
A remake- though not exact - of 'M' has a Peter Lorre-like actor as a pedophile murderer (none of that on-screen fortunately). The cinematography is good - especially the ending scenes in the sewers, 'borrowed' from the Third Man.
A madman is loose in Buenos Aries, kidnapping and murdering young children and in general baffling the police. There is a sub-plot, the prosecutor has an unhealthy interest in the only witness to a childs abduction.
All this may have been cutting edge in the Argentine post-Peron era, but unlike the first few reviewers I see nothing remarkable here. The acting is less than average Hollywood of the same time, the story was told better before and after this. And you have to suffer through sub-titles also😁
A madman is loose in Buenos Aries, kidnapping and murdering young children and in general baffling the police. There is a sub-plot, the prosecutor has an unhealthy interest in the only witness to a childs abduction.
All this may have been cutting edge in the Argentine post-Peron era, but unlike the first few reviewers I see nothing remarkable here. The acting is less than average Hollywood of the same time, the story was told better before and after this. And you have to suffer through sub-titles also😁
10fwdixon
Here is an Argentine noir film (English subtitles) that is a take-off of Fritz Lang's masterpiece "M" with Peter Lorre, though not a scene-by-scene remake like the US version with David Wayne. Well worth viewing when you have an hour and a half to kill.
Excellent, expressive cinematography, good acting and the pacing of the film is perfect.
Highly recommend.
Excellent, expressive cinematography, good acting and the pacing of the film is perfect.
Highly recommend.
When I first saw this film on Turner Classic Movies' schedule for October 29, two days before Hallowe'en, I wondered, "Why are they showing one of those cheap, terrible Mexican horror movies in Eddie Muller's time slot?" I was wrong on all countsL the film turned out to be more noir than horror, a clever reworking of Fritz Lang's "M," and a film or real quality and power in its own right. Also it's from Argentina, not Mexico. Eddie Muller stressed the feminist aspects of the tale, particularly the appearance of strong women characters (ironically, Lang's "M" contains virtually no women even though a woman, Thea von Harbou, wrote it). Writer-director Román Vinoly Barreto manages to work in references not only to "M" but other classic films like "The Man Who Knew Too Much," "The Third Man," and even "Casablanca" (early on, when they're just starting the search for the child-killer, the police say, "Round up all the usual suspects"), but Barreto ably fuses those movies into his plot so he seems like a director with a true love of his predecessors instead of some kid saying, "Look at how many movies I've seen!" A truly great film, blessedly rediscovered (thank you, Hollywood Foreign Press Association - the much-maligned group that hosted the Golden Globes - for funding its restoration) and ready to take its place as one of the classics of the film noir era.
I came across this film on You Tube yesterday and was surprised to find that it was a remake of Fritz Lang's M (1931) shot in South America.
The title translate as THE BLACK VAMPIRE. M was released in South America as THE VAMPIRE OF DUSSELDORF so the title makes sense there even tho there is no vampire. This is not a scene by scene remake like the remake made in the United States in 1951.
The film has a dark moody black and white atmosphere like an older movie would have. The actor playing the killer is pretty good. In one scene he takes the daughter of a friend to the carnival and has to fight his urge to kill her.
The title translate as THE BLACK VAMPIRE. M was released in South America as THE VAMPIRE OF DUSSELDORF so the title makes sense there even tho there is no vampire. This is not a scene by scene remake like the remake made in the United States in 1951.
The film has a dark moody black and white atmosphere like an older movie would have. The actor playing the killer is pretty good. In one scene he takes the daughter of a friend to the carnival and has to fight his urge to kill her.
Pleased to join my six IMDB colleagues below in praise of this very fine Argentinian remake of "M"...with a generous portion of "Third Man" and a dash of "Freaks" thrown in for good measure in that darkly magnificent, climactic scene. Is it better than Lang's original, as Eddie Muller intimated in his intro? Not sure, since it has been many a moonlit and moonless night since I have seen the German masterpiece and I would hesitate to place anyone above Peter Lorre in the tortured, oleaginous category (though Nathan Pinzon comes awfully close). But I will opine that the loss of this film's director, Ramon Vinoly Barretto, in his mid fifties was, in my opinion, quite tragic. Give it an A minus.
Le saviez-vous
- AnecdotesAmalia's daughter is portrayed by a young actress using the professional name Gogó. She is actually the daughter of director Román Viñoly Barreto. In her acting career, she appears in only a few films, all directed by her father. She would go on to receive a Doctorate in Medicine and then a Doctorate in Psychiatry.
- ConnexionsFeatured in Latin Noir (2021)
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- How long is The Black Vampire?Alimenté par Alexa
Détails
- Durée
- 1h 30min(90 min)
- Couleur
- Mixage
- Rapport de forme
- 1.37 : 1
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