Aggiungi una trama nella tua linguaAging actress hires scientist developing youth serum involving brain fluid extraction. She takes it, but unintended consequences transform her into a homicidal creature.Aging actress hires scientist developing youth serum involving brain fluid extraction. She takes it, but unintended consequences transform her into a homicidal creature.Aging actress hires scientist developing youth serum involving brain fluid extraction. She takes it, but unintended consequences transform her into a homicidal creature.
- Regia
- Sceneggiatura
- Star
John Marcus Powell
- Dr. Germaine
- (as Marcus Powell)
Louis Homyak
- Tony the Guard
- (as Louis F. Homyak)
Recensioni in evidenza
A scientist is tasked to create a 'rejuvenating' serum with a huge investment from a has-been star. When a break in the development was discovered, a youth obsessed star tries it without care AND discover a much more scarier after-effect AND pushed to insanity.
That was ok.
I really watched this simply because I want to watch see the comparison against the Substance. Its practically similar in that an aging star drinks a somewhat untested product that has out-of-this-world repercussion to its host. Its rife in similarity but fundamentally it differs in how it tells its story.
This film is very focused on the Monster of it all. Its more interested how awful she is as a monster and loses any kind of satire or commentary that the Substance really succeeds on. I mean this has a great make-up special effect too BUT the only characterization the star has is that she wants to be young again and work - which is fine but she uses her new found youth to be able to hang around the youth of time. Its quite a weird disjunct to her original position.
I also think that this solidly putting the blame towards her is sad. Initially, I posit the lack of a male antagonist is the reason I did not like how this story is told BUT the more I think about it, I just felt that there is something missing in how this film put blame. I felt that it was more complicated and there's no easy pass for everyone involved. I think it condemns the star far too much for my own liking.
And ultimately, i think it did not fully just developed certain characters to make us care for their plight. Its not bad AND I see where it succeeds but it clearly flawed.
Soft Recommendation.
That was ok.
I really watched this simply because I want to watch see the comparison against the Substance. Its practically similar in that an aging star drinks a somewhat untested product that has out-of-this-world repercussion to its host. Its rife in similarity but fundamentally it differs in how it tells its story.
This film is very focused on the Monster of it all. Its more interested how awful she is as a monster and loses any kind of satire or commentary that the Substance really succeeds on. I mean this has a great make-up special effect too BUT the only characterization the star has is that she wants to be young again and work - which is fine but she uses her new found youth to be able to hang around the youth of time. Its quite a weird disjunct to her original position.
I also think that this solidly putting the blame towards her is sad. Initially, I posit the lack of a male antagonist is the reason I did not like how this story is told BUT the more I think about it, I just felt that there is something missing in how this film put blame. I felt that it was more complicated and there's no easy pass for everyone involved. I think it condemns the star far too much for my own liking.
And ultimately, i think it did not fully just developed certain characters to make us care for their plight. Its not bad AND I see where it succeeds but it clearly flawed.
Soft Recommendation.
A rich actress who has gotten too old for leading roles employs a scientist who is working on a formula for eternal youth. The formula involves withdrawing certain fluids from the human brain. She takes the serum, but its unforseen side effects turn her into a murderous monster. Brian Thomas Jone's "The rejuvenator" is a surprisingly gory and ambitious horror outing, with a ambitious plot and some excellent make-up effects. Granted, it lacked down-to-Earth characters, but if you liked films like "Society" and "Re-animator", the The Rejuvenator may be up your alley. The final transformation sequence is astounding!
Would you risk everything to be young again? Would you willingly be a guinea pig in an experiment to reverse ageing? Juvenatix's answer to this is yes. And the result is a Jekyll and Hyde type tale where the guinea pig in question keeps changing from a young female into a hideous monster with an urge to kill. The special effects in this movie are well worth seeing , especially the part were she transforms for the last time. Lowlight : Attractive lab assistant gets the top of her skull knocked off.
Rejuvenatrix isn't really a proper horror film in my eyes, but it makes a nice change from the norm and is entertaining throughout. The story involves an old wealthy woman who wants to be young again, and is investing vast amounts of money in a "serum" that will make her young. She gets her wish, but the catch is that after the serum wears off, she is transformed into an old hag with a taste for blood. There are some respectable gore scenes such as a woman's brain being pulled from her head, and a nurse splattered against a wall. But the tone of Rejuvenatrix is different from a slasher film so these scenes don't seem as cool as they normally would. Still this is thoroughly entertaining, it never really gets boring, and there's some decent gore - what more can you ask for? It also provides some interesting views on the debate of 'growing old gracefully'.
I wouldn't recommend this to slasher fans, but those who love all styles of horror film should enjoy it.
I wouldn't recommend this to slasher fans, but those who love all styles of horror film should enjoy it.
"The Rejuvenator" is a pleasantly old-fashioned horror film, while still integrating today's requisite dose of elaborate makeup effects and gore. It is variously known as "Rejuvenatrix" (title displayed on print) and for foreign markets, "Juvenatrix".
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.
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.
Lo sapevi?
- QuizVivian Lanko's debut.
- BlooperWhen the woman is running around as a creature, you can see her extended fingers are wiggling and shaking as if rubber prosthetics.
- Citazioni
[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.
- ConnessioniReferenced in Splatterhouse (1988)
- Colonne sonoreNice Boy
Written and Performed by Poison Dolly's
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