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El vampiro sangriento

  • 1962
  • 1 h 50 min
AVALIAÇÃO DA IMDb
5,2/10
287
SUA AVALIAÇÃO
El vampiro sangriento (1962)
Horror

Adicionar um enredo no seu idiomaCount Cagliostro, whose family has tried for generations to rid the world of vampires, instructs his daughter and her fiance to protect several valuable documents.Count Cagliostro, whose family has tried for generations to rid the world of vampires, instructs his daughter and her fiance to protect several valuable documents.Count Cagliostro, whose family has tried for generations to rid the world of vampires, instructs his daughter and her fiance to protect several valuable documents.

  • Direção
    • Miguel Morayta
  • Roteirista
    • Miguel Morayta
  • Artistas
    • Begoña Palacios
    • Erna Martha Bauman
    • Raúl Farell
  • Veja as informações de produção no IMDbPro
  • AVALIAÇÃO DA IMDb
    5,2/10
    287
    SUA AVALIAÇÃO
    • Direção
      • Miguel Morayta
    • Roteirista
      • Miguel Morayta
    • Artistas
      • Begoña Palacios
      • Erna Martha Bauman
      • Raúl Farell
    • 13Avaliações de usuários
    • 15Avaliações da crítica
  • Veja as informações de produção no IMDbPro
  • Veja as informações de produção no IMDbPro
  • Fotos3

    Ver pôster
    Ver pôster
    Ver pôster

    Elenco principal10

    Editar
    Begoña Palacios
    Begoña Palacios
    • Ines Cagliostro
    Erna Martha Bauman
    Erna Martha Bauman
    • Countess Eugenia Frankenhausen
    Raúl Farell
    • Dr. Riccardo Peisser
    Bertha Moss
    Bertha Moss
    • Frau Hildegarde
    Carlos Agostí
    Carlos Agostí
    • Count Siegfried von Frankenhausen
    Pancho Córdova
    Pancho Córdova
    • Justus
    • (as Francisco A. Cordova)
    Antonio Raxel
    • Count Valsamo de Cagliostro
    Enrique Lucero
    Enrique Lucero
    • Lazaro
    Lupe Carriles
    Lupe Carriles
    • Lupe, the innkeeper
    Nathanael León
    Nathanael León
    • Torture Chamber Master
    • (não creditado)
    • Direção
      • Miguel Morayta
    • Roteirista
      • Miguel Morayta
    • Elenco e equipe completos
    • Produção, bilheteria e muito mais no IMDbPro

    Avaliações de usuários13

    5,2287
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    10

    Avaliações em destaque

    5Uriah43

    The Vampire "Count Frankenhausen"

    This film begins on a dark, foggy night with two men and a woman in search of a body that has been hung on a tree and left to die alongside a rural road. Although the sight is horrifying to them, what they are most interested in is the mandrake plant that has grown underneath the body hovering above it. However, just before they can dig it up, they see a carriage coming through the fog and they immediately take cover behind a tree. To their astonishment, neither the carriage or the horse pulling it makes any noise and the driver looks like Death himself. And then, just as quickly as it came, it disappears in the fog further on down the road. Obviously shaken by this experience, they hurriedly dig up the mandrake and head back to a large house where "Count Valsamo de Cagliostro" (Antonio Raxel) has been patiently waiting for them. We then learn that Count Cagliostro has dedicated his life to hunting vampires and assisting him is his daughter "Ines Cagliostro" (Begoña Palacios), her fiancé "Dr. Riccardo Peisser" (Raul Farell) and the Count's loyal butler "Justus" (Pancho Cordova). Likewise, it is also revealed that their quest for the mandrake root was necessary for his research on identifying vampires-living or dead. What Count Cagliostro doesn't realize, however, is that the one vampire he has been diligently trying to locate by the name of "Count Siegfried von Frankenhausen" (Carlos Agosti) has recently purchased a house not far away and just happened to be the passenger in the deathly quiet carriage that very night. Now, rather than reveal any more, I will just say that I had previously seen several Mexican horror films and after reading a generally positive review on those pertaining to vampires, I decided to satisfy my curiosity and see for myself. To that effect, I was generally pleased for the most part as the plot flowed rather smoothly and the acting was quite solid as well. There was, however, one particular flaw in that the object used to simulate a flying bat looked more like a flying bunny rabbit instead-and this completely ruined the overall effect. I was also somewhat surprised by the ending but after a bit of research I discovered that there is a sequel titled "Invasion of the Vampires" which apparently takes up where this film ends. Be that as it may, in spite of the particular flaw just mentioned, I don't consider this to be a bad film by any means and I have rated it accordingly. Average.
    4BA_Harrison

    The Bloody Boring Vampire.

    The impressively eerie opening scene of The Bloody Vampire—a creepy black carriage being driven by a grim reaper-style character across a foggy landscape while bells toll and wolves howl—lays on the atmosphere thick and fast, and the splendidly spooky trappings continue unabated throughout this cheesy Mexican horror, leaving virtually no cliché left unturned. Unfortunately, despite the potential for this being a frightfully fun slice of Gothic excess, director Miguel Morayta undoes most of his good work with a terrible script that is overly convoluted when it comes to its vampiric lore and which features far too much dreary conversation.

    The occasional sight of evil Count Frankenhausen turning into a giant, hairy rubber bat with over-sized ears and fangs enlivens proceedings occasionally, and Latino beauty Begoña Palacios (second wife of Sam Peckinpah, no less) is easy on the eye as plucky undercover vampire hunter Ines, adding a little spiciness by briefly stripping to her corset and big 'ol bloomers, but overall the film is a frustratingly dull affair, one that all the shadowy corridors, caverns full of cobwebs, choral music, raging thunderstorms, secret passageways, and clocks chiming midnight in the world cannot save.

    3.5 out of 10, rounded up to 4 for IMDb.
    4Leofwine_draca

    Plodding Mexican vampire flick

    A fairly bog standard Gothic horror entry from Mexico, filmed at the Azteca studios with a strong foreboding atmosphere and some great production design. Expect to see a film filled with classic horror images: the spooky old castle and crypts; vampires rising from their coffins in a cave; oodles of dry ice masquerading as fog filling the screen with an eerie chill and sense of the weird. THE BLOODY VAMPIRE also boasts one of the best openings I've seen in a Mexican horror flick: it involves a carriage (driven by a skeleton!) riding slow-motion through a spooky old forest, making no noise whatsoever as it travels by. It's just a shame that the rest of the movie can't live up to this classic horror imagery.

    Instead, the film boasts smalltalk, smalltalk, and more smalltalk. Director Miguel Morayta doesn't seem to know what he's doing, as he films long static takes with little action or excitement to enliven them. Instead we get one long monotonously-dubbed scene after another which becomes a little wearing after a while. Conversations about a new method to kill vampires, boring romantic sub-plots between minor characters and even a discussion of the origins of coffee (!) threaten to drag this film right down to the ground and eventually lessen the entertainment value a great deal. Not so that the film is totally unwatchable, but it could have been a lot more successful with a little cutting here and there and a few more scenes of action to recommend it.

    The special effects employed by Morayta and his team are largely amusing, if limited. The sight of the giant rubber bat (with huge ears) flapping around the sets is a cheesy delight for the bad movie buff. Otherwise most of the effects are of the sound variety – the film is chock full of weird moans, chanting, creaking doors and eerie winds. The sound actually highlights the horror in a number of scenes and adds to the watchability of the film a great deal. Cast-wise, the unpleasant Count von Frankenhausen is played by Carlos Agosti as a sneering Bela Lugosi variation, complete with (added in) pin-prick lights in his eyes and the trick of shining normal lights on his eyes to make them more spellbinding, again originally used by Lugosi. But Agosti just comes off as a thoroughly nasty fellow rather than a truly evil bloodsucking vampire.

    Glamour content is added by the lovely Begona Palacios, as a purveyor of good who goes undercover as a maid and whose affections are hunted by the evil Frankenhausen (well, who wouldn't?). Bertha Moss is suitably hissable as the evil Frau Hildegarde but Raul Farell leaves a void as the uninteresting Doctor Peisser, supposedly the film's male lead. By far the best character is unlucky manservant Lazaro, who gets violently whipped by the Count for his insubordination. The biggest cheat of the film is there's no real ending; INVASION OF THE VAMPIRES, the superior sequel, followed.
    5evilskip

    Coffee break with Count Frankenhausen

    For my 100th commentary I picked this little film.Another south of the border flick snapped up for a few pesos by K Gordon Murray.According to some film books this film was hacked down from its original running time but not the dvd I watched.It could have used 15 minutes trimmed.I'll get to that in a moment.

    This film starts out great.A coach driven by a skeleton races noiselessly through the woods. Rather spooky.In it is the dreaded vampire Count Frankenhausen.When the Count gets to his home we're treated to more fog and spookiness.

    Then the yakking begins.One of the Count's idiot neighbors is his sworn enemy Count Cagliostro.They've lived nearby for some time and didn't even know it!Anyway Count Cagliostro babbles endlessly about a new method to kill vampires.It isn't even used in this film but is in the sequel, Invasion Of The Vampires.Then the Count Cagliostro goes to the capitol probably to filibuster and we don't thankfully see him until the end of the film.

    His daughter and doctor fiance discover that the evil Count lives nearby.So Anna goes undercover as a servant to the Countess there.For some reason the Count hasn't fanged his wife but fangs servant girls brought to him by the sadistic Frau Hildegard.Well Anna turns on Frankenhausen and off we go.

    But in the middle of the film the vampire and the doctor have a seemingly endless conversation about COFFEE!!ARRGGH!Cut this right out of the movie please!

    There is some real brutality here with the whipping of servants and one has his tongue cut out of his mouth.The last twenty minutes pick up the pace and we're treated to a nice chase and some spooky shots of the vampire.When the vampire changes into a bat however he looks like a vampiric Bugs Bunny.Rabbit ears are on that bad boy!

    In the end there is a climactic showdown in the cave of the vampires.

    All in all some of the spooky scenes save this movie.The soundtrack switches from choral music to jarring electronic weirdness which is creepy.Stay tuned for info on the sequel, Invasion Of The Vampires.
    9django-1

    fine gothic-horror film from Mexico

    This review is of the English-dubbed, K. Gordon Murray presentation of the film as THE BLOODY VAMPIRE. From the first frames--with a slowed-down horse-drawn carriage almost floating through the fog-shrouded trail, the soundtrack containing an eerie wind punctuated by a slow churchbell and wolf howling--you know you are in the hands of filmmakers who know how to capture a disturbing setting of gothic horror. While this film does have some slow talky moments, I would rate it among the finest vampire films of the 60s, equal to the best ones coming from Italy and the Philippines. Director Miguel Mortaya is a master.

    The SWV video (which may no longer be available, for legal reasons) is from a fine print, and contains the outlandish and LONG K. Gordon Murray spoken prologue with a swirling, headache-inducing spiral on the screen.

    If you were to buy only one of the K. Gordon Murray mexican horror imports, this may well be the one to buy. The film is so visually stunning that even those who dislike dubbing may be able to get past it here and let the film's shadowy images wash over them.

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    • Conexões
      Followed by La invasión de los vampiros (1963)

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    Detalhes

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    • Data de lançamento
      • 6 de setembro de 1962 (México)
    • País de origem
      • México
    • Idioma
      • Espanhol
    • Também conhecido como
      • The Bloody Vampire
    • Locações de filme
      • México
    • Empresas de produção
      • Atzeca
      • Internacional Sono Film S.A.
      • Tele Talia Films
    • Consulte mais créditos da empresa na IMDbPro

    Especificações técnicas

    Editar
    • Tempo de duração
      1 hora 50 minutos
    • Cor
      • Black and White
    • Proporção
      • 1.37 : 1

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