Adicionar um enredo no seu idiomaSatan saves a man from death on condition he become his disciple (and, as it turns out, a hairy murderous beast).Satan saves a man from death on condition he become his disciple (and, as it turns out, a hairy murderous beast).Satan saves a man from death on condition he become his disciple (and, as it turns out, a hairy murderous beast).
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First off, the summary is inaccurate. Satan doesn't save the man's life, the man becomes a spirit of evil that inhabits people and awake the latent evil in those around him.
Second, having seen this movie and all of the episodes of SCTV with Mary Charlotte Wilcox, it is obvious these are two different actresses. Shape of the face, eyes, their voices, everything is different. Also, no one else but Mary Charlotte Wilcox could be Idela Voudrey and that includes this Mary Wilcox.
I like this movie for some reason. It tends to get a little slow but it actually has a nice sort of message at the end when Langdon finally meets his fate, something he longed to experience for decades as a spirit of evil.
John Ashley stars and he seems like he is doing a kind of Elvis impersonation at least with the hair when he isn't the beast. Satan transforms him into a murderous creature put of punishment because of his desire to be an individual again. A temptation that strikes him when the devil allows him to inhabit this man with his own face. The change causes him to lose focus on ruining the people around him to trying to spare them that pain. It could have been more than just a monster movie but it tries....
Second, having seen this movie and all of the episodes of SCTV with Mary Charlotte Wilcox, it is obvious these are two different actresses. Shape of the face, eyes, their voices, everything is different. Also, no one else but Mary Charlotte Wilcox could be Idela Voudrey and that includes this Mary Wilcox.
I like this movie for some reason. It tends to get a little slow but it actually has a nice sort of message at the end when Langdon finally meets his fate, something he longed to experience for decades as a spirit of evil.
John Ashley stars and he seems like he is doing a kind of Elvis impersonation at least with the hair when he isn't the beast. Satan transforms him into a murderous creature put of punishment because of his desire to be an individual again. A temptation that strikes him when the devil allows him to inhabit this man with his own face. The change causes him to lose focus on ruining the people around him to trying to spare them that pain. It could have been more than just a monster movie but it tries....
After recently finding a copy of this on DVD, I brought it home and was amazed to find this was everything I was looking for and a whole lot more. Filmed in the Philippines and directed by Eddie Romero, I was horrified/enlightened by its blasphemous blend of cannibalism, comedy, and deals with the devil gone bad. John Ashley is excellent as one of the most frightening, gruesome, and demented-looking monsters I've ever seen. Entertaining as can be. For me, the only thing scarier than this movie is the fact that I almost never got to see it! Great flick!
Vic Diaz as the almost comedic Satan lends this Filippino horror film an eccentric flavour that saves it from total oblivion. Ashley isn't bad either as a damned murderer, inhabiting the body of an American businessman, forced by Satan to endure of life of evil, but when guilt gets the better of him, Satan resorts to dirty tricks in order to compel him to serve. The transformation he undergoes to that of a hairy beast with super-human strength causes the local police to suspect they have something out of the ordinary with which to contend.
Ashley plays the tortured soul well enough for the film's limited scope, and he's ably assisted by the statuesque beauty Mary Wilcox as his neglected, but loyal wife. Wilcox has a few risqué scenes in modest attire (although sometimes also clad in a zebra outfit), but it's debatable as to whether that's indeed her in the bizarrely photographed love-making scene. Fans will also recognise the prolific Eddie Garcia as a detective (he also directed), and American Ken Metcalfe ("Up From the Depths") in a minor supporting role playing Ashley's concerned brother.
There's not much horror, and what there is can often be too dark to discern, but the film does improve after a slow start at least achieving mediocre status, including the witty banter of Diaz's omnipotence, and equally, moronic dialogue from the sultry Wilcox. There's a couple of twists (e.g. the banished blind man with whom Ashley forms an alliance) that generate some interest and the climax in the tall grass lends some sympathy to Ashley's condemned character, but don't expect too much for your time.
Ashley plays the tortured soul well enough for the film's limited scope, and he's ably assisted by the statuesque beauty Mary Wilcox as his neglected, but loyal wife. Wilcox has a few risqué scenes in modest attire (although sometimes also clad in a zebra outfit), but it's debatable as to whether that's indeed her in the bizarrely photographed love-making scene. Fans will also recognise the prolific Eddie Garcia as a detective (he also directed), and American Ken Metcalfe ("Up From the Depths") in a minor supporting role playing Ashley's concerned brother.
There's not much horror, and what there is can often be too dark to discern, but the film does improve after a slow start at least achieving mediocre status, including the witty banter of Diaz's omnipotence, and equally, moronic dialogue from the sultry Wilcox. There's a couple of twists (e.g. the banished blind man with whom Ashley forms an alliance) that generate some interest and the climax in the tall grass lends some sympathy to Ashley's condemned character, but don't expect too much for your time.
Well, you do not have to worry about a yellow night in this film. I was thinking that perhaps there would be a full moon or something giving the night a yellowish tint which unleashes the beast, but no, the only yellow is the smoke that sometimes accompanies Satan when he shows up. This is just one of those films that tries really hard to do something good, but ends up making a film that is a bit confusing as you begin to figure out it is supposed to be kind of like an evil Quantum Leap thing, but you never really know what Langdon the main character of the story is supposed to be doing when he assumes others identities.
The film starts out in a bit of confusing fashion as a man is apparently on the run and a woman is gunned down on the way of bringing him food. He is starving and makes the mistake of eating nearby grapes, which are not actually grapes as they are poisonous. Satan comes along and taunts the man and the man agrees to do Satan's bidding and Satan rewards the man with rotten meat. The man is apparently put into other people's bodies to do stuff and he randomly becomes a monster, but who knows why. The man he is through most of the film has a wife that totally loves him, apparently more than her actual husband and a blind man offers him aid, but can he get out of Satan's clutches!?!
Not all that great, thinking this film was made in the Philippines. The cast is mainly Asian; however, the man guy, his wife and brother are all English actors. The gore in the film is light and revolves around him turning into the monster which is sort of like a werewolf, but not really and there is never a real reason he turns into this beast. Though he is a beast in daytime too, so one of those titles that just does not fit with what is going on.
So, not totally horrible, but too much of the film is a bit lacking in the plot department. Why does the guy even turn into a monster? Has he turned into a monster in any of his other stops in his service to Satan and what exactly is he supposed to be doing in these other bodies? You get some kills and some cool scenes, but not enough to become a good film, just one worth watching to try and figure out what is going on.
The film starts out in a bit of confusing fashion as a man is apparently on the run and a woman is gunned down on the way of bringing him food. He is starving and makes the mistake of eating nearby grapes, which are not actually grapes as they are poisonous. Satan comes along and taunts the man and the man agrees to do Satan's bidding and Satan rewards the man with rotten meat. The man is apparently put into other people's bodies to do stuff and he randomly becomes a monster, but who knows why. The man he is through most of the film has a wife that totally loves him, apparently more than her actual husband and a blind man offers him aid, but can he get out of Satan's clutches!?!
Not all that great, thinking this film was made in the Philippines. The cast is mainly Asian; however, the man guy, his wife and brother are all English actors. The gore in the film is light and revolves around him turning into the monster which is sort of like a werewolf, but not really and there is never a real reason he turns into this beast. Though he is a beast in daytime too, so one of those titles that just does not fit with what is going on.
So, not totally horrible, but too much of the film is a bit lacking in the plot department. Why does the guy even turn into a monster? Has he turned into a monster in any of his other stops in his service to Satan and what exactly is he supposed to be doing in these other bodies? You get some kills and some cool scenes, but not enough to become a good film, just one worth watching to try and figure out what is going on.
Beast of the Yellow Night features a hideous man-monster that tears its victims to shreds, but the real horror is a semi-naked Vic Diaz. The rotund Filipino actor appears at the beginning of the film as Satan wearing nothing but a loincloth (my eyes!), promising dying army deserter Joseph Langdon (John Ashley) immortality if he agrees to become a servant of evil. Unperturbed by Vic's lack of clothing, Joseph agrees and is 'reborn' in several bodies over the years, his mission to awaken the evil in the people that he meets. Langdon's latest guise is that of facially disfigured accident victim Philip Rogers, who, having been pronounced dead, amazes everyone by coming back to life with a brand new face (his doctor is so shocked that he promptly has a heart attack).
Phil's sexy blonde wife Julia (Mary Charlotte Wilcox) takes her hubby home but notices that he now behaves rather strangely. But it's not just his personality that has changed: from time to time, Phil/Langdon physically transforms into a horrible bloodthirsty creature with rubber claws and great big jaws.
The first of producer Roger Corman's movies to be shot in the Philippines during the '70s, this clunker from director Eddie Romero is frequently confusing (what Satan has to gain from turning his servant into a killer beast is never explained) and pretty dull for the most part, even when Ashley is in monster mode. There are a couple of brief gory moments (a disembowelment and some slashed faces), and Wilcox sheds her clothes (or her body double does--it's hard to tell), but for the most part the film is painfully slow, especially when the creature is given refuge by an old, blind bandit (an idea lifted from Frankenstein?). The ending sees the monster and the blind man trapped by the army in a burning field of grass, Phil/Langdon finally shot and killed even though he was bullet-proof only moments earlier.
Phil's sexy blonde wife Julia (Mary Charlotte Wilcox) takes her hubby home but notices that he now behaves rather strangely. But it's not just his personality that has changed: from time to time, Phil/Langdon physically transforms into a horrible bloodthirsty creature with rubber claws and great big jaws.
The first of producer Roger Corman's movies to be shot in the Philippines during the '70s, this clunker from director Eddie Romero is frequently confusing (what Satan has to gain from turning his servant into a killer beast is never explained) and pretty dull for the most part, even when Ashley is in monster mode. There are a couple of brief gory moments (a disembowelment and some slashed faces), and Wilcox sheds her clothes (or her body double does--it's hard to tell), but for the most part the film is painfully slow, especially when the creature is given refuge by an old, blind bandit (an idea lifted from Frankenstein?). The ending sees the monster and the blind man trapped by the army in a burning field of grass, Phil/Langdon finally shot and killed even though he was bullet-proof only moments earlier.
Você sabia?
- CuriosidadesThe poster for this film was on Garth's bedroom wall in Wayne's World.
- Citações
Julia Rogers: Who are you?
Joseph Langdon: As far as you're concerned, I am and can only be... whoever, whatever you think I am.
- ConexõesEdited into The Beast of the Yellow Night (2014)
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- How long is Beast of the Yellow Night?Fornecido pela Alexa
Detalhes
- Tempo de duração1 hora 27 minutos
- Mixagem de som
- Proporção
- 1.85 : 1
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By what name was Beast of the Yellow Night (1971) officially released in Canada in English?
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