Adicionar um enredo no seu idiomaIn a 19th century village, a young aristocrat suffering from a terminal disease finds herself being drawn to the underground world of vampires and their strange rituals.In a 19th century village, a young aristocrat suffering from a terminal disease finds herself being drawn to the underground world of vampires and their strange rituals.In a 19th century village, a young aristocrat suffering from a terminal disease finds herself being drawn to the underground world of vampires and their strange rituals.
- Direção
- Roteiristas
- Artistas
Carme Contreras
- Mujer de Patrick
- (as Carmen Contreras)
Toni de Mosul
- Cura
- (as Antonio De Mossul)
Avaliações em destaque
I have immensely enjoyed some of director Leon Klimovsky's horror films, but this one is too melodramatic to be a good horror film. It concerns a woman (Emma Cohen) falling in love with an aristocratic-type vampire and the tragedy that ensues. There is one effective scene in a cemetary, but even such scenes as this are shot too dark to really be of any merit. A missed opporitunity; it could have been much better.
(1975) The Night of the Walking Dead/ Strange Love of the Vampires/ El extraño amor de los vampiros
(In Spanish with English subtitles)
HORROR
It regards the controversy of burying of a female corpse, between the doctor, Patrick (Lorenzo Robledo) and the rest of the village. The religious village before they bury the female corpse want to stick a stake into her while the doctor is forbidding the practice altogether he believes it is sacrilegious. The doctor's wife tries to persuade her doctor husband to get involve, but he refuses to listen. And by the time night happens we then see three vampires walk into the middle of the night and go to her burial just so they can pull the spike out of her chest. It is then she becomes alive again and walk along with them to vampires chambers. The next scene has the Dr. Patrick arriving to another patient, this time he arrives to serve to a wealthy family and he is treating Catherine (Emma Cohen) and that the lady who was buried at the opening who walks among with the other vampires happens to be her sister, Mariam (Amparo Climent).
Again, this is another one of those unique vampire movies where viewers are supposed to feel sympathetic towards them when they are simply vampires who do not turn into bats, but act around like ghouls, and still continue to kill people. Catherine had a love interest named Jean (Baringo Jordan) but he does not even want to see her at all as the reason is because he says he is afraid of her. As a result of that response viewers do not want to have sympathy for her anymore. What the movie does do instead is to make the head vampire, Rudolph de Winberg (Carlos Ballesteros) to be much more considerate and caring to the well being to Catherine than some of the human characters. The fact of the matter is that they still killed people, and instead of burning their corpses that did work, they would then try a different method that did not work for long. That scene alone was a little asinine when the villagers went to the grave site. I can't believe how many times I yawned while I was watching scenes like that and then as soon as a topless scene comes up is when I finally took notice.
It regards the controversy of burying of a female corpse, between the doctor, Patrick (Lorenzo Robledo) and the rest of the village. The religious village before they bury the female corpse want to stick a stake into her while the doctor is forbidding the practice altogether he believes it is sacrilegious. The doctor's wife tries to persuade her doctor husband to get involve, but he refuses to listen. And by the time night happens we then see three vampires walk into the middle of the night and go to her burial just so they can pull the spike out of her chest. It is then she becomes alive again and walk along with them to vampires chambers. The next scene has the Dr. Patrick arriving to another patient, this time he arrives to serve to a wealthy family and he is treating Catherine (Emma Cohen) and that the lady who was buried at the opening who walks among with the other vampires happens to be her sister, Mariam (Amparo Climent).
Again, this is another one of those unique vampire movies where viewers are supposed to feel sympathetic towards them when they are simply vampires who do not turn into bats, but act around like ghouls, and still continue to kill people. Catherine had a love interest named Jean (Baringo Jordan) but he does not even want to see her at all as the reason is because he says he is afraid of her. As a result of that response viewers do not want to have sympathy for her anymore. What the movie does do instead is to make the head vampire, Rudolph de Winberg (Carlos Ballesteros) to be much more considerate and caring to the well being to Catherine than some of the human characters. The fact of the matter is that they still killed people, and instead of burning their corpses that did work, they would then try a different method that did not work for long. That scene alone was a little asinine when the villagers went to the grave site. I can't believe how many times I yawned while I was watching scenes like that and then as soon as a topless scene comes up is when I finally took notice.
I saw this film under the more appropriate title The Strange Love of the Vampires. It is mostly a Gothic love story, although it took this viewer some time to figure that out.
A small, 18th Century village has had a rash of strange deaths. The villagers believe the deaths are the work of vampires. A progressive doctor, at first, laughs at the villagers' superstitions (like staying away from an abandoned castle and driving a stake through the heart of a corpse). Just when the viewer is convinced that the doctor is the protagonist, the film's focus switches to one of his patients, the sickly Catherine (Emma Cohen). Rejected by her beloved, lonely Catherine is left in the care of servants when her parents go away. Then, one night, a count Rudolph appears asking for shelter. The two hit it off, but the count may not be human.
The Strange Love of the Vampires/Night of the Walking Dead remains a hard film to categorize. The story is very typical and more fitting for a film made a decade earlier. There is probably too much love and not enough blood for many fans of 70's horror. On the other hand, director Leon Klimovsky provides some obligatory T&A and a couple scenes reminiscent of his more explicit outings with Paul Naschy (the vampire party is the highlight). All of which might not set well with those looking for more old fashioned scares.
The Strange Love of the Vampires is not essential viewing. One watches with only mild interest. On the other hand, the film is certainly not painful to set through. The ending even surprised this viewer (although it is in keeping with what came before). Euro-horror completists with reserved expectations might like it.
A small, 18th Century village has had a rash of strange deaths. The villagers believe the deaths are the work of vampires. A progressive doctor, at first, laughs at the villagers' superstitions (like staying away from an abandoned castle and driving a stake through the heart of a corpse). Just when the viewer is convinced that the doctor is the protagonist, the film's focus switches to one of his patients, the sickly Catherine (Emma Cohen). Rejected by her beloved, lonely Catherine is left in the care of servants when her parents go away. Then, one night, a count Rudolph appears asking for shelter. The two hit it off, but the count may not be human.
The Strange Love of the Vampires/Night of the Walking Dead remains a hard film to categorize. The story is very typical and more fitting for a film made a decade earlier. There is probably too much love and not enough blood for many fans of 70's horror. On the other hand, director Leon Klimovsky provides some obligatory T&A and a couple scenes reminiscent of his more explicit outings with Paul Naschy (the vampire party is the highlight). All of which might not set well with those looking for more old fashioned scares.
The Strange Love of the Vampires is not essential viewing. One watches with only mild interest. On the other hand, the film is certainly not painful to set through. The ending even surprised this viewer (although it is in keeping with what came before). Euro-horror completists with reserved expectations might like it.
Delirously, delicious Spanish vamp-opera!!
Don't know if Neil Jordan ever has seen this one.
but the similarities are striking, with the showing of the "alternate" vampire society.
But this one is rather more enjoyable than Ho'woods multi X $$$$$$$$$$ X hype (and so called "clever" scripts".
Leading girl is just so neck-bitingly juice nice,
how can you blame an aging, lonely count? With nice, lush cinematography (or photos as the credits claim),
super lovely 70s girls, nice atmosphere, and with the sort of dubbing you've come to expect and love for a good piece of 70's Eurotrash (way off).
Don't know if Neil Jordan ever has seen this one.
but the similarities are striking, with the showing of the "alternate" vampire society.
But this one is rather more enjoyable than Ho'woods multi X $$$$$$$$$$ X hype (and so called "clever" scripts".
Leading girl is just so neck-bitingly juice nice,
how can you blame an aging, lonely count? With nice, lush cinematography (or photos as the credits claim),
super lovely 70s girls, nice atmosphere, and with the sort of dubbing you've come to expect and love for a good piece of 70's Eurotrash (way off).
León Klimovsky's swan song to the vampire genre proves that even experienced practitioners can stumble when passion wanes. This Spanish gothic horror exercise feels more like a perfunctory farewell than a meaningful exploration of its titular strange love. The film's atmosphere, while appropriately moody with its 19th-century village setting, lacks the visceral punch needed to elevate standard vampire folklore into something memorable.
Cinematographer Miguel F. Mila captures the requisite shadows and candlelit interiors with competent if uninspired framing. The visual language speaks fluent gothic - crumbling stone walls, mist-shrouded landscapes, and appropriately decrepit castle chambers - yet never transcends genre conventions to create genuinely unsettling imagery. Colors remain muted throughout, lending a pallid quality that suits the subject matter but fails to inject visual dynamism into proceedings that desperately need it.
Emma Cohen delivers the film's most compelling performance as Catherine, the terminally ill aristocrat drawn to vampiric salvation. Her portrayal captures both the desperation of someone facing mortality and the dangerous allure of forbidden transformation. Cohen navigates the character's psychological journey with sufficient conviction, though the script provides limited opportunities for deeper exploration. Carlos Ballesteros as Count Rudolph von Winberg brings standard vampire gravitas to his role, complete with the expected theatrical flourishes and predatory charm, but his interpretation feels recycled from countless similar portrayals without adding fresh nuance.
The supporting cast, including Viky Lussón and Rafael Hernández, provides adequate backing without distinguishing themselves. Their performances serve the plot machinery without memorable individual moments, contributing to the film's overall sense of going through familiar motions rather than exploring new territory.
Klimovsky's direction maintains professional competence throughout, keeping the narrative moving at a reasonable pace and ensuring technical elements function properly. However, the film lacks the directorial passion that distinguished his earlier vampire efforts. The staging feels mechanical, as if following a well-worn template rather than discovering fresh angles on eternal themes of love, death, and transformation.
The production values reflect the mid-1970s Spanish horror industry's limitations. Sets appear modest but serviceable, costumes hit period-appropriate notes without exceptional detail, and special effects remain minimal. While these constraints don't necessarily doom the production, they require compensatory strengths in storytelling or performance that never quite materialize.
Cinematographer Miguel F. Mila captures the requisite shadows and candlelit interiors with competent if uninspired framing. The visual language speaks fluent gothic - crumbling stone walls, mist-shrouded landscapes, and appropriately decrepit castle chambers - yet never transcends genre conventions to create genuinely unsettling imagery. Colors remain muted throughout, lending a pallid quality that suits the subject matter but fails to inject visual dynamism into proceedings that desperately need it.
Emma Cohen delivers the film's most compelling performance as Catherine, the terminally ill aristocrat drawn to vampiric salvation. Her portrayal captures both the desperation of someone facing mortality and the dangerous allure of forbidden transformation. Cohen navigates the character's psychological journey with sufficient conviction, though the script provides limited opportunities for deeper exploration. Carlos Ballesteros as Count Rudolph von Winberg brings standard vampire gravitas to his role, complete with the expected theatrical flourishes and predatory charm, but his interpretation feels recycled from countless similar portrayals without adding fresh nuance.
The supporting cast, including Viky Lussón and Rafael Hernández, provides adequate backing without distinguishing themselves. Their performances serve the plot machinery without memorable individual moments, contributing to the film's overall sense of going through familiar motions rather than exploring new territory.
Klimovsky's direction maintains professional competence throughout, keeping the narrative moving at a reasonable pace and ensuring technical elements function properly. However, the film lacks the directorial passion that distinguished his earlier vampire efforts. The staging feels mechanical, as if following a well-worn template rather than discovering fresh angles on eternal themes of love, death, and transformation.
The production values reflect the mid-1970s Spanish horror industry's limitations. Sets appear modest but serviceable, costumes hit period-appropriate notes without exceptional detail, and special effects remain minimal. While these constraints don't necessarily doom the production, they require compensatory strengths in storytelling or performance that never quite materialize.
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Detalhes
- Tempo de duração1 hora 30 minutos
- Mixagem de som
- Proporção
- 1.85 : 1
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What is the French language plot outline for El extraño amor de los vampiros (1975)?
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