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Le baron vampire

Original title: La isla de la muerte
  • 1967
  • 1h 25m
IMDb RATING
4.5/10
415
YOUR RATING
Le baron vampire (1967)
HorrorSci-Fi

Baron von Weser keeps a menagerie of carnivorous plants, but takes great care of one particular specimen.Baron von Weser keeps a menagerie of carnivorous plants, but takes great care of one particular specimen.Baron von Weser keeps a menagerie of carnivorous plants, but takes great care of one particular specimen.

  • Director
    • Mel Welles
  • Writers
    • Mel Welles
    • Ernst Ritter von Theumer
    • Stephen Schmidt
  • Stars
    • Cameron Mitchell
    • Elisa Montés
    • Jorge Martín
  • See production info at IMDbPro
  • IMDb RATING
    4.5/10
    415
    YOUR RATING
    • Director
      • Mel Welles
    • Writers
      • Mel Welles
      • Ernst Ritter von Theumer
      • Stephen Schmidt
    • Stars
      • Cameron Mitchell
      • Elisa Montés
      • Jorge Martín
    • 19User reviews
    • 16Critic reviews
  • See production info at IMDbPro
  • See production info at IMDbPro
  • Photos4

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    Top cast9

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    Cameron Mitchell
    Cameron Mitchell
    • Baron von Weser
    Elisa Montés
    Elisa Montés
    • Beth Christiansen
    • (as Elisa Montes)
    Jorge Martín
    • David Moss
    • (as George Martin)
    Kai Fischer
    Kai Fischer
    • Cora Robinson
    • (as Kay Fischer)
    Rolf von Nauckhoff
    • James Robinson
    • (as Ralph Naukoff)
    Hermann Nehlsen
    • Prof. Julius Demerist
    • (as Herman Nelsen)
    Matilde Muñoz Sampedro
    Matilde Muñoz Sampedro
    • Myrtle Callahan
    • (as Matilde Sampedro)
    Ricardo Valle
    • Alfredo
    • (as Richard Valle)
    Mike Brendel
    • Baldi…
    • Director
      • Mel Welles
    • Writers
      • Mel Welles
      • Ernst Ritter von Theumer
      • Stephen Schmidt
    • All cast & crew
    • Production, box office & more at IMDbPro

    User reviews19

    4.5415
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    Featured reviews

    6kevinolzak

    Seen on Pittsburgh's CHILLER THEATER in 1969

    "Maneater of Hydra" (1966) was a delirious Spanish-German horror tale that aired 5 times on Pittsburgh's CHILLER THEATER from 1969-1972 (I missed it, too young). The dubbing isn't as bad as it could have been, and Cameron Mitchell does not dub his own voice, but it certainly had a weird atmosphere that 1962's "The Day of the Triffids" couldn't match. Obscure in its day, and even more so now, this is a perfect example of the types of features that we enjoyed in the days of late night movies-till-dawn, replaced by dull-as-dishwater paid programming and network gabfests indulging pseudo-hipsters with rabid young audiences that have never experienced anything else. These titles can be difficult to find, and this one was no exception, with a starring role for Cameron Mitchell, who gets to dominate the screen from start to finish. It doesn't work as a mystery because we already know that Baron v. Weser is up to something with his carnivorous plants, feeding a mouse to one, while a fellow botanist steals a cute bunny rabbit to do the same with an unseen creation outside. The director is veteran Roger Corman actor Mel Welles (working behind the camera primarily in Europe), immortalized for his marvelous turn in 1960's "The Little Shop of Horrors," which also dealt with a bloodthirsty plant (he would later direct 1972's "Lady Frankenstein" for Corman's New World Pictures). Welles had just finished an acting part in 1965's "The She-Beast," shot in Italy and Yugoslavia by 21 year old cult director Michael Reeves, and remained in Europe for the remainder of the decade. Cameron Mitchell was coming off a starring role in "Nightmare in Wax," another CHILLER THEATER regular, no stranger to European cinema, whose best work came in the Swedish "Face of Fire" (1958), in a rare sympathetic turn. This must rank as one of his best horrors, with a remarkably grisly climax for its period. He remained busiest in Italy, and frequently collaborated with genre pioneer Mario Bava, particularly on the 1964 cult classic "Blood and Black Lace," which aired 6 times on CHILLER THEATER (quite a showcase for rabid horror fans like myself). "Maneater of Hydra" may not be a classic, but I never found it dull, definitely worth a look.
    Geisterzug

    A Climax To Die For

    The heroine in the clutches of a vampire tree, the hero leaping to her aid with an axe - slashing at blood-sucking branches with his weapon - then being attacked by the mad scientist who created the tree, also with an axe!

    An axe battle between the two, under the writhing blood-sucking branches, in the middle of a rain-drenched thunderstorm. GREAT staging! What happens next is bloody (incredibly bloody, in fact), outrageous, melodramatic, over-the-top, and (dare I say?) EXCITING!

    Now come on - isn't that last ten minutes worth the previous hour and 20 minutes of bad dubbing and odd characterisation?

    And what the HELL is that old German woman gibbering on about?

    Fans of Man-Eating Plants should check out the Mel Welles site.
    8stareater50

    A bit of Creature Double Feature Nostalgia..

    Maneater of Hydra was a regular part of the Creature Double Feature program rotation, which aired in New England during the 70s-80s showing monster/sci-fi movies. I remembered this one vividly, for it features a vampiric tree killing the visitors to a mad baron's island. Z-grade movie regular Cameron Mitchell played the Baron. Memories of the film were better than the actual movie, which I managed to hunt down 20 years after last seeing it, but I still find in enjoyable and there is a great B-monster payoff in the last 15 minutes. The animated opening credits with orchestrated music is worth the price of admission alone.

    Maneater is a great bit of nostalgia, bringing back childhood memories of rushing home every Saturday to catch Creature Double Feature, spending 3 hours of the afternoon watching the cheesiest movies ever made, and having a blast doing it. This film isn't as bad as people would have you believe.
    2lee_eisenberg

    "Day of the Triffids" ripoff

    "La isla de la muerte" (alternately called "Island of the Doomed" and "Maneater of Hydra" in English) is the sort of movie that only three people could present: Elvira, Joe Bob Briggs, or at least one of the guys on "Mystery Science Theater 3000". I saw it on Elvira's show. It's basically a "Day of the Triffids" ripoff. A bunch of tourists go to an island where a man is breeding carnivorous plants. Naturally, the whole thing is an unintentional laugh riot. To be certain, the character Myrtle reminded me of Kyle's mom on "South Park", while the character David looked how Tony Randall would look if left in the microwave too long.

    Anyway, it's the sort of thing that you watch for pure entertainment. When the Mistress of the Dark presented it, she naturally added no shortage of campy commentary (namely that a plant-themed movie has a character whose last name is Moss).

    PS: director Mel Welles played the flower shop owner in the original "Little Shop of Horrors".
    5Bezenby

    Needed more plant action

    n upbeat, typically sixties animated credits sequence leads us into this strange but not totally successful flesh-eating plant film. If you're going to deliver a weird plant film – give us more weird plants and less inter-personal drama!

    A group of rubes are talked into taking a short cruise an a botanical tour of an almost deserted island. Amongst those travelling are a drunken slutty wife and her boring husband, a lady who loves talking pictures of everything, a young girl (Elisa Montes – a regular Western actress), a young guy, and a botanist, who is the only person who would realistically want to go on a tour like this. Things take a turn for the worst almost right away when an old man covered in weird wounds stumbles in front of the car and dies.

    Cameron Mitchell shows up as the Baron who own the usual big scary mansion and tells everyone not to worry about the dead guy as he was insane and sick anyway (the old woman takes a picture of the corpse for good measure). Cameron, who is dubbed by someone else, explains that he's got all sorts of weird plants everyone can have a look at (and I admit I drifted away from his botanical jibber jabber – and I have an allotment!).

    He's still gibbering on about nitrogen in the soil or what not during dinner, but at least he dishes up a cucumber that tastes like beef! This leads to more jibber jabber, plus there's the twin brother of the dead guy that frightens the crap out of people, and apart from the strange porcupine plants he shows them, the film settles in for people bickering for a while when we should have more footage of whatever strange plant is sucking people's blood out.

    I guess people go on about the ending as it's the only really interesting part of the film. Turns out there's this huge tree that attacks people and Cameron wanted to feed it the tourist, plus the thing spews blood everywhere when you hit it with an axe. It's very possibly that I would have liked this film more if the print wasn't full screen, jerky and twitchy, but then again the film did say 'Starring Cameron Mitchell' so what was I expecting?

    Killer plants will return to Euro-cinema in Contamination .7!

    Cameron Mitchell will return to crappy films as a mad doctor in Nightmare In Wax, a crappy overacting criminal in Greek giallo Medusa, a member of the KKK in the Klansman, as whatever he was in the slasher film Haunts, a terrible psychic in shitty South African slasher film The Demon, a cop versus Satan in The Nightmare Never Ends, a mumbling cult leader in Martial Arse film Low Blow, a grizzled bar owner in great eighties action film Codename: Vengeance, and also as a crooked country park owner in Memorial Valley Massacre – and those are just the Cameron Mitchell films I own!

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    Storyline

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    Did you know

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    • Trivia
      The movie is pretty bloody for its time (especially the finale) but, unfortunately, the print used for the DVD from Shout! Factory (as part of their "Elvira Movie Macabre" series) is a terribly soft fullframe speckled mess that's full of drop-outs, emulsion scratches and jitter. It's also obvious that it's a TV print (although it appears to be uncut), as every ten minutes the film fades to black.
    • Connections
      Featured in Movie Macabre: Maneater of Hydra (1983)

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    Details

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    • Release date
      • November 25, 1970 (France)
    • Countries of origin
      • West Germany
      • Spain
      • United States
    • Languages
      • English
      • German
      • Italian
    • Also known as
      • Island of the Doomed
    • Filming locations
      • Arenys de Mar, Barcelona, Catalonia, Spain
    • Production companies
      • Orbita Film S.A.
      • Theumer Filmproduktion
      • Órbita Films
    • See more company credits at IMDbPro

    Tech specs

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    • Runtime
      1 hour 25 minutes
    • Sound mix
      • Mono
    • Aspect ratio
      • 2.35 : 1

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