Santo el enmascarado de plata y Blue Demon contra los monstruos
- 1970
- 1h 25m
To foil his plan for world domination, wrestling superheroes El Santo and Blue Demon battle the mad Dr. Halder and his army of reanimated monsters.To foil his plan for world domination, wrestling superheroes El Santo and Blue Demon battle the mad Dr. Halder and his army of reanimated monsters.To foil his plan for world domination, wrestling superheroes El Santo and Blue Demon battle the mad Dr. Halder and his army of reanimated monsters.
- Director
- Writers
- Stars
- Blue Demon
- (as Blue Demon)
- Otto Halder
- (as Jorge Rado)
- Niño
- (as Niño Raul Martinez Solares Jr.)
- …
- Gloria Halder
- (as Hedy Blue)
- Bailarín
- (as Adalberto Martinez 'Resortes')
- …
- Hombre lobo
- (as Vicente Lara 'Cacama')
- …
- Franquestain (sic)
- (as Manuel Leal)
- Ciclope
- (as Gerardo Cepeda)
- …
- Empresario
- (as Gordo Alvarado)
- …
- Director
- Writers
- All cast & crew
- Production, box office & more at IMDbPro
Featured reviews
But why go on? All you need to know is that Santo and Blue Demon vs the Monsters contains the following line from mad scientist Otto Halder, as he confronts the entire crew of good guys in his lab, all momentarily under his power: "You called me insane!" (Turns to evil invention, calmly.) "I will now disintegrate my niece."
What more could a True Believer ask from a movie than a line like that?
Any true lover of professional wrestling knows some history of Lucha Libre (Mexican wrestling) and the super-stardom some wrestlers had that transcended the business into the real of film. El Santo and The Blue Demon were two of it's biggest stars.
These Luchadors were superheroes in their own right and in tradition of American superhero things like the Batman TV series this movie was as cheesy as hell, but the right kind of cheesy.
Any wrestling fan, or even fans of B movies or cheesy superhero stuff, should watch this and the many other titles to these guys names. For the rest of you, you have no idea what you are missing.
After Santo's best pal Blue Demon (Alejandro Moreno) is captured and cloned by the mad professor, and several attempts are made to kidnap Gloria, Santo steps in to thwart Halder's dastardly plans.
This film opens with a wrestling match, and is pretty much wall-to-wall fighting, either in the ring, or outside the arena against Halder's monsters: Frankenstein, Cyclops, The Vampire, The Wolf Man, The Mummy, the Vampire Woman, and assorted zombie henchmen. The creatures are an amusing bunch of monstrosities (especially Cyclops), but once the novelty of the many shonky monsters wears off, the film will hold little appeal for anyone but avid lucha libre fans.
4/10, plus a generous bonus point for the hilarious dance scene that looks to have been lifted from an entirely different film, and for the fact that Frankenstein had an electric vibrator stuck in his neck (that's what the subtitles said!).
In the film, Santo and Blue Demon (played by themselves) are rivals on the ring, and partners in their fight against evil. One day they receive the news that Otto Halder (Jorge Rado), the famous scientist, has died. This wouldn't be weird, if it weren't for the fact that Santo and Blue Demon had suspected that Halder was a criminal mastermind. The fact that Santo's girlfriend Gloria (Hedi Blue) is Otto's niece made Otto a personal enemy of the duo. Santo has the feeling that Otto's death is not normal, but Blue convinces Santo to go on vacation while he does the investigations. As Santo had thought, Otto Halder is still alive, and after capturing Blue Demon and bringing back to life the mythological monsters of old, he prepares his revenge against Gloria, her father, and Santo.
While the story was written by Rafael García Travesí (who had written Santo's best and most famous films), the screenplay was really the brainchild of producer Jesus Sotomayor, a Mexican producer notorious for his excessively ambitious movies that while based on popular trends often showed poor results. Sotomayor's involvement in the writing of the story is probably the reason of the convoluted and hugely nonsensical plot, as the inclusion of numerous enemies (Halder himself, a vampire, a mummy, a wolf man, Frankenstein's creature, a cyclops, Blue Demon's evil clone, Halder's hunchback sidekick and his zombie henchmen) makes the film an absurd exercise in excess that ultimately destroys what could had been another good Santo film. García Travesí may not had been a terrific writer, but he knew very well how to mix monsters with Santo's trademark action, and in this film the whole formula gets overused to the point that it becomes surreal.
While the atrocious excess in the plot is awful, I think the real tragedy of the film is that it shows how low the career of director Gilberto Martínez Solares was at that point. From being one of the most important figures in the Golden Age of Mexican cinema (directing the best films of genius comedian Germán Valdés "Tin Tán"), he witnessed the downfall of the Golden Age and like many others, worked on sub-par productions in the darkest years of Mexican film industry. By the early 70s, old school comedy films were not popular, so he started directing adventure and sci-fi films (the first being "Blue Demon contra las Invasoras" in 1969) and later sleazy and zany low-rate comedies through the late 70s and early 80s. While a very effective director in comedy, Martínez Solares showed an very anachronistic vision when he started making sci-fi films, and this film demonstrates it.
The film has a very 50s look and if it weren't in color it could pass as a film straight from that era, as the camera-work and the overall style of the film look dated (even for the 70s). The low-budget of the film doesn't help with this as most of the make-up and special effects (like the Cyclops costume) are incredibly cheap. However, not everything is bad in the film, and it could be said that this film (along with the previously mentioned "Blue Demon contra las Invasoras") started the new evolution of the wrestlers sub-genre, moving away from the Bond-like style of films Santo was doing at the moment and taking him back to the fantasy realm in sci-fi adventures of mad doctors and kitsch futuristic designs.
Depsite all the flaws, Santo's charm works and he delivers a fine performance with the little he had to work. While it looks like Santo feels awkward working in the film, he gets the job done like only he knows how to do. Blue Demon seems to have more fun, and he has the meatiest role, as after he is captured he is cloned and the evil clone is sent to kill Santo. Jorge Rado as Otto Halder delivers a good performance, although the script doesn't really give him a lot to work with. Hedi Blue was not really a talented actress and her short career shows that she was only in the film for her good looking face.
While overall this Santo film is disappointing, it's fun to watch in group, as the absurd plot and excessive amount of badly done monsters can make for a fun night at the movies. It's a shame that the careers of Santo, Blue Demon and Gilberto Martínez Solares were involved in this film, but at least this opened new grounds for Santo and other wrestlers. Sadly, it also meant the beginning of the darkest hour for Mexican cinema. 5/10
Did you know
- Quotes
Waldo: Master, what are you going to do?
Bruno Halder: I will destroy the Silver Masked Man, and no one better for the job than his best friend, Blue Demon.
[evil laughter]
Blue Demon: You will fail, Halder. The forces of good will always defeat evil.
Bruno Halder: Not this time. You will kill Santo. You, Demon! And then I will annihilate you!
[evil laughter]
- ConnectionsReferenced in Mascára vs. mascára (2023)
Details
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- Santo and Blue Demon vs. the Monsters
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