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IMDbPro

Léonor

Original title: Leonor
  • 1975
  • PG
  • 1h 41m
IMDb RATING
5.6/10
520
YOUR RATING
Léonor (1975)
DramaFantasyHorror

A female vampire rises from her crypt every night in search of children as her victims.A female vampire rises from her crypt every night in search of children as her victims.A female vampire rises from her crypt every night in search of children as her victims.

  • Director
    • Juan Luis Buñuel
  • Writers
    • Roberto Bodegas
    • Juan Luis Buñuel
    • Jean-Claude Carrière
  • Stars
    • Michel Piccoli
    • Liv Ullmann
    • Ornella Muti
  • See production info at IMDbPro
  • IMDb RATING
    5.6/10
    520
    YOUR RATING
    • Director
      • Juan Luis Buñuel
    • Writers
      • Roberto Bodegas
      • Juan Luis Buñuel
      • Jean-Claude Carrière
    • Stars
      • Michel Piccoli
      • Liv Ullmann
      • Ornella Muti
    • 11User reviews
    • 9Critic reviews
  • See production info at IMDbPro
  • See production info at IMDbPro
  • Photos14

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    Top cast29

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    Michel Piccoli
    Michel Piccoli
    • Le Seigneur Richard
    Liv Ullmann
    Liv Ullmann
    • Leonor
    Ornella Muti
    Ornella Muti
    • Catherine
    Antonio Ferrandis
    Antonio Ferrandis
    • Thomas Vanette
    José María Prada
    José María Prada
    • L'homme Mystérieux
    • (as José Mª Prada)
    José Guardiola
    José Guardiola
    • Bernabé
    Jorge Rigaud
    Jorge Rigaud
    • Fusoris
    José María Caffarel
    José María Caffarel
    • Le Médecin
    • (as José Mª Caffarel)
    Piero Vida
    Piero Vida
    Tito García
    Tito García
    • Un Ami de Richard
    Francisco Nieto
      José Moreno
      José Moreno
      • Arnaud - le Majordome
      Carmen Maura
      Carmen Maura
      • Jeanne
      Ana Gasber
      Francisco Balcells
      Loreta Tovar
      Manuel Sierra
      José Antonio Ceinos
        • Director
          • Juan Luis Buñuel
        • Writers
          • Roberto Bodegas
          • Juan Luis Buñuel
          • Jean-Claude Carrière
        • All cast & crew
        • Production, box office & more at IMDbPro

        User reviews11

        5.6520
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        Featured reviews

        10jbernhard

        Amazing romantic horror tragedy

        There are no vampires here, the synopsis given here is incorrect. What you get is a devastating film that details a love lost but never forgotten, and what happens when that lost love returns 10 years later resulting in murder, chaos and violence. Even more impressive, the film does not resort to nudity or gore to keep the viewer's attention. The cast is excellent, the script and story are fresh and inventive, and the direction hits all the right notes. Truly a one of a kind horror film, absolutely NOT for the slasher / torture porn crowd. The Magnetic video from 1980 contains the 85 min English dubbed version. The IMDb lists 100 min for the Spanish version, which is set for DVD release in June 2008. The dubbing is above average and nothing seems missing from the 85 min version, but I'm curious about the Spanish DVD when it comes out. This could be the ultimate art house horror!
        10matheusmarchetti

        Dark Romance

        This is probably one of the most underrated, if not, THE most underrated horror film of all time. It has a 4.8 rating on IMDb, yet it deserves at least a 7.8. Never released in theaters in the US, the film eventually showed up on VHS, marketed as a cash-in on The Exorcist, under the title "Mistress of the Devil", and it was a huge disappointment, mainly because the two films have absolutely nothing in common. The story here, which recalls the works of Poe, follows a man who makes a pact with the Devil to have his dead wife, played by Liv Ullmann, back from the grave. She does come back, but as vampire who preys on young children. Stylishly directed by Luis Bunuel's son - Juan Bunuel, the film is a slow-burn, but never really boring, and it is actually pretty scary at times, while being romantic and touching as well, including some of the most heartbreaking scenes in horror cinema. The beautiful cinematography, courtesy of Suspiria's Luciano Tovoli, and the gorgeous locations at the Spanish countryside, add to the film's brooding Gothic atmosphere. Ullman gives an amazing performance as usual, and is one of the most gorgeous vampires out there IMO. Ennio Morricone's fantastic score perfectly captures the gloominess and foreboding atmosphere of this tragic love story. Overall, 10/10 for me.
        7melvelvit-1

        It could have been a contender...

        If anything, LEONOR is a very Grimm fairy tale of love, loss, sorrow, and horror set in the Middle Ages during the time of the black plague but unfortunately, it's also less than the sum of its parts. Feudal lord Richard (Michel Piccoli), mad with grief over the death of his beloved wife Leonor (Liv Ullman), tries to assuage his torment by marrying a village girl (Ornella Muti) who eventually bears him two sons. Ten years pass but the pain doesn't ease and when Richard gets the chance to bring his lost love back, he takes it. His dream comes true but soon animals can't be tamed, crops won't grow, and children begin disappearing from the village...

        Filmed among the mountains and crumbling castles of Spain by Luis Buñuel's writer/director son Juan (who worked mostly in TV after this), LEONOR is a vampiric variation on "The Monkey's Paw" and "could have been a contender" since dark romantic horror can be just as potent as erotic horror in the right hands. The sweeping vistas and medieval tableaux by Dario Argento's SUSPIRIA cinematographer Luciano Tovoli and the moody Ennio Morricone score both serve the story well but the Gothic, Poe-like tale (based on a 19th century work by J. Sheridan Le Fanu contemporary Matthew Gregory Lewis) is slow moving and the horror implied rather than explicit. Both factors work against the film but the casting of Liv Ullman in the role of "Leonor" is the final nail in the coffin, so to speak. Ingmar Bergman's muse may be a very good actress but as someone quipped to Katharine Hepburn when she said she wanted the part of Scarlett O'Hara, "I can't see anyone chasing you for ten years" and if Liv and ravishing Ornella Muti had switched places this would have gotten a 8/10 from me. As is, it's a 7.
        lazarillo

        Excellent film that has regrettably fallen into the cracks between art and horror

        Although not strictly a vampire film, this is one of those interesting European combinations of horror and art, typified by "Daughters of Darkness" in the 70's or "Let the Right One In" more recently. The plot involves a a 14th century nobleman who loses his young wife (Liv Ullman) to a horseback-riding accident (and to primitive medical practices of the era). He re-marries and has children, but remains mired in grief and unable to forget his first wife (even though his new wife is played by a Ornella Muti, who would make most men forget their own name). Finally, in a kind of "Monkey's Paw" scenario he manages to actually will her back from the grave, but she's not the same, and a lot of local children begin to mysteriously disappear and it isn't long before his new family is threatened. . .

        This is more an art film than a horror film, not surprisingly since it was directed by Luis Bunuel's son and features Ingemar Bergman's frequent lead actress and muse. It's more serious than a lot of Euro-horror films, realistically set against the background of the Black Death plague and seriously commenting on the prevailing superstitions of the time (i.e. the fool-hardy medical practices, the witch-burnings). The vampiric element is present mainly in the undead Ullman's predations on peasant children, which recalls the "Bloofer Lady" that the undead Lucy Westeridge becomes in Bram Stoker's original novel "Dracula", an element that has been left out of almost all the subsequent movie adaptations because it't just too disturbing. It's also really quite heartbreaking to see the maternal instinct so corrupted, and to see undying love gone so horribly wrong.

        This movie has, unfortunately, kind of fallen through the cracks between art and horror. It is not as exploitative as Jean Rollins sex-and-blood-soaked vampire films, on one hand, but it is not quite as self-consciously arty as something like Ingemar Bergman's "Hour of the Wolf" either (if Bergman or the Bunuel father had simply put their NAME on this movie, it would no doubt be much more well-known today) . It deserves better though. Ulman and Piccolo are very good as the star-cursed lovers, and Ornella Muti is amazing (if WAY too beautiful to be forsaken for a dead woman). It is ripe material for a DVD release.
        6BA_Harrison

        Some guys are never happy.

        When his beloved wife Leonor (Liv Ullmann) is crushed by her horse, medieval nobleman Richard (Michel Piccoli) rushes to be by her side, the woman dying shortly thereafter. Richard attempts to assuage his grief by 'getting back in the saddle', so to speak, immediately marrying local beauty Catherine (the stunning Ornella Muti, of Flash Gordon fame) - and by 'immediately', I mean the very same day that Leonor carks it. That should take his mind off things!

        Of course, some guys are never happy...

        Catherine bears Richard two sons, Matthew and Gregory, but even after ten years, the wealthy lord still longs for the companionship of his first wife. So when a mysterious stranger tells Richard that he can reunite him with his long dead Leonor, he jumps at the chance. Sure enough, Leonor is resurrected, leaving Richard to make Catherine disappear - by stabbing her in the guts and chucking her down a well (divorce clearly not an option in medieval times).

        This being a dark, tragic, gothic love-story/horror with strong art-house leanings, Richard's happiness is short-lived, as his undead wife begins to feed on local children, the black death approaches his castle, his livestock becomes uncontrollable and nothing grows in his garden. The atmosphere is one of morose futility, with death and decay always lurking around the corner - not exactly a barrel of laughs. Director Juan Luis Buñuel (son of cinematic surrealist Luis Buñuel) conducts proceedings with an eye for an interesting shot, but employs a languorous approach that I imagine will alienate many modern-day viewers - let's be honest, not a lot happens for much of the film. For a '70s Euro-horror, there's also a distinct lack of nudity and gore.

        That said, I still found Leonor interesting enough to stay the course: there's a lyrical, haunting quality to the film, the cinematography is impressive, Ennio Morricone supplies the score, there's a scene where a young girl is burnt alive with a container of gunpowder around her neck, and the film kicks off with gang of bandits attacking Richard, one of whom is a dwarf (naturally, Richard makes short shrift of him!). I also like that the ending is totally bizarre: Richard and Leonor escape from the castle only to ride their horse off a bridge and into a ravine.

        5.5/10, rounded up to 6 for IMDb.

        Related interests

        Mahershala Ali and Alex R. Hibbert in Moonlight (2016)
        Drama
        Elijah Wood in Le Seigneur des anneaux : La Communauté de l'anneau (2001)
        Fantasy
        Mia Farrow in Rosemary's Baby (1968)
        Horror

        Storyline

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        Details

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        • Release date
          • August 29, 1975 (West Germany)
        • Countries of origin
          • Spain
          • France
          • Italy
        • Official site
          • Official site
        • Languages
          • Spanish
          • French
        • Also known as
          • Leonor, the Devil's Mistress
        • Production companies
          • Arcadie Productions
          • Films 66
          • Goya Producciones Cinematográficas S.A.
        • See more company credits at IMDbPro

        Tech specs

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        • Runtime
          • 1h 41m(101 min)
        • Color
          • Color
        • Sound mix
          • Mono
        • Aspect ratio
          • 1.85 : 1

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