Night of the Bloody Apes (film)

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La Horripilante bestia humana
Horror y sexo
Night of the Bloody Apes
File:Night of the Bloody Apes Poster.jpg
Mexican release poster
Directed by René Cardona
Jerald Intrator (inserts director)
Produced by Guillermo Calderón
Alfredo Salazar
Written by René Cardona Jr.
René Cardona
Starring José Elías Moreno
Carlos Lopez Moctezuma
Armando Silvestre
Norma Lazareno
Agustín Martínez Solares
Noelia Noel
Gerardo Zepeda
Music by Antonio Díaz Conde
Cinematography Raúl Martínez Solares
Edited by Jorge Bustos
Distributed by Azteca Films Inc.
Release dates
February 6, 1969 (Mexico)
Running time
81 minutes
Country Mexico
Language Spanish

Night of the Bloody Apes is the title of the 1972 English language version of the 1969 Mexican horror film La Horripilante bestia humana ("The Horrible Man-Beast"), also known as Horror y sexo ("Horror and Sex") and as Gomar—The Human Gorilla. The film was directed by René Cardona and is a remake of his 1962 film Las Luchadoras contra el medico asesino ("The Wrestling Women vs. the Murderous Doctor"; U.S. title Doctor of Doom), the first in a series of films blending elements of the lucha libre and horror genres.

The plot concerns a mad scientist who transplants a gorilla's heart into his dying son, saving his life but transforming him into a monstrous, ape-like creature who embarks on a rape and murder spree before being brought to justice by a luchadora (female wrestler). The plot of Night of the Bloody Apes does not concern the luchadora bringing the ape-man to justice—rather, she has a much less pronounced role in the plot.

Plot

Lua error in package.lua at line 80: module 'strict' not found. Mad scientist Dr. Krellman attempts to cure his son's leukemia by doing heart transplant, replacing his son's heart with that of a gorilla's. The result of the operation transforms Krellman's son into a deformed and mutated man-ape hybrid taking on the characteristics of the organ's donor, who immediately goes on a bloody rampage.

Cast

  • Armando Silvestre as Lt. Arturo Martinez
  • Norma Lazareno as Lucy Osorio
  • Agustín Martínez Solares as Julio Krallman
  • Gerardo Zepeda as Monstruo

Production

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Release

Lua error in package.lua at line 80: module 'strict' not found. Lua error in package.lua at line 80: module 'strict' not found. The film has been released on DVD by Something Weird Video as part of a double feature with its fellow Mexican horror movie Feast of Flesh (a.k.a. Placer sangriento ["Bloody Pleasure"], 1967). It was released uncut on DVD in the UK by Redemption in 2007, and Nucleus Films released the remastered and uncut version on DVD on 8 October 2012.

Reception

Lua error in package.lua at line 80: module 'strict' not found. Critical reception for the film has been almost universally negative.

TV Guide panned the film awarding it a score of 0 / 4 calling it "gross", and "unbelievably inept" however they also stated "With its dizzying combination of hard-core gore, gratuitous nudity, rampaging monster, actual footage of open-heart surgery, and masked Mexican wrestlers, this is a tough one to ignore".[1]

Bill Gibron from DVD Verdict.com gave the film a negative review, panning the film's acting and the fact that the film itself did not make any sense. In his review on the film, Gibron commented, "You've really got to hand it to director Rene Cardona. It's not every filmmaker who would attempt to create suspense and milk raw terror out of such commonplace occurrences as climbing the stairs, crossing the room, or Mexican ladies wrestling. And yet Night of the Bloody Apes is filled to the frijoles with static scenes of people walking up and down flights of steps, moving from the foyer into the master bedroom, and woman on woman grappling. As a piece of South of the Border exploitation, it has it all: wanton nudity, actual graphic and gory surgery footage, fake monster mania, and Tijuana style makeup and costumes. Throw in the most melodramatic score this side of Douglas Sirk's Imitation of Life, and you've got a motion picture miscalculation of the highest order".[2]

It currently has a score of 5.1 on IMDb.[3]

References

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