词条 | House of Terror (film) |
释义 |
| name = La Casa del Terror | image = La-casa-del-terror .jpg | image_size = | caption = Original Mexican theatrical release poster | director = Gilberto Martínez Solares | producer = Fernando de Fuentes hijo | writer = {{Plainlist|
}} | starring = {{Plainlist|
}} | music = Luis Demetrio | cinematography = Raúl Martínez Solares | editing = Carlos Savage | distributor = | released = {{Film date|df=y|1960|3|24}} | runtime = 82 minutes | country = Mexico | language = Spanish }} La Casa del Terror ({{literal translation|House of Terror}}) is a 1959[1] Mexican comedy horror film directed by Gilberto Martínez Solares and starring American horror icon Lon Chaney Jr. and Mexican comedian Tin Tan. The film involves a night watchman in a wax museum, whose boss has been secretly draining his blood to use in his experiments in raising the dead. Meanwhile, a mummy, stolen from an Egyptian sarcophagus, is revived and becomes a werewolf when moonlight hits him. Producer Jerry Warren[2] would later combine segments of La Casa del Terror with footage from another Mexican film, La Momia Azteca (1957[2]), to create a hybrid film called Face of the Screaming Werewolf (1964). PlotCasimiro (Tin Tan), the night watchman at a wax museum of horrors, has been napping more frequently on the job because his boss, Professor Sebastian (Yerye Beirute)[3], is secretly draining blood from him while he sleeps to use in his experiments in raising the dead, experiments conducted in his hidden laboratory behind the wax museum. The mad doctor's attempts haven't worked so far, and the bodies of his failures have been covered in wax and placed in the museum to cover his crimes. The professor learns that the mummified body of a man (Lon Chaney Jr.) has been found preserved in an Egyptian sarcophagus. The professor and his two henchmen steal the body of the mummy and take it back to his lab - but after the mummy is unwrapped, they fail to revive him. After the doctor and his men leave the lab that night, a bolt of lightning reactivates the equipment and provides the surge needed to revive the dead man. As he struggles to awareness, the clouds outside part, the full moon shines on his face through a window, and the resurrected corpse transforms into a werewolf. Casimiro sees the creature wandering around the museum, but no one will believe him, not even his girlfriend, Paquita (Yolanda Varela)[3]. When the professor and his men return, the werewolf kills one of his henchmen, and the Wolf Man is imprisoned in a cage inside the lab. He later escapes and lopes off to the nearest park, where he strangles and bites a few innocent people. The werewolf winds up at Paquita's apartment, and Casimiro arrives there just in time to see his girlfriend being abducted. He bravely follows them back to the wax museum and after witnessing the werewolf brutally slay Professor Sebastian, Casimiro gets the jump on the werewolf and beats him to death with a burning torch. The museum and lab catch fire, and the werewolf's body is immolated in the flames. Cast
ProductionThe film was shot in Mexico in 1959[4]. It was directed by Gilberto Martínez Solares (who also wrote the story)[3]. Juan García and Fernando de Fuentes co-wrote the screenplay with Solares.[3] Lon Chaney Jr. traveled to Mexico in 1959 to star in this Tin-Tan horror/comedy[4]. Jerry Warren commented (in an interview with Tom Weaver) "He (Chaney) didn't like doing this kind of film. He didn't like being classified as a werewolf at all. ....He wanted to be Lon Chaney, not the sort of character whose face changed.....but in Hollywood, people do the things they have to do." [5] The werewolf transformation effects in the film were very similar to those in the Universal Wolf Man movies, with Chaney having to hold his face still while the slow dissolves turn him into a monster.[6] The special effects were handled by Jorge Benavides[3].
Producer Jerry Warren bought the film and combined footage from La Casa del Terror with footage from another 1950s Mexican film, La Momia Azteca, in order to create a hybrid film which he released in 1965[7] as Face of the Screaming Werewolf.[6] He edited out almost all of the Tin-Tan comedy footage from the picture, leaving mostly just the Lon Chaney-related horror footage, then combined that with sequences taken from La Momia Azteca, together with some new footage he filmed himself.[3] Home mediaLa Casa del Terror was released on DVD in 2007 by Laguna Films.[8]References1. ^Smith, Don G. (1996). "Lon Chaney Jr.". McFarland & Co., Inc. {{ISBN|0-7864-0120-6}}. Page 147 2. ^{{cite web|url=http://www.tvguide.com/movies/the-aztec-mummy/review/101590/|title=TheAztec Mummy|work=TV Guide}} 3. ^1 2 3 4 5 6 7 Cotter, Robert Michael (2005). "The Mexican Masked Wrestler and Monster Filmography". McFarland and Co. Inc. {{ISBN|0-7864-2022-7}}. Page 40 4. ^1 Smith, Don G. (1996). "Lon Chaney Jr.". McFarland & Co., Inc. {{ISBN|0-7864-0120-6}}. Page 147 5. ^Weaver,Tom (1988). "Interviews with B science Fiction and Horror Movie Makers". McFarland & Co., Inc. Page 378 6. ^1 Smith, Don G. (1996). "Lon Chaney Jr.". McFarland & Co., Inc. {{ISBN|0-7864-0120-6}}. Page 148 7. ^Smith, Don G. (1996). "Lon Chaney Jr.". McFarland & Co., Inc. {{ISBN|0-7864-0120-6}}. Page 147 8. ^{{cite web|url=http://www.allmovie.com/movie/la-casa-del-terror-v16541/releases|title=La Casa del Terror at AllMovie|publisher=AllMovie|accessdate=25 June 2018}} External links
7 : Mexican black-and-white films|Mexican films|Mexican horror films|Spanish-language films|Werewolves in film|Mexican science fiction films|Mexican comedy films |
随便看 |
|
开放百科全书收录14589846条英语、德语、日语等多语种百科知识,基本涵盖了大多数领域的百科知识,是一部内容自由、开放的电子版国际百科全书。