20 August, 2013

THE AWFUL DR. ORLOF Blu-ray review

  • Hartog-1912: With the help of his deformed, blind, deranged manservant Morpho (Ricardo Valle),  Dr. Orlof (Howard Vernon), a disturbed ex-prison medic, abducts and skins music hall performers and local prostitutes, attempting  to crudely graft their facial tissue onto the ruined head of his daughter, Melissa (Diana Lorys, who also appears as Wanda Bronsky, the gorgeous girlfriend of the not-to-bright but nice Inspector Tanner [Conrado San Martin], who is not making headway in solving the serial kidnappings). Wanda proposes a daring, dangerous mission in which she will pose as a "harlot" to trap the villain. Her plan succeeds all too well, resulting in her eventual abduction and new role as the next unwilling tissue donor in Orlof's operating theater of horrors. 
Title credit card for the censored Spanish version. The  new Blu-ray contains all the nudity missing from this edit, done at the time of the regime of General Francisco Franco.

The basics of this plot would be repeated, sometimes shot by shot, in such subsequent Franco efforts as EL SECRETO DEL DR. ORLOF (1964), LA VENGANZA DEL DR. MABUSE (1971), THE SINISTER DR ORLOF (1982), FACELESS (1988), to name but a few, each time adding more nudity, sleaze and gore whenever allowed. ORLOF [onscreen title: L'HORRIBLE DOCTEUR ORLOF] was, of course, censored in Spain of all nudity, including a scene of Orlof cutting into the exposed upper torso of an abducted showgirl (Mara Lasso) and Morpho pawing the exposed breasts of Wanda ( a body double was used when Lorys refused to do the shot). These were shocking images then, if not today. Somehow the richly shadowed B&W cinematography of Godofredo Pacheco makes these moments seem all the more transgressive, suddenly erupting within a more charming, genteel period setting.

What remains memorable about this film is the stunning visuals which employ B&W film stock to its fullest capacity (unfortunately this is not fully apparent in this transfer, which could used a boost in the contrast, it's sometimes grey and white, instead of jet black and white. However, definition, sharpness and detail are all significantly improved from the previous 2000 IMAGE DVD). Right from the very first image, framed through a street lamp, to the final shot of the survivors walking away down an arched walkway of a Gothic castle, Franco frames his scenes with optical, almost subliminal reminders that we are watching a staged production, an artifice, something at least once removed from reality.
 Morpho, in his voyeur mode, peers at his prey while hiding in a closet. Note the bugged-out eyes which Franco would use to even more outrageous effect with the cannibal-zombie in DEVIL HUNTER (1980).

Then there's Morpho Lautner (Ricardo Valle), who is tagged, in the perceptive and informative Tim Lucas commentary, as the screen's first "oral sadist," biting into the necks and chests of his voluptuous victims, combining the attributes of a cannibal (DEVIL HUNTER), zombie (LAS TUMBAS DE LOS MUERTOS VIVIENTES) and vampire (EL CONDE DRACULA), all in one unique, unforgettable character. This kind of thing just wasn't business-as-usual in the early 60s horror genre, leaving H.G. Lewis (BLOOD FEAST) and Georges Franju aside. The shots of the women's bleeding torsos, skinned faces, their chained bodies hanging from the ceiling of Orlof's dungeon, are the stuff of nightmares and 1960s Fumetti Neri.

This Blu-ray also presents the experimental, slam-bang, atonal, rattling, pounding, non-melodic J. Pagan-A. Ramirez Angel-Jess Franco score to its best advantage. The well-translated, very readable English subtitles (they even took the trouble to subtitle the songs in the music hall sequences) are also a welcome addition to the French langauge track

Watching the excellent documentary "The Young Dr. Orlof Chronicles" directed by Daniel Gouyette, featuring a wealth of fascinating information and insights into the making of this Jess Franco horror classic by film historians Alain Petit, Lucas Balbo, Jean-Pierre Bouyxou and Eurocine Exec Daniel Lesoeur. It alone is worth the price of admission to the new Blu-ray presentation of THE AWFUL DR. ORLOF from REDEMPTION FILMS.
"Welcome to the Mad, Mad World of  THE AWFUL DR. ORLOF.... such carryings-on and such carryings-out...." the vintage US trailer exclaimed. I would have loved to have seen the SIGMA III Corporation double bill of this with Riccardo Freda's THE HORRIBLE DR. HICHCOCK back in 1964, two of the most transgressive horror films of that era, both dealing with still forbidden themes of necrophilia, sadism, rape and sexual sadism, submerged in heavy Gothic aesthetics combining German Expressionism, French Fantastique, the London-Fog Hollywood excursions into mad scientist/Jack the Ripper territory and Jess Franco's own Spanish tinged, macabre-erotic artistic proclivities by way of Luis Bunuel and Edgar Neville.

The plot is an unholy stew of tropes boldly incorporating elements of Franju's LES YEUX SANS VISAGE (1959), CIRCUS OF HORRORS (1960) and countless other Euro/American models. The Owl which inhabits the Orlof household even recalls Chano Urueta's delirious Mexican sex, gore and surgery cheapo THE WITCH'S MIRROR (1960), the latter influence confirmed by the director during my 2005 interview in which he revealed an unending admiration for the Mexican maestro. It remains unclear if Franco actually saw and consciously incorporated any or all of these into his mise en scene but they somehow all pertain.

Wanda (Diana Lorys), in hooker guise, encounters herself on the other side of the mirror, the title of one of the director's best films and a recurring image throughout his long career.

I would like to cite the excellent documentary "The Young Dr. Orlof Chronicles" directed by Daniel Gouyette, featuring a wealth of fascinating information and insights into the making of this Jess Franco horror classic by film historians Alain Petit, Lucas Balbo, Jean-Pierre Bouyxou and Eurocine Exec Daniel Lesoeur. It alone is worth the price of admission to the new Blu-ray presentation of THE AWFUL DR. ORLOF from REDEMPTION FILMS.  These world class experts discuss everything from the impact of the film on the European cultural scene in the early 60s to the elusive "novels" of David Khune/Khunne, with Lucas Balbo nailing the source of the beard.  No one, including the late director, has ever produced one of these mysterious pulp fictions, but it's fun to speculate.  

Equally fascinating is David Gregory's "The Horror of Orlof," the last interview with the director focusing on his first horror film. Franco reveals that he did not set out to be a horror director, his first three features were the screwball comedy TENEMOS 18 ANOS and two light-hearted musical comedies.  He then failed to secure the go-ahead to film B. Tavern's novel THE REBELLION OF THE HANGED, an epic tale of exploitation and violence in the jungles of Mexico, by the author of THE TREASURE OF THE SIERRA MADRE, that had already been filmed in 1954 by Alfredo Crevenna and Emilio Fernandez on Mexican locations. Shifting to Gothic territory after taking the Spanish and French producers to a a screening of  Hammer's THE BRIDES OF DRACULA, the director went full speed ahead on filming the first excursion into full fledged surgical horror, boosted with erotic elements, on Madrid locations. There's not much nudity/sex in LES YEUX SANS VISAGE, but there is much sensual poetry. But ORLOF goes for the jugular in both regards, making it all the more daring considering it was made in a country still under a dictatorship which was once allied with Hitler's Nazi Germany.

Franco claims to have  picked the name Orlof from a Hollywood studio musician. I would go with Tim Lucas that the Bela Lugosi Orloff character in the 1939 British horror THE HUMAN MONSTER was a more likely source. Franco contends he wanted to make films like Antonioni's LA NOTTE but ended up forced into the horror ghetto, from which he would never really emerge.

There's also an 8 minute homage to the late director by Daniel Gouyette, "Jess! What are you doing now?" A photo gallery and original theatrical trailers are also included in this HD upgrade package which certainly presents this "museum piece" (as Franco referred to it in his later years) in an expanded, improved edition, with some room left for future improvement in the contrast and restoration departments. This version also runs almost 5 minutes longer than the 83 minute IMAGE DVD,  making it the way to go, if you want to upgrade, until a full restoration arrives.

We'll be looking at the Spanish version in more detail in a future blog post. Thanks to Mirek Lipinski for the caps from the Spanish version and thanks to Nzoog for his consultative support.

PS: In his excellent commentary on THE AWFUL DR. ORLOF Blu-ray Tim Lucas cites the influence of director John Brahm, especially THE LODGER, on the visual style and atmosphere of Jess Franco's first horror film. This prompted me to review some images from Brahm's career, especially his 1940s films. Here's an image from Brahm's 1946 Film Noir THE LOCKET, showing Robert Mitchum's face obscured by shadows. Note how it compares to the image of Howard Vernon as Dr. Orlof. The expressionist use of lighting illustrates inner darkness

Jess Franco had already mastered the B&W format.
Photo

15 August, 2013

NIGHTMARES COME AT NIGHT Blu-ray Review

Nightmares Come at Night
 Cynthia and Anna in the hypnotic "Mirror Stage" matrix which defines their relationship and the film's plot.

The French psycho-analytic-theorist Jacques Lacan would probably appreciate the symbolic implications of this key image from Jess Franco's NIGHTMARES COME AT NIGHT in relation to his "Mirror Stage" theory of psychological development. And the film may be the director's most direct examination of psychological fantasy structures in the unconscious. A naive, almost child-like woman, who falls under the hypnotic spell of a manipulative adult, is used as a pawn in the final stage of  a crime. But this was, after all, an exploitation item designed for the adult film circuit which existed in Europe in the early 1970s, so we don't want to get too analytical, but Franco's obsession with mirror imagery goes all the way back to his earliest features (VAMPIRESAS 1930, GRITOS EN LA NOCHE) and the aberrant psyche of strange, seductive females is a recurring conceit in his massive filmography.

The women in the mirror are the submissive Anna (Diana Lorys) and the manipulative, sadistic Ice Queen Cynthia (Colette Giacobine), who in collaboration with Dr. Vicas (Paul Muller), involve Anna in a cover-up of an elaborate crime which they have committed. The cover-up involves the control of Anna's mind by Cynthia's hypnotic commands and drugs administered by Dr. Vicas, a conflicted psychiatrist who seems to sympathize with the hapless Anna. Cynthia seduces Anna, who will then be compelled to seduce and murder her and Vicas' partners in a jewel robbery, including Jack Taylor (SUCCUBUS), Soledad Miranda (VAMPYROS LESBOS) and Andre Montcall. Muller would play another conflicted father-figure who manipulates a similarly naive woman (Miranda) in Franco's subsequent film, EUGENIE DE SADE, also featuring Montcall. But NIGHTMARES COME AT NIGHT manages to come off as both conventional and Oneiric in a way only Jess Franco can manage.

The theme of mental domination by destructive forces of which the victim is not consciously aware, can be found in the director's  THE SADISTIC BARON VON KLAUS (1962), MISS MUERTE aka THE DIABOLICAL DR. Z, SUCCUBUS [NECRONOMICON], to name a few predecessors. The victims in the latter two are also erotic entertainers, and Franco uses the performer-voyeur matrix which is virtually the mainstay of his universe since his very first feature, TENEMOS 18 ANOS (1959). 

Anna (played with exquisite elan by Diana Lorys [the heroines of GRITOS EN LA NOCHE, RESEDENCIA PARA ESPIAS and a memorable player in THE BLOODY JUDGE]) performs her number in an ultra sleazy Zagreb strip joint which is constructed basically with a stage flat, a ragged couch, a plaster statue and a few chairs. She faces the camera, the audience, as she does her slowed down tease. One thinks immediately of David Lynch's The Slow Club. She's going slowly to get the audience to buy more drinks and not just get up and leave. One night she notices the alluring, but somehow sinister, Cynthia eyeing her from a corner table. So begins the plot which will not unravel until the film's very last image. One of Franco's best acted films, Lorys, Giacobine and Paul Muller could not be better, or better cast, in their complex roles. Franco uses mirror imagery to introduce each and to elaborate the plot and relationship arc. Captive birds flutter around the villa Cynthia like indicators of Anna's flights of fantasy. The sensuous, poetic narration of Josiane Gibert is highly evocative and pretty much guides the film to its conclusion.

This is a tragedy wrapped in a caper nestled within a sterling example of low budget late 1960s European erotica. The fact that the legendary Soledad Miranda is on hand as a criminal cohort who lounges around bare-assed in some inserts, which seem to have been shot around the time of EUGENIE DE SADE {note that Andres Monales [Montcall] also plays her lover in that film and is her partner here in the sleazy room with LIFE IS ALL SHIT emblazoned on the wall, has been the selling point of this title on past home video incarnations. Life is Shit may indeed be Jess Franco's message here and in much of his long, twisting filmography, there's even a song with that refrain heard in several of his later flms, written by his sometime collaborator, MANACOA FILES author and film historian Alain Petit.

As pointed out by Lucas Balbo in OBSESSION: THE FILMS OF JESS FRANCO this story was to be later remade as the inferior LOS OJOS SINIESTROS DEL DR. ORLOFF (1973). Yet another remake is  the rather extraordinary MIL SEXOS TIENE LA NOCHE (1981).

The thumping, eerie, sometimes rocking, sometimes abstract, jazzy, noirish Bruno Nicolai score is one of his best, and most experimental. The abrupt opening credits (credited to Nadia), made up of still images from the remainder of the film, is also highly effective.

Yet another must-have Blu-ray from REDEMPTION. Once again I must call attention to the excellent Tim Lucas commentary. I've heard many, many commentaries. They tend to be litanies of factoids and oft-told behind-the-scenes tales. Tim does something really refreshing, taking you by the hand and escorting you into the film, its style, tone and substance. He follows individual shots, appreciating Franco's oft-criticized zooms/pans/rack-focused explorations for what they are, a fearless filmmaker's personal hand writing on the spatial-temporal continuum which is a Jess Franco film. It's revealing and actually allowed me to upgrade and re examine the film from different perspectives. And yet another superb documentary from Daniel Gouyette, EUGENIE'S NIGHTMARE OF A SEX CHARADE, during which experts Alain Petit, Lucas Balbo and Jess Franco himself are allowed to expand on the context and import of this breakaway thriller. It also includes some fascinating info on Franco's lost experiment, SEX CHARADE. 

One of the most fascinating and appreciated features is a verbal-visual essay by producer Bret Wood detailing the cleaning up and reformatting of the disc after it was discovered that certain scenes were shot in different aspect ratios. It all looks very good on Blu-ray with focus and detail not seen on the previous DVD versions. Although the new detail sometimes reveal the inadequacies of the original lighting and camera work. But it's a terrific film and this is a very welcome Blu-ray upgrade. All this and more, much more. Kudos to REDEMPTION for putting Diana Lorys on the cover instead of Soledad Miranda. It's really HER film and she soars in it. Highly recommended!

(C) ROBERT MONELL 2013 

14 August, 2013

John Brahm, Jess Franco andTHE AWFUL DR. ORLOF

In his excellent commentary on THE AWFUL DR. ORLOF Blu-ray Tim Lucas cites the influence of director John Brahm, especially THE LODGER, on the visual style and atmosphere of Jess Franco's first horror film. This prompted me to review some images from Brahm's career, especially his 1940s films. Here's an image from Brahm's 1946 Film Noir THE LOCKET, showing Robert Mitchum's face obscured by shadows. Note how it compares to the image of Howard Vernon as Dr. Orlof. The expressionist use of lighting illustrates inner darkness..
Photo

11 August, 2013

The Doctor Orlof saga continues....

The new feature version of our web series now in production under the direction of Alex Bakshaev...

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Jess Franco's first Dr. Orlof film.... now on Blu-ray!
I would like to cite the excellent documentary "The Young Dr. Orlof Chronicles" directed by Daniel Gouyette, featuring a wealth of fascinating information and insights into the making of this Jess Franco horror classic by film historians Alain Petit, Lucas Balbo, Jean-Pierre Bouyxou and Eurocine Exec Daniel Lesoeur. It alone is worth the price of admission to the new Blu-ray presentation of THE AWFUL DR. ORLOF from REDEMPTION FILMS.

08 August, 2013

NIGHTMARES COME AT NIGHT on BLU-RAY!

Yet another must-have Blu-ray from REDEMPTION. Once again I must call attention to the excellent Tim Lucas commentary. I've heard many, many commentaries. They tend to be litanies of factoids and oft-told behind-the-scenes tales. Tim does something really refreshing, taking you by the hand and escorting you into the film, its style, tone and substance. He follows individual shots, appreciating Franco's oft-criticized zooms/pans/rack-focused explorations for what they are, a fearless filmmaker's personal hand writing on the spatial-temporal continuum which is a Jess Franco film. It's revealing and actually allowed me to upgrade and re examine the film from different perspectives. And yet another superb documentary from Daniel Gouyette, EUGENIE'S NIGHTMARE OF A SEX CHARADE, during which experts Alain Petit, Lucas Balbo and Jess Franco himself are allowed to expand on the context and import of this breakaway thriller. It also includes some fascinating info on Franco's lost experiment, SEX CHARADE. All this and more, much more. Kudos to REDEMPTION for putting Diana Lorys on the cover instead of Soledad Miranda. It's really HER film and she soars in it. Highly recommended!
A more detailed review of this terrific Blu-ray presentation will be added soon...

04 August, 2013

NEXT CHAT @ CINEMADROME



This rarely seen but worthy title will be discussed on JESS FRANCO LIVE @ the CHAT ROOM on CINEMADROME on Aug 10 5PM ET.

30 July, 2013

HOW TO SEDUCE A VIRGIN/PLAISIR A TROIS: MONDO MACABRO DVD Screengrabs



This is looking Great! A mannequin in the basement sex room adjacent to the torture chamber of Martine De Bressac (Alice Arno). More to come. Thanks to Pete Tombs. This is going to be a must-have.

28 July, 2013

THE MIRROR STAGE: 1

What does this film director and this French psychoanalyst  have in common? Find out in my upcoming series, THE MIRROR STAGE.

The Mirror Stage [French: stade du miroir] is a term probably largely unknown outside of the the theory, practice and history of psychoanalyis.

TOP: Jess Franco as the voyeur-Russian spy in UNA RAJITA PARA DOS (1982) 
BOTTOM: Jacques Lacan lecturing. 
This series will consider some interesting possible parallel's between Jacques Lacan's theoretical psychological concept of THE MIRROR STAGE and Jess Franco's long running deployment of mirror imagery in his films.

Lacan first made public his theory as a paper presented at
the International Psychoanalytic Congress in Marienbad. LAST YEAR AT MARIENBAD, the 1961 French Art Film classic, a labyrinth of hypnotic mise en scene written by Alain-Robbe Grillet and directed by Alain Resnais, comes immediately to mind.... right?

Beyond the joke there is something to be said concerning the relation of the theory and the central placement of the mirror as both a symbolic object and a stylistic signfiier in the cinema of Jess Franco. To name another film, AL OTRO LADO DEL ESPEJO, a key title in the prolific auteur's filmo from 1973, a year in which he made, or partially made, up to 12 feature films.

I actually had the chance to talk with the director in some detail about the film and his evaluation, intentions and practice during an [unpublished] interview I conducted with him by telephone in 2004.
But first, in the next blog post on this topic, we'll attempt to outline Lacan's theory, at least to the best of my ability, given my limited understanding of psychoanalytic theory and Lacan's dense texts on the topic.

(C) Robert Monell 2013
 

20 July, 2013

TODAY: LIVE CHAT ON CINEMADROME!

JESS FRANCO LIVE! On Saturday, July 20 @ 5PM ET we continue our live chat on CINEMADROME, discussing the director's 1980s output, the decade when he returned to Spain and let all Hell break loose. First up is the notorious Women in Prison epic, SADOMANIA, starring the late, great Ajita Wilson. Be there! Scroll down to the CHATROOM @ http://www.cinemadrome.yuku.com/

13 July, 2013

TODAY: Live Jess Franco Chat on CINEMADROME!

JESS FRANCO LIVE CHAT: THE 1980s Films. Saturday, July 13, at 5PM ET we'll be discussing Jess Franco's 1980's films as the topic. We'll be working our way through ALL of them, one by one, starting later today.... Be there. On CINEMADROME CHAT. http://www.cinemadrome.yuku.com/

Films discussed today will include NAKED SUPER WITCHES OF THE RIO AMORE, BLOODY MOON, SADOMANIA and DEVIL HUNTER!

09 July, 2013

SOLEDAD MIRANDA LIVES!



Soledad Miranda in EL CONDE DRACULA [Top] and EUGENIE DE SADE [Bottom]

Soledad Rendón Bueno (9 July 1943 – 18 August 1970), the Spanish actress-singer who is best known as Soledad Miranda, would have celebrated her 70th birthday today if not for a cruel twist of fate which occurred on the Costa Del Sol highway near Lisbon on August 18, 1970. But Soledad Miranda survives as an international icon of Cinema. The tragic car accident which took her life at the age of 27 happened at the height of her career, just as she was about to sign a multi-year contract with German producer Artur Brauner.
But this event also allowed her to enter the realm of legend, propelled by the seven films she managed to complete the last year of her life. These films, directed by Jess Franco (the final three co-produced by Brauner), illustrated her protean abilities as a performer. The theatrical success of the iconic VAMPYROS LESBOS in Germany at the time and the subsequent establishment of such films as EUGUENIE DE SADE and SHE KILLED IN ECSTASY as cult classics on VHS and DVD have given her a kind of immortality. Her image is all around us. On DVDs, posters, album covers, screenshots, Youtube videos, vintage adverts. She certainly qualifies as one of the Queens of the Internet. Just Google her name.

By 1970 she had already appeared in supporting roles in both Spanish and international co productions such as PYRO, THE SOUND OF HORROR, SUGAR COLT and 100 RIFLES, sometimes playing opposite of American stars like Barry Sullivan and Burt Reynolds. She was a well known personality in Spain even before the final Franco films. But she moved into a different dimension in 1969, starting with her haunting and haunted performance as Lucy in Franco's EL CONDE DRACULA. Even the normally aloof Christopher Lee was took notice of her special magnetism. A few months later, appearing under the name Susann Korda, she was equally haunting, but also vulnerable, dangerous and ultimately touching as the title character in EUGENIE DE SADE, one of Jess Franco's unquestionable masterworks. The unfinished JULIETTE and the (MIA) SEX CHARADE followed. But it is with her show stopping presence as the sensuous, mysterious vampire Nadine Korody that she seems to break through yet another boundary, leaving no doubt that we are in the presence of an arresting talent able to make her heart and soul visible onscreen. She developed this sexual/existential ambiguity even further as the vengeful widow who seduces and kills her victims in SHE KILLED IN ECSTASY. She seems to freeze her victims in place before melting them down.

Who know what would have eventually happened if she had been able to continue to act during the next four decades? Superstar status on an international scale? A flame out? Or a slow fade away?  What's important now is her legacy, now preserved on countless DVDs, photographs, albums and in books, articles and discussion of a certain type of Cinema. So, while mourning her loss let's also celebrate her life on her 70th birthday. Soledad Miranda Lives!

04 July, 2013

JESS FRANCO LIVE[S]!

http://www.cinemadrome.yuku.comI'm planning a new CHAT to be called JESS FRANCO LIVE[S] regarding the career and filmography of Jess Franco which will feature news and special topic discussions on my CINEMADROME site @ http://www.cinemadrome.yuku.com/  Just go to the site, register and scroll down to the CHAT FORUM and click on.
This first CHAT will be this Saturday, July 6 at 5PM ET. The subject will be THE LEGACY OF JESS FRANCO AND LINA ROMAY. Hope to see you there.

22 June, 2013

Additional scene added to upcoming Blu-ray

d.
Photo

The queen is not happy. Her scenes have been removed from CHRISTINA, PRINCESS OF EROTICISM (because they did not originally belong there). We explained to her that they will be viewable as a separate entity, in their entirety, on the Blu-ray of A VIRGIN AMONG THE LIVING DEAD. But she is still not pleased.

I'm very pleased Redemption is releasing this on Blu-ray in the original director's cut and with a lot of Special Features, including the later "zombie" version with inserts shot by Jean Rollin. This was the first version I saw on grey market from VSOM, a composite of all the footage, including this amusing, sexy-surreal insert of Alice Arno as a "queen" presiding over an orgy on the lawn of a villa. Franco regulars Pierre Taylou (Exorcism) and Wal Davis (THE OTHER SIDE OF THE MIRROR, YUKA) can also be seen in this scene. This will be presented as a separate element. Also included is a commentary by Tim Lucas. Look for it in August!

17 June, 2013

New DEVIL HUNTER DVD

Here's the link to David's review on TOMB IT MAY CONCERN
http://david-z.blogspot.com/2013/06/manhunter-jess-franco-savage-unleashed.htmlhttp://david-z.blogspot.com/2013/06/manhunter-jess-franco-savage-unleashed.html


13 June, 2013

Jess Franco's Final Film coming on Blu-ray!

Producer Ferranz Herranz sent the specs and cover for the coming BD and DVD of Jess Franco's final film.

I'm listing here the specs of the "Al Pereira" BD and DVD
July 10th - Cameo Media
"AL PEREIRA VS. THE ALLIGATOR LADIES"
1080 24p
Aspect ratio: 1.78:1
Audio: Spanish stereo DTS-HD
Subtitles (film): English, Italian, German
ADDITIONAL FEATURES
TRAILERS:
Theatrical Trailer (2’)
Trailer of the documentary “A ritmo de Jess” (3’)
THE SHOOTING:
Behind the scenes (24’)
The Wrath of Jesus (documentary short) (3’)
Camera tests (1’)
Interviews: Jess Franco and Antonio Mayans (questions by Álex Mendíbil and Francesco Cesari) (19’)
THE PREMIERE:
Pies de Gato TV: Chronicle of the Barcelona premiere (13’)
Estreno en el Maldad (documentary short) (10’)
La Nuit des Alligator Ladies (documentary short) (15’)
Malaga Film Festival premiere (4’)
WEBSERIES:
Return of the Bloodsucking Nazi Zombies, by Alex Bakshaev and Robert Monell (24’)
BUFF! SHORT FILMS (Bizarre & Underground Film Festival):
Arrozzorra, by Naxo Fiol, starring Irene Verdú (12’)
Coños y barro, by Naxo Fiol, starring Irene Verdú (4’)
Horrormania, by Juan Carlos Gallardo (12’)
Jenny, by Julio Cerrillo (5’)

12 June, 2013

LOS BLUES DE LA CALLE POP (aventuras de Felipe Marlboro, volumen 8 (1983)

  1. Jess Franco introduced in LOS BLUES DE LA CALLE POP

     

    One of my favorites, but in need of a proper OAR DVD. A colorful, satirical neo-noir, this would be perfect for Blu-ray, which takes place in "Shit City" where Jess Franco is the piano man, Antonio Mayans is the corrupt PI and Bogart looks down from the CASABLANCA poster on the wall. 

    A terrific score by Fernando Garcia Morcillo, in the jazz-blues vein, illuminated by blinding lens flares, it looks like a Punk graphic novel on film.

    Most amusing of all is that all the main characters are named after cigarette brands. Mayans is Felipe Marlboro, Jess Franco plays Sam Chesterfield! A hoot and one to search out.

    Only Jess Franco could have made this delightful film, iconoclastic, experimental and packed with cryptic jokes, secret codes and outrageous hairstyles.

04 June, 2013

SEXORCISMES now online!

Sexorcismes-1975-French-w-Eng-Subs-A-Jess-Franco-Film-w-Lina-Romay-avihttp://veehd.com/video/4760721_Sexorcismes-1975-French-w-Eng-Subs-A-Jess-Franco-Film-w-Lina-Romay-avi

Sexorcismes 1975 (French w/ Eng Subs) A Jess Franco Film w/ Lina Romay.avi | 1:20:50 Add to my collection





by Thunder.thor1
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embed / report

VHSRip. Original UNCUT French version. Storyline: Mathis Vogel (Jess Franco) is a former priest who has been excommunicated by the Church for practicing the methods of the Inquisition. Now he writes extreme sadistic stories for a sleazy magazine in Paris. His fanatical religious fervour drives him to kidnap torture and kill sexually promiscuous young women in order to save their souls. (Banned in Europe and the US except France when it first came out in 1975 Jess Franco later released a tame English version for the international audience in 1979. The English version entitled Exorcism is available here on Vee.)
SEXORCISMES, the rarely seen alternate, harder/ "uncut" alternate version of Jess Franco's EXORCISM, in now available for online viewing at Veehd.com. This version retains the superior original French language track with the director's crucial voice performance as Mathis Vogel. It also contains scenes not in any other versions, including footage of women chained in a torture chamber in Vogel's attic. Jess Franco can also be seen participating in some of the erotic action in this version! A must see. But don't download the plugins at Veehd.com, Codec and Vaudix are associated with Malware which can damage your computer. Good luck!

31 May, 2013

GOODBYE TO FRANCOISE BLANCHARD

Goodbye to French actress Francoise Blanchard who passed away two days ago in France. No cause of death has been reported as of yet. She was 58. Her striking looks and the ability to project emotion subtly and without words is best demonstrated as the title character in Jean Rollin's 1982 rural zombie tale LA MORTE VIVANTE. She plays a young woman who rises from the dead when an earthquake causes revivifying chemicals to spill into her subterranean tomb. Her anguished cry at the end of  LA MORTE VIVANTE never fails to sends a chill up my spine while bringing tears to my eyes.  A silent, very moving performance from an actress pretty much unknown, outside of cult circles, here in the US.File:Francoise 1982.jpg

She also appeared in Rollin's THE SIDEWALKS OF BANGKOK and Jess Franco's REVENGE IN THE HOUSE OF USHER (1983).


Françoise Blanchard
Since I originally posted this I have been informed by Alain Petit that her scenes in USHER, which were shot as post [original Spanish*] production inserts, were shot by Franco himself. There had been a question about this previously. Alain posted this explanation on my FACEBOOK timeline: "Jess himself did the inserts for NEVROSE, mostly in a parisian Jazz club called "Le Caveau de la Huchette."  The original Spanish version is quite different than the French version and Francoise does not appear in it.  Thanks to Alain for this clarification. 
Francoise Blanchard as Melissa in NEVROSE aka NEUROSIS: THE FALL OF THE HOUSE OF USHER (USA DVD/Video title), the Eurocine alternate version of LOS CRIMENES DE USHER (1985).

 OBSESSION: THE FILMS OF JESS FRANCO lists her as the female lead in his still unreleased 1986 AIDS thriller SIDA-LA PESTE DEL SIGLO XX. She also appears as an Amazon in GOLDEN TEMPLE AMAZONS and found work in a number of 1980s Eurocine projects [OASIS OF  LOST WOMEN]. She also reportedly has a role in the Eurocine backed, unreleased CHASING BARBARA, a composite adventure film made up of footage shot by Jess Franco and Jean Rollin.

[Below] In SIDEWALKS OF BANGKOK (1984); With Marina Pierro in LA MORTE VIVANTE.
 



Francoise-Blanchard
German poster for the Eurocine WIP OASIS OF THE LOST WOMEN and a more recent image of Francoise as seen in an interview on the LA MORTE VIVANTE DVD.

I sometimes wonder if she's the stand-in for Christina Von Blanc hiding behind the flowing blonde hair in the Eurocine zombie inserts directed by Rollin for the alternate 1980s era version of  Franco's A VIRGIN AMONG THE LIVING DEAD.

*LOS CRIMENES DE USHER was the Spanish theatrical release title for what would eventually be reworked in NEVROSE. 

30 May, 2013

VIAJE A BANGKOK, ATAUD INCLUIDO: Scene

Here's a screencap and the dialogue from a scene in Jess Franco's 1985 adaptation of Edgar Wallace's Sanders Come From the River.  This is a delightfully updated reboot of the director's 1966 Eurospy CARTES SUR TABLE, but this time with a Zen spin. Agent Sanders (Jose Llamas) and Howard Vernon investigate a series of attacks on international officials by zombie like assassins wearing sunglasses! No Eddie Constantine but Howard Vernon rules with his shocking white mustache and wicked cane. It's worth the price of admission to watch him smoking a pipe in a bubble bath....

SANDERS: Blimp, Daniel Blimp. He’s an English colonel.
HOTELIER: I’m sorry but the colonel’s no longer in the hotel.
SANDERS: But that’s impossible!
HOTELIER: It’s less than half an hour ago that they came to pay the colonel’s bill and take away his luggage. Here’s the voucher they signed when they removed his luggage.
SANDERS: Who signed it?
HOTELIER: Let’s see if I can read it. It says “Charles Dickens”. Never heard of him. Do you know who it is?
SANDERS: He rings a bell. Anyway, do you know the number of Marion Wentworth’s room?
HOTELIER: I’m afraid you’re out of luck, sir. Her bill’s been paid too, and her luggage’s been taken away.
SANDERS: Was it also that Charles Dickens man?
HOTELIER: That’s right, sir.
SANDERS: But how could you have possibly allowed him to take way the belongings of two customers? Couldn’t you have asked him who he was?
HOTELIER: Mr. Dickens struck me as quite a gentleman. We simply assumed the colonel and the lady were looking for some quite corner, if you know what I mean.
SANDERS: I see. Didn’t they leave an address?
HOTELIER: One never gives addresses in such cases!
[Thanks to NZOOG for the image and the dialogue translation. We might present further Jess Franco scenes like this in the future.]