Jack el destripador backdrop
Jack el destripador poster

JACK EL DESTRIPADOR

Jack the Ripper

1976 DE HMDB
septiembre 23, 1976

Un respetado doctor por el día, Dennis Orloff, se dedica a asesinar prostitutas por las noches en las calles de Londres.

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Equipo

Produccion: Erwin C. Dietrich (Producer)Max Dora (Producer)
Guion: Jesús Franco (Screenplay)
Musica: Walter Baumgartner (Original Music Composer)
Fotografia: Peter Baumgartner (Director of Photography)Peter Spoerri (Director of Photography)

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Marco Castellini
Un médico loco, nacido de una relación incestuosa de una prostituta, se pasea por Londres matando a todas las prostitutas que encuentra, desmembrándolas y tirándolas al Támesis. Al final será detenido gracias a la ayuda de una mujer. Klaus Kinski dirigido por Jesus Franco: no es que se pudiera esperar una "obra maestra"... pero al menos esta vez Franco logra dirigir una película "digna", que no escatima escenas "fuertes" y, como de costumbre, desnudez explícita (pero se sabe que Franco es el Tinto Brass del género de terror...).
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Wuchak

Wuchak

7 /10

“Any back alley street is where we'll probably meet”

Helmed by Jess Franco and released in 1976, “Jack the Ripper” is a well-done interpretation of the serial killer of the Whitechapel district of London with Klaus Kinski in the title role. Keep in mind that the murderer was never identified or arrested and so every cinematic account that reveals the killer’s identity is a fabrication. This is Victorian horror in the manner of Hammer’s "Hands of the Ripper" (1971), which dealt with the hypothetical daughter of the Whitechapel slasher, as well as "The Two Faces of Dr. Jekyll" (1960). The latter is the better of the two and this one’s about on par with it.

I realize that "The Two Faces of Dr. Jekyll" dealt with the fictitious Mr. Hyde, but the two killers are somewhat linked in that Stevenson’s novella was published 2.5 years before the Ripper slayings debuted; and the stage production of “Dr. Jekyll” in London, 1888, had to be shut down due to the hysteria over the ghastly Ripper killings in which even those who merely played murderers on stage were considered suspects. For a colorful low-budget production that combines the two slayers, check out "Edge of Sanity" (1989) with Anthony Perkins.

Like “Edge of Sanity,” this version with Klaus Kinski doesn't hold back with its depictions of the sadistic and debauched. As such, there's an amount of sordidness and gore, which is apropos in light of the grisly subject. If you're in the mood for a Victorian milieu, black coats, London fog, cobblestone streets, gas lamps, alluring women, burlesque entertainment, a ghastly killer and lush colors, "Jack the Ripper" should fill the bill. It's the precursor to "From Hell" (2001), 25 years earlier.

Lina Romay (not the elder singer from America) stands out on the feminine front as brunette Cabaret dancer Marika. She happened to be the quickie director’s mate for four decades (they officially married in 2008, four years before her death; Jess died from a stroke the following year). There are a couple of other notable females, of course. I should add that there’s some nudity with one thin actress shown totally nude; just a heads up.

The flick runs 1 hour, 31 minutes, and was shot in Zürich, Switzerland, which is about fifteen miles from the border of southwest Germany. Establishing shots were done in London.

GRADE: B

Reseñas proporcionadas por TMDB