El deseo y la bestia backdrop
El deseo y la bestia poster

EL DESEO Y LA BESTIA

The Blood Beast Terror

1968 GB HMDB
febrero 1, 1968

Tras ocurrir una serie de inexplicables crímenes, el inspector Quenell es asignado al caso. Sus investigaciones le llevarán hasta un científico que ha conseguido crear una especie de mariposa vampiro que crece desmesuradamente y ataca a los seres humanos para beberse su sangre.

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Equipo

Produccion: Arnold L. Miller (Producer)Tony Tenser (Executive Producer)
Guion: Peter Bryan (Screenplay)
Musica: Paul Ferris (Original Music Composer)
Fotografia: Stanley A. Long (Director of Photography)

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Marco Castellini
Londres siglo XIX: un científico loco transforma una mariposa en una especie de chica-vampiro. Un policía, alarmado por la desaparición de numerosas personas, orienta sus investigaciones hacia la casa del estudioso, dedicado a nuevos experimentos espeluznantes. La vampira matará a su creador y morirá entre las llamas. Peter Cushing y Robert Flemyng en un fantahorror producido por la Hammer. Es la típica historia del médico loco con algunos puntos originales y divertidos (ver el personaje de la vampira-mariposa), pero nada más. Aceptable.
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RESEÑAS DE LA COMUNIDAD (2)

Wuchak

Wuchak

5 /10

The Mothman’s first movie

Young men in the countryside near London are winding up dead with their throats torn open and their blood drained. A Scotland Yard inspector (Peter Cushing) enlists the input of a college entomologist (Robert Flemying) to track down the killer. Wanda Ventham plays the latter’s daughter while Vanessa Howard is on hand as the former’s daughter.

"The Blood Beast Terror" (1968) was ironically made during the general period when the so-called Mothman terrorized inhabitants of Point Pleasant, West Virginia, in late 1966. Cushing viewed it as his worst film and Flemying hated working on it. Most of the cast complained about the small, cost-effective (cheap) sets.

Made by Tigon, it’s quaint and frugal, but it’s not THAT bad. Fans of Cushing and British horror produced by Hammer, Amicus & the like should appreciate it to some degree. One problem is that the creature is revealed too early, albeit from a distance. However, when it’s fully shown it works for what it is. Another issue is that what a certain character is doing with his dubious experiments is muddled. I’d say more but I don’t want to give anything away.

Wanda Ventham is striking and charismatic; she’s the mother of Benedict Cumberbatch. Meanwhile Vanessa is cute.

The movie runs 1 hour, 28 minutes, and was shot in Goldhawk Studios, Shepherd's Bush, London and Grim's Dyke House, Old Redding, Harrow Weald, Middlesex (exteriors of the Clare House).

GRADE: C

CinemaSerf

CinemaSerf

5 /10

Vernon Sewell has assembled quite a decent cast here, but sadly the story is scraping the bottom of the barrel somewhat. Robert Flemyng is a genetic scientist who has created (why?) a being that by day is the gorgeous, vivacious young women "Clare" (Wanda Bentham) but by night is a blood sucking insect feasting readily on anyone who takes it's fancy. Luckily, Peter Cushing ("Insp. Quennell") is on hand to get to the bottom of things. Again, the colour photography robs this of what menace it had, and the effects - such as they are - rely too much on the old techniques of light and shade to have much of an impact in this new medium. Perhaps not a film for lepidopteraphobics, it does gather a bit of pace as Cushing's investigations start to bear fruit, but for me this is all just a bit too predictably silly.

Reseñas proporcionadas por TMDB