Miss Muerte (1966)
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Abuelo Made in Spain screencaps (3/4)
Abuelo Made in Spain is a 1969 Spanish comedy written by Pedro Masó and Vicente Coello and directed by Pedro Lazaga.
Marcelino (Paco Martínez soria), a widower shepherd living in the Aragonese Pyrenees saw his three young daughters Cándida (Carmen Lozano), Visi (Mabel Karr), and Nieves (Monica Randall), go to Madrid to find better lives; they've all gotten married, had sons, and forgotten their father. One day, Marcelino receives a letter from Cándida, who invites him to come for a long visit. What she really wants is some help from her father, as she's not able to take care of her 10 daughters and her upcoming child. Marcelino goes to Madrid, but once there, he only finds an unknown, frantic, hostile world and three unhappy daughters.
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More than 30 years after its premiere in cinemas, in 2000 it was broadcast on La 1, being seen by more than five million viewers and ranking 33rd among the most viewed films in the decade (2000-2009) and the first at the national level.
Cast:
Paco Martínez Soria - Marcelino
Carmen Lozano - Cándida
Mabel Karr - Visitación "Visi"
Monica Randall - Nieves
María Montez II - dancer
Fernanda Hurtado - Nina
José Ramón Moreno Muñoz - Antoine, "Los Gritos" drummer
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Bad movie I have The Diabolical DR.Z aka Miss Muerte 1966
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Jesus Franco- Miss Muerte (The Diabolical Dr. Z) (1966)
#ViernesDePelicula
Hoy cumpliría 87 años el maestro Jesus Franco y como me resulta un personaje entrañable no puedo menos que dedicarle una entrada en el blog haciéndome cargo de una de sus películas mas conocidas y mas valoradas, en tanto la obra de Franco ha sido (a veces con razón) muy, pero muy criticada. Estoy hablando de Miss Muerte, "un largometraje con un título maravilloso que parece salido de una novela barata, o de la literatura de quiosco de entonces. Es un film tal vez no excesivamente original, pero sí muy redondo, en todos sus aspectos técnicos y artísticos. Es un film, también, muy propio de los inicios del despegue del cine fantástico español, un momento en el que se asimilan y mezclan diversas corrientes e influencias foráneas, para, una vez agitadas con desparpajo (Franco al menos tenía ese desparpajo), hacer algo que, aunque seguía siendo mimético, tenía mucha gracia, y mucho encanto. Mabel Karr, en el papel de científica loca, está muy bien; su interpretación tiene la dureza, la locura, y el punto de delirio, que el personaje necesita. Es muy curioso, además, que aquí tanto el científico loco como su "criatura", una criatura programada para la venganza, sean dos mujeres, y muy atractivas, sin duda.
He dicho antes que hay influencias, que a veces son homenajes: el cine negro, el cine de Orson Welles. Las referencias a Robert Bresson son bastante divertidas. Hay en la trama, tal vez, algún eco de "Los ojos sin rostro" (Les yeux sans visage, 1960), de Georges Franju. El personaje del Dr. Zimmer (Antonio Jiménez Escribano) tiene algo de Dr. Strangelove. Hay un momento violento -la mujer que rompe un cristal con la cabeza- que se anticipa a algunos crímenes del cine de Dario Argento. Por otro lado, la estrategia de situar la acción en un país extranjero (aquí, uno vagamente germánico), por aquello de sortear a la censura, será habitual en el fantaterror español de los últimos años del franquismo. Por último, las escenas en el cabaré con Estella Blain vestida de mujer-araña son de un erotismo muy especial."
Reseña de Pedro Triguero
País: España
Director: Jesus Franco
Guion: Jesus Franco & Jean-Claude Carriére
Reparto: Antonio Jiménez Escribano, Guy Mairesse, Howard Vernon, Mabel Karr, Fernando Montes, Estella Blain, Ana Castor, Daniel White
Música: Daniel White
Genero: Terror, Ciencia Ficcion
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Miss Muerte (1966) - Spanish poster
AKA The Diabolical Dr. Z
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Abuelo Made in Spain screencaps (2/4)
Abuelo Made in Spain is a 1969 Spanish comedy written by Pedro Masó and Vicente Coello and directed by Pedro Lazaga.
Marcelino (Paco Martínez soria), a widower shepherd living in the Aragonese Pyrenees saw his three young daughters Cándida (Carmen Lozano), Visi (Mabel Karr), and Nieves (Monica Randall), go to Madrid to find better lives; they've all gotten married, had sons, and forgotten their father. One day, Marcelino receives a letter from Cándida, who invites him to come for a long visit. What she really wants is some help from her father, as she's not able to take care of her 10 daughters and her upcoming child. Marcelino goes to Madrid, but once there, he only finds an unknown, frantic, hostile world and three unhappy daughters.
___
More than 30 years after its premiere in cinemas, in 2000 it was broadcast on La 1, being seen by more than five million viewers and ranking 33rd among the most viewed films in the decade (2000-2009) and the first at the national level.
Cast:
Paco Martínez Soria - Marcelino
Carmen Lozano - Cándida
Mabel Karr - Visitación "Visi"
Monica Randall - Nieves
María Montez II - dancer
Fernanda Hurtado - Nina
José Ramón Moreno Muñoz - Antoine, "Los Gritos" drummer
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The Diabolical Dr. Z (1966)
The Diabolical Dr. Z (1966)
The Diabolical Dr. Z [aka Miss Muerte] (1966) Alejandro Ulloa provided the exquisite black and white cinematography for Jesse Franco’s dissociative collage of horror. Irma [Mabel Karr] takes revenge on the doctors who mocked her father’s research on “the moral centers of the human nervous system.” Dr. Z is himself less a moral center than a Dr. Strangelove, or Dr. Mabuse. His evil machine is a…
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The Diabolical Dr. Z (1966)
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Miss Muerte (1966)
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Abuelo Made in Spain screencaps (1/4)
Abuelo Made in Spain is a 1969 Spanish comedy written by Pedro Masó and Vicente Coello and directed by Pedro Lazaga.
Marcelino (Paco Martínez soria), a widower shepherd living in the Aragonese Pyrenees saw his three young daughters Cándida (Carmen Lozano), Visi (Mabel Karr), and Nieves (Monica Randall), go to Madrid to find better lives; they've all gotten married, had sons, and forgotten their father. One day, Marcelino receives a letter from Cándida, who invites him to come for a long visit. What she really wants is some help from her father, as she's not able to take care of her 10 daughters and her upcoming child. Marcelino goes to Madrid, but once there, he only finds an unknown, frantic, hostile world and three unhappy daughters.
___
More than 30 years after its premiere in cinemas, in 2000 it was broadcast on La 1, being seen by more than five million viewers and ranking 33rd among the most viewed films in the decade (2000-2009) and the first at the national level.
Cast:
Paco Martínez Soria - Marcelino
Carmen Lozano - Cándida
Mabel Karr - Visitación "Visi"
Monica Randall - Nieves
María Montez II - dancer
Fernanda Hurtado - Nina
José Ramón Moreno Muñoz - Antoine, "Los Gritos" drummer
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Miss Muerte 1966
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