Fangs of the Living Dead
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Average customer review:Product Details
- Amazon Sales Rank: #78858 in DVD
- Released on: 2004-02-24
- Rating: PG (Parental Guidance Suggested)
- Aspect ratio: 1.33:1
- Formats: Color, Dubbed, DVD, Letterboxed, NTSC
- Original language: Spanish
- Dubbed in: English
- Number of discs: 1
- Running time: 80 minutes
Customer Reviews
INOFFENSIVE EURO-SCHLOCK
Released in 1968 as part of a triple-horror-feature for the drive-in crowd, "Fangs" came and went without notice in this country. Supposedly, this is the "American" version. Retromedia--whom I admit I have no respect for due to their poor quality offerings--has done an OK job with this Italian-Spanish vampire mish-mash and I rather enjoyed it. 50's sex bomb Anita Ekberg is miscast as Sylvia--a Rome "bathing suit model"--who is notified she has inherited a castle. On her arrival, it turns out she has inherited it's alleged vampiric/witchcraft legacy as well. The strangely effete and thin "Uncle" who has sent for her has other cards up his sleeve. What follows is a campy Euro effort at atmospheric horror replete with beautiful girls, a dungeon tomb, sinister caretaker, Euro-style barmaids at a local inn and , of course, "vampires" that may or not be real. It's all very "PG" with no gore or nudity but LOTS of cleavage on the girls. There's a typical stiff-as-a-board hero and his comic-relief friend who dash about saying "We've got to save her!" and one line I truly loved from a barmaid to the hero/scientist, "Would you mind having a look at a girl who's not well?" The dubbing is so-so, the acting the pits (but so bad it's a riot) and the photography is typically European style atmospheric but rather endearingly low-budget. Miss Ekberg is a LITTLE too long-in-the-tooth to be a damsel in distress with an obviously younger leading man, but she is still beautiful and displays, in one outfit, some astounding "assets" that are truly eye-bogglers. All in all, not bad if you're in the mood for something like this and especially if you like low-budget "Euro-shockers". The color is good with one shady spot in one scene and the soundtrack has what sounds to be the original continental jazz flavored pop score along with the appropriately creepy stuff. I liked it---maybe you will too.
Weak Italian Attempt at Vampires
A young woman on the verge of marriage discovers that she has inherited a castle and is now a Countess. She decides to visit her new land before her wedding. But once there she finds the castle inhabited by relatives who are vampires. Under a hypnotic thrall she sends word back to her fiancé cancelling the wedding. Fiancé is not put off and journeys to find out what is going on.
Suddenly everyone is being attacked by vampires. The fiancé and a friend set out on a daring rescue with the local doctor.
In the end the whole thing comes off a just silly. The final scene has one of the vampires chasing someone through the bright daylight with no ill effects. One gets the feeling that the film's creators were trying to reproduce the feeling of the Hammer vampire films but failed. The characters' motivations and emotions jump all over the place with little or no consistency. When done one can only wonder who would enjoy this film.
Love Italian Style...
Sylvia Morell (Anita Ekberg) inherits a castle in the outskirts of the Italian countryside. Upon arrival, she is greeted by a strange, ultra-thin uncle, who tells her of her grandmother named "Malenka" -(this was also the movie's original title)-, sealed in the castle's underground crypt. Thankfully, the castle is also the home of a vampire babe in an eye-popping outfit! She's the sort of gal that could bite my neck any time! There are also two local barmaids, one of whom is afraid she's being turned into a nosferatu. Anyway, the rest of the movie is a confusing trainwreck. However, Ms. Ekberg, the vampire babe, and the two village barmaids made it all rather painless and somehow enjoyable! There's even a vampiric catfight!! Worth a look...




