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1957 Mexican film From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
El vampiro (English: The Vampire) is a 1957 Mexican horror film, produced by Abel Salazar and directed by Fernando Méndez from an original screenplay by Ramon Obon, and starring German Robles as Count Lavud, the vampire, Abel Salazar as Dr. Enrique, and Ariadna Welter as Marta. The film, which took influence from the canon of Universal horror, is seen as the beginning of the Mexican horror boom of the 1960s.[1]
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El vampiro | |
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Directed by | Fernando Méndez |
Written by | Ramón Obón (Story and adaptation) |
Produced by | Abel Salazar |
Starring | Abel Salazar Germán Robles Ariadne Welter Carmen Montejo José Luis Jiménez |
Music by | Gustavo César Carrión |
Release date |
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Running time | 95 minutes |
Country | Mexico |
Language | Spanish |
A sequel, El ataud del vampiro (English: The Vampire's Coffin) with the same producer (Salazar), director (Méndez), writer (Obon) and three main actors playing the same roles (Robles, Salazar, and Welter) was released in 1958.
The film is about Marta, a young woman, who travels to her childhood village, only to find that one of her aunts is dead and another is under the influence of Mr. Duval, who later turns out to be a vampire named Count Karol de Lavud.
It is one of the first movies to show a vampire with elongated canines, a year before Hammer's Horror of Dracula. Although F.W. Murnau's Nosferatu (Max Schrek) had elongated incisors; Tod Browning's Dracula (Bela Lugosi) did not show his teeth at all, while for this film Robles was given visible teeth.[1]
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