Jump to content

The Fury of the Wolfman: Difference between revisions

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Content deleted Content added
Fetler (talk | contribs)
Altered structure
Line 18: Line 18:
}}
}}


'''''La Furia del Hombre Lobo''''' ('''''Fury of the Wolfman'''''), also known as ''The Wolfman Never Sleeps'', is a 1970 Spanish [[horror film]] that is the fourth in a long series about the [[werewolf]] Count Waldemar Daninsky, played by [[Paul Naschy]]. It was not released until 1972, due to problems involved in finding a distributor. Naschy later said in interviews that he hated this film, because it was so shoddily made by director Zabalza, who he said was a talentless alcoholic hack. This was the first film to involve a yeti as the catalyst that transforms Waldemar into a werewolf (the "yeti origin" appearing again in ''La Maldicion de la Bestia'' in 1975). Most VHSs and DVDs of this film were from a slightly edited print, although complete versions do exist. Naschy followed this film up with a sequel called ''La Noche de Walpurgis'' (1970), which became the highest-grossing film in the series.
'''''La Furia del Hombre Lobo''''' ('''''Fury of the Wolfman'''''), also known as ''The Wolfman Never Sleeps'', is a 1970 Spanish [[horror film]] that is the fourth in a long series about the [[werewolf]] Count Waldemar Daninsky, played by [[Paul Naschy]]. It was not released until 1972, due to problems involved in finding a distributor.
This was the first film to involve a yeti as the catalyst that transforms Waldemar into a werewolf (the "yeti origin" appearing again in ''La Maldicion de la Bestia'' in 1975). Naschy followed this film up with a sequel called ''La Noche de Walpurgis'' (1970), which became the highest-grossing film in the series.


==Plot summary==
==Plot summary==
College professor Waldemar Daninsky travels to [[Tibet]] and is bitten by a [[yeti]], which causes him to become a werewolf. He is accidentally killed while trying to escape after murdering his cheating wife and her lover, but he is later revived by a female scientist, Dr. Ilona Ehrmann, who uses him in her mind control experiments. Daninsky later discovers her underground asylum populated by the bizarre subjects of her failed experiments. The crazed scientist revives Waldemar's murdered ex-wife, who also becomes a werewolf from being fatally bitten by Daninsky, and forces the two werewolves to fight. Waldemar kills his wife once again, and is in turn shot to death by the doctor's assistant, a woman who loves him enough to end his torment.<br>
College professor Waldemar Daninsky travels to [[Tibet]] and is bitten by a [[yeti]], which causes him to become a werewolf. He is accidentally killed while trying to escape after murdering his cheating wife and her lover, but he is later revived by a female scientist, Dr. Ilona Ehrmann, who uses him in her mind control experiments. Daninsky later discovers her underground asylum populated by the bizarre subjects of her failed experiments. The crazed scientist revives Waldemar's murdered ex-wife, who also becomes a werewolf from being fatally bitten by Daninsky, and forces the two werewolves to fight. Waldemar kills his wife once again, and is in turn shot to death by the doctor's assistant, a woman who loves him enough to end his torment.

The plot of this film differed from the earlier entries in the series in that 1) Daninsky is a college professor in this film, 2) the lycanthropy is caused by a yeti's bite, and 3) Daninsky is married in this film. Due to the laziness of director Zabalza, this film wound up including a lot of stock footage from ''La Marca del Hombre Lobo'' and a few carelessly mismatched werewolf scenes played by a stunt double.
The plot of this film differed from the earlier entries in the series in that 1) Daninsky is a college professor in this film, 2) the lycanthropy is caused by a yeti's bite, and 3) Daninsky is married in this film. Due to the laziness of director Zabalza, this film wound up including a lot of stock footage from ''La Marca del Hombre Lobo'' and a few carelessly mismatched werewolf scenes played by a stunt double.



Revision as of 11:29, 11 April 2015

La Furia del Hombre Lobo
Directed byJosé María Zabalza
Written byJacinto Molina
StarringPaul Naschy,
Perla Cristal,
Verónica Luján
CinematographyLeopoldo Villaseñor
Edited byLuis Álvarez,
Sebastián Herranz
Music byAna Satrova
Distributed byAVCO Embassy Pictures (USA, theatrical)
Release date
February 7, 1972
Running time
90 min
CountrySpain
LanguageSpanish

La Furia del Hombre Lobo (Fury of the Wolfman), also known as The Wolfman Never Sleeps, is a 1970 Spanish horror film that is the fourth in a long series about the werewolf Count Waldemar Daninsky, played by Paul Naschy. It was not released until 1972, due to problems involved in finding a distributor.

This was the first film to involve a yeti as the catalyst that transforms Waldemar into a werewolf (the "yeti origin" appearing again in La Maldicion de la Bestia in 1975). Naschy followed this film up with a sequel called La Noche de Walpurgis (1970), which became the highest-grossing film in the series.

Plot summary

College professor Waldemar Daninsky travels to Tibet and is bitten by a yeti, which causes him to become a werewolf. He is accidentally killed while trying to escape after murdering his cheating wife and her lover, but he is later revived by a female scientist, Dr. Ilona Ehrmann, who uses him in her mind control experiments. Daninsky later discovers her underground asylum populated by the bizarre subjects of her failed experiments. The crazed scientist revives Waldemar's murdered ex-wife, who also becomes a werewolf from being fatally bitten by Daninsky, and forces the two werewolves to fight. Waldemar kills his wife once again, and is in turn shot to death by the doctor's assistant, a woman who loves him enough to end his torment.

The plot of this film differed from the earlier entries in the series in that 1) Daninsky is a college professor in this film, 2) the lycanthropy is caused by a yeti's bite, and 3) Daninsky is married in this film. Due to the laziness of director Zabalza, this film wound up including a lot of stock footage from La Marca del Hombre Lobo and a few carelessly mismatched werewolf scenes played by a stunt double.

Cast

  • Paul Naschy
  • Perla Cristal
  • Verónica Luján
  • Miguel de la Riva
  • José Marco
  • Francisco Amorós
  • Javier de Rivera
  • Ramón Lillo
  • Fabián Conde
  • Pilar Zorrilla

External links