Night of the Bloody Apes
Brief Synopsis
Cast & Crew
Rene Cardona
Film Details
Technical Specs
Synopsis
This cheap Mexican horror film is a remake of Cardona's Doctor of Doom (1962), spiced with nudity, medical footage, women wrestling, and cheap gore shots. Female masked wrestler Lucy (who looks like the devil) beats the stuffing out of an opponent - a wrestling lady with a red costume like Catwoman. Lucy finally hurls her opponent from the squared circle and knocks her out cold. Although Lucy's cop boyfriend tries to convince her that it's all part of the show, Lucy can no longer handle the stress of wrestling. Meanwhile, a mad scientist (Dr. Krellman) attempts to cure his son's leukemia by doing the first 'ape-to-human' heart transplant. He decides to put a gorilla's heart into the lad and orders his flunky to "prepare the gorilla!". There is actual footage of a graphic open heart surgery inserted in the ape operation scenes. This of course causes the boy to turn into a big stinky man-ape. He becomes deformed and mutated, as he sprouts excessive facial hair and takes on the characteristics of the organ's donor, who immediately goes on a bloody rampage, tearing clothes off women and faces off men.
Director
Rene Cardona
Film Details
Technical Specs
Articles
Night of the Bloody Apes/Feast of Flesh
In addition to the gratuitous gore, Night of the Bloody Apes also features plenty of female nudity from the wrestler heroine lounging around the locker room in her birthday suit to a female victim being stripped naked and mauled by the rampaging, sex-crazed monkey-man. Oh yes, the monkey man. See if this makes sense. A grieving scientist tries to reverse the effects of his son's terminal heart disease so he kidnaps an ape from the local zoo and transplants the heart into his son's body. The ensuing scene contains the immortal line, "Prepare the gorilla," as the scientist orders his handicapped assistant - the Spanish equivalent of Igor - to do the dirty work. As expected, the patient gets worse and eventually receives another heart transplant - this one courtesy of an unsuspecting female wrestler. So now we've got a sickly boy with a female wrestler's heart and the body of a muscle-bound Neanderthal. Nothing makes a whole lot of sense here but then consider the title. Amid the crudely staged carnage and dull exposition scenes involving a couple of inept cops are occasional moments of fun like the opening scene which introduces the lady wrestlers - they look like rejects from a Batgirl casting call. The atrociously dubbed English dialogue may even make you consider having your eardrums cleaned. Did he really say that? Yes, I'm afraid, he did. For example, in the scene where the chief inspector ridicules his underling's investigation as the product of a lively imagination, he tells him, "It's more probable that of late more and more you're watching on your television those pictures of terror." Linguistic experts could learn a lot from this movie; then again, they could suffer serious brain damage.
Night of the Bloody Apes, digitally remastered for Something Weird's DVD edition, looks better than it has any right to for a cheesy early '70s grind-house stable. And it comes with an insane amount of DVD extras including an additional feature, Feast of Flesh aka The Deadly Organ (1967), which makes even less sense than Night of the Bloody Apes and is directed by Emilio Vieyra, the man who gave us The Curious Dr. Humpp (1971). Though beautifully photographed in black and white and presented in its theatrical aspect ratio of 1.66:1, Feast of Flesh is rather slow going with a storyline that fluctuates between a masked sadist transforming women into his love slaves and a police manhunt for a serial killer that haunts a South American beach resort. Other extras include numerous short subjects and burlesque novelty numbers like "Gorilla and the Maiden," a gallery of ghoulish comic cover art, movie trailers for Face of the Screaming Werewolf (1964) and other schlock titles, 3 minutes of gory outtakes from Night of the Bloody Apes and lots more!
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by Jeff Stafford