Face of the Screaming Werewolf

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Face of the Screaming Werewolf
Face of the Screaming Werewolf FilmPoster.jpeg
Directed byGilberto Martínez Solares
Rafael Portillo
Jerry Warren
Written byFernando de Fuentes
Gilberto Martínez Solares
Alfredo Salazar
Jerry Warren
Produced byJerry Warren
StarringLon Chaney Jr.

George Mitchell
Fred Hoffman
Rosita Arenas
Ramón Gay
CinematographyRaúl Martínez Solares
Enrique Wallace
Edited byJerry Warren
Music byLuis Hernández Bretón
Distributed byA.D.P. Pictures Inc.
Something Weird Video
Release date
1965[1]
Running time
60 minutes
CountriesMexico
United States
LanguageEnglish (Dubbed)

Face of the Screaming Werewolf is a 1965 horror film created by low budget film maker Jerry Warren by combining parts of two unrelated Mexican horror films (La Casa del Terror (1960) and La Momia Azteca (1957)), and adding new footage which he had shot himself.[2] It was released theatrically in 1965 on a double-bill with Warren's similarly constructed Curse of the Stone Hand, which starred John Carradine.[3]

Warren eliminated almost all of the comedy scenes with Mexican comedian Tin-Tan from Casa del Terror[2] and combined the remaining Lon Chaney Jr. footage with mummy footage he took from La Momia Azteca.,[4]

Warren had earlier released his own re-edited version of La Momia Azteca in 1963, which he had retitled Attack of the Mayan Mummy, by removing huge chunks of the original foreign film and replacing them with newly filmed footage featuring American actors.[5] He later used extensive footage from this same Mexican mummy film to incorporate into his Face of the Screaming Werewolf.[2] The story that Ed Wood filmed a few scenes of Lon Chaney Jr. in a werewolf costume in Hollywood in 1964, which Jerry Warren incorporated into Face of the Screaming Werewolf, is unsubstantiated.[6]


Plot[]

A psychic woman named Ann Taylor (Rosita Arenas),[7] regressed to a former life via hypnosis, leads archaeologists into an Aztec pyramid where they discover a tomb containing two mummies, one of which turns out to be a mummified Caucasian werewolf (Lon Chaney Jr.), the other a mummified ancient Aztec warrior (Angel di Stefani). A mad doctor (Yerye Beirute)[7] kidnaps the werewolf-mummy to his lab and manages to revive him, the unwrapped creature transforming into a snarling werewolf when the full moon rises.

Meanwhile, the second mummy (the Aztec warrior) escapes from captivity later that night and tries to kidnap Ann Taylor, the psychic, from her apartment, but they are both anticlimactically hit by a car and killed (off-screen) as he tries to carry her off. A hastily inserted newspaper headline alerts the public that the Mummy has been killed, bringing that plot to an abrupt end.

The werewolf kills the mad scientist, escapes from the lab and goes on a killing spree in a nearby city. The werewolf kidnaps a young woman (Yolanda Varela) from her apartment near the film's finale, and Mexican comedian Tin-Tan (German Valdes) shows up out of nowhere to attempt to rescue her (since almost all of his scenes had been edited out of the original Mexican film by Jerry Warren for this Americanized edition[2]) and he battles the monster on a building ledge high above the city. The Werewolf escapes back to the lab with the woman, but the lab catches on fire and the nameless hero beats him to death with a burning torch somehow, and as the monster turns back into a human, a pair of American actors playing policemen dismiss the idea that there was ever a werewolf at all.

Cast[]

  • Lon Chaney Jr. as The Mummified Werewolf
  • as The Aztec Mummy
  • Rosita Arenas as Ann Taylor (the psychic)
  • Yerye Beirute as Dr. Janning
  • George Mitchell as Dr. Frederick Munson
  • as Detective Hammond
  • Ramón Gay (billed as Raymond Gaylord) as Dr. Edmund Redding
  • (billed as Donald Barron) as Janning's heavyset henchman
  • Yolanda Varela (billed as Landa Varle) as the girl carried off by the werewolf
  • German Valdes (aka Tin-Tan) as Hero who rescues the girl from the werewolf
  • Chuck Niles as newscaster Douglas Banks
  • Steve Conte as The Hired Thief

Critical Responses[]

Michael Weldon of Psychotronic Video stated that the film did not make sense since so much of the original dialogue scenes had been removed.[8] Cavett Binion of AllMovie referred to it as a "messy film" that contained poor dubbing and editing.[9]

References[]

  1. ^ Smith, Don G. (1996). "Lon Chaney Jr.". McFarland & Co., Inc. ISBN 0-7864-0120-6. Page 148
  2. ^ Jump up to: a b c d Cotter 2005, p. 41.
  3. ^ Smith 2006, p. 148.
  4. ^ Smith 2006, p. 147.
  5. ^ Ray, Fred Olen (1991). "The New Poverty Row". McFarland and Co. Inc. ISBN 0-89950-628-3. Page 14, 15
  6. ^ Smith, Don G. (1996). Lon Chaney Jr. McFarland. ISBN 0-7864-0120-6.
  7. ^ Jump up to: a b Cotter 2005, p. 40.
  8. ^ Weldon, Michael (1996). "The Psychotronic Video Guide". St.Martin's Griffin. ISBN 0-312-13149-6. Page 195
  9. ^ Binion, Cavett. "Face of the Screaming Werewolf". Retrieved 9 July 2018.

Sources[]

External links[]

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