The Black Pit of Dr. M (1959) Poster

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8/10
A Pit worth falling into
FilmFlaneur24 February 2008
After Dr Mazali (Rafael Betrand) makes his dying colleague Dr Aldama (Antonio Raxel) promise to reveal the secrets of the afterlife to him, in a séance he is then given a stark warning: in a few months time, he will indeed learn what lies beyond death, but at great personal cost. For even as "science senselessly struggles to break the barrier which separates us from God," one door will close just as another opens, in an irrevocable and fearful process. Meanwhile a mysterious stranger contacts Aldama's estranged daughter Patricia (Mapita Cortes) and brings her to Mazali's sanatorium where events will reach their climax in madness and tragedy...

After two successful vampire pictures, El Vampiro and El Ataud del Vampiro, made in just the previous year to this film, director Fernando Méndez next opted for this more ambitious project, a complicated and atmospheric zombie tale in which some have seen anticipations of much Mexican genre production due the following decade. The Black Pit Of Dr M (aka: Misterios de Ultratumba) can therefore be seen as the culmination of his short career in horror, as only the unsatisfactory western hybrid The Living Coffin (aka: El Grito de la Muerte, 1959) remained before Méndez worked on a couple of further, more nondescript, projects and retired from directing a couple of years later.

While some parts of Black Pit are hugely impressive - leading its effusive DVD commentary track to claim it as a neglected 'masterpiece', some of its strengths are arguably also its weakness. For instance the insistent, melodramatic tone, studio acting, or the conflation of several horror elements (zombies, apparitions, mad scientists, disfigured assistants, private asylums, etc) into one heterogeneous mixture that's both daring and ultimately diffuse in effect.

Méndez's black and white film looks splendid in this reincarnated edition, with excellent cinematography that includes deep focus, adding immeasurably to the Gothic atmosphere it inhabits. Dr Manzali's mist swept, wet-paved hacienda for instance, containing the sanatorium, full of evocative visual pleasure and composition, or the Ulmer-like minimalism of the nightclub in which we first see Patricia. Add to this a splendidly sombre main theme by Gustav Carrion and fans are in for a treat. Such sustained sombreness is certainly streets ahead of the better-known, somewhat beloved, campy works of terror that were to follow shortly in the Mexican horror film, like The Brainiac (aka: El Baron del Terror, 1962). In fact the moody genre success of Mendez's film makes it hard to see why the American distributors felt obliged to change the title at all, let alone quite what the black pit in the English language title is. Dr Mazali has nothing like it on show, unless it is the metaphorical pit of madness into which he so dramatically plunges.

Combining the disparate elements of the plot into one convincing whole is, as already mentioned, one of the film's biggest challenges. It's not that the result is a failure, far from it. But as a scarred henchman, gauche lovers, Dracula-like caped figure, a madwoman, obsessed medic and all the trapping of a B-movie asylum come together on screen in turn, by the half way mark Méndez has to make a decision about progressing the plot out of these complications, and then to its crisis which is only in varying degrees completely successful. One wishes that he had made more of an earlier stylistic decision, which incidentally makes up one of the film's finest moments: a startling jump cut from a close up of the terrified Patricia's eyes directly to an impending confrontation within the madhouse. Elsewhere the narrative abruptly (presumably for reasons of timing and clarity) skips a whole three months and a murder trial before it takes up matters again in a death cell - a process done through more traditional editing which leaves the development of one major character meantime at least to be desired. But perhaps one should carp too much; nightmares after all have their own disorientating logic (and the DVD blurb does refer optimistically to 'shocking jolts'), this while sacrificing some mundane events gives Méndez time to bring out some striking sequences: the eruption from the grave for instance, or those within the asylum.

Elsewhere, and away from the intriguing complexities of the narrative, things are less original. As the central and necessarily doomed character, Dr Mazali suffers from the stereotyping dogging most scientists of his ilk; those to whom "There are more things in heaven and Earth... than are dreamt of in your philosophy," can be applied almost as narrative mantra. Actors Betrand and colleagues do a respectable job, but it's fair to say that most pleasure obtained by the viewer stems from the mounting of the plot, rather than the way it's acted.

CasaNegra can be congratulated on doing a fine job in bringing this Mexican horror classic safely to disc, one of a series of such releases. Not everything is perfect (viewers are warned about some 'brassiness' in the soundtrack sound, but it's very minor especially compared to an unmentioned, persistent low hum heard throughout, presumably present in the original elements). The print, taken from vault materials, is admirably free from on screen damage or artifacts. Extras include an enthusiastic and welcome commentary by IVTV's Frank Coleman, a photo essay 'Mexican Monsters Invade the US', a director's biography, the original 1961 continuity script, cast bios, poster and stills gallery with the original trailer.

All in all this is indispensable viewing for those who enjoy their horror in black and white, especially those who cherish the original 1930s' Universal cycle, from which much on offer here owes strong inspiration. Those who have stumbled across Mexican cinema of this type will see this is one of the best examples and not hesitate others should check it out as soon as possible.
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8/10
Very Creepy and Atmospheric Mexican Horror Gem
Witchfinder-General-66627 February 2009
I cannot claim to be an expert on Mexican Horror cinema so far, but I certainly intend to dig out more films of the kind of this gem. "Misterios De La Ultratumba" aka. "The Black Pit of Dr. M"/"Mysteries From Beyond The Grave" of 1959 is an immensely moody Mexican Horror film that provides both a morbid and fascinating story and a genuinely creepy atmosphere. Occultism, mad science and the resurrection of the dead have always been some of my favorite Horror topics, and "Misterios De Ultratumba" unites all these elements in a very memorable and deeply uncanny manner. The atmosphere of this eerie gem is intensified by a haunting score, great Gothic settings and morbid makeup.

Dr. Mazali (Rafael Bertrand) and Dr. Aldama (Antonio Raxel) have made a pact that the first one of them to die shall come back and tell the other the secret of resurrection. After Aldama's death, Mazali, the head of a remote mental clinic, waits for the instructions of his dead colleague... This is only a very vague description of the plot, but I sure don't intend to give any part of this creepy gem's fascinating and wonderfully morbid plot away. The film, most of which is terrifically set in an old countryside insane asylum, maintains an intensely eerie Gothic atmosphere from the very beginning. The settings and visuals are great, old cemeteries and churches, heavy tombstones and foggy grounds provide the uncanny mood that my fellow fans of classic Horror should appreciate. The film provides morbidity, insanity and genuine scariness, all of which is intensified by the brilliantly intense and haunting score that boosts the creepiness each time it is heard. The performances are very decent, Rafael Bernard is good in the lead and Mapita Cortés is very nice to look at in the female lead as Dr. Almada's illegitimate daughter. This was the first film by Director Fernando Méndez I ever saw, but it certainly isn't going to be the last. Overall, "Misterios De Ultratumba" is an immensely creepy gem that no lover of atmospheric Horror should miss. Highly recommended!
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8/10
Another Mexican horror winner!
bensonmum229 August 2006
Warning: Spoilers
Another Mexican horror winner! Until just recently, I doubt I could have named more than a half dozen Mexican horror films that didn't feature a masked wrestler. As I'm quickly discovering, Mexican horror has much more to offer – especially for fans of Gothic horror. Films like The Black Pit of Dr. M appear to be heavily influenced by the classic Gothic Universal films of the 1930s. They have the same thick atmosphere, similar looking sets, a familiar grand but foreboding score, and common plot themes. In fact, if the actors weren't speaking Spanish and you could replace the main actor with Boris Karloff, you would essentially have a 1930s American horror film.

The Black Pit of Dr. M is the story of a couple of doctors who have made what is in essence a death pact. The one who dies first will do whatever he can to comeback to let the another know what the afterlife is like. But Dr. Mazali isn't content with knowing what happens after death, he wants to experience it. His recently departed friend, Dr. Aldama, informs Dr. Mazali that it might be possible him to experience the afterlife, yet return to the living. But is Dr. Mazali willing to pay a heavy price to cheat death?

If I have one complaint with The Black Pit of Dr. M it would be with the predictable nature of some of the plot points toward the end of the movie. Maybe I've seen too many similar movies or maybe the movie really is predictable, but a few more plot twists in the films finale would have made this one even better. As it is, The Black Pit of Dr. M is a wonderfully entertaining movie even with this weakness. Fans of Gothic horror are sure to enjoy this one.

Casa Negra's new DVD is amazing given the obscure nature of the movie. I sincerely doubt that The Black Pit of Dr. M ever looked better. The DVD includes a warning about some brassy moments in the film's soundtrack, and while I noticed it, the audio weaknesses never distracted or took away from the film's enjoyment. The extras are nice and include a very informative commentary with IVTV founder Frank Coleman. Overall, it's another solid job by Casa Negra.
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Will somebody please find the dubbed print of this?
reptilicus10 July 2001
Ages ago a dubbed print of this movie used to run frequently on "Chiller Theatre" on Saturday nights. I saw it so many times I memorised it and it is still among my fondest memories. The music was what I first noticed, it stood out in my mind (many years later someone "borrowed" it for a direct-to-video picture called THE VIDEO DEAD). Rafael Bertrand, who later played "Capt. Labiche" in ISLE OF THE SNAKE PEOPLE; one of Boris Karloff's last movies, is Dr. Masali, master of an insane asylum. He makes a deal with colleague Dr. Harrison Aldeman (Jacinto Aldama in the undubbed print) that whoever dies first will come back and tell the survivor what lies behind deaths door. Dr. Aldeman dies first and returns during a séance to tell Masali a set of events have already begun that will enable him to solve the mystery. He does, but not nearly in the way he had expected to. An insane gypsy woman and an orderly named Elmer figure in the mystery very prominently; so does Dr. Aldeman's daughter who is summoned to the asylum by a mysterious messenger who turns out to be her fathers ghost! Along the way there is unrequited love, mutilation, murder, ghosts and death. I always thought this was a scary movie when I was a child. Somehow I think it still is. Now here is the complicated part. A dubbed print does exist, at least it used to, because New York's Channel 11, WPIX had it. That was more years ago than I care to remember but I would like to think they did not just toss the print out with the trash when they stopped running "Chiller Theatre". Maybe it is still in the vault gathering dust and waiting to be found. For cryin' out loud will somebody go look!
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6/10
This NEEDS to be out on VHS soon, dang it
occupant-15 October 2001
Movies and TV from the Buffy show all the way back to 1960 have been ripping off the dig-myself-out-of-the-grave scene, evidently begun with this film (correct me if I'm wrong). The idea could be as old as Poe but it's this film which, in my history, succeeds with the definitive version. As mentioned earlier, two doctors in charge of an asylum agree to contact the one living, should the other die first. The theme played on the violin by Dr. M is recapitulated at different plot points in a way that earlier audiences would recall from opera.
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10/10
Another Mexican Horror Masterpiece
ferbs549 April 2008
Mexican director Fernando Mendez' 1958 horror masterpiece "The Black Pit of Dr. M" originally appeared under the title "Misterios de Ultratumba" ("Mysteries of the Afterlife"), certainly a more appropriate appellation. In this film, you see, Dr. Masali, head of a rural insane asylum, coerces a dying associate, Dr. Aldama, to show him the secrets of the realm of the dead, and then return him to the land of the living. But poor Dr. Masali should have known that when you make a deal with the soon-to-be-dead, things don't always turn out quite as expected! And they don't, in this very cleverly plotted story that conflates a predestined love affair, an insane gypsy woman, a cursed dagger, disfigurement by acid, transmigration and so much more. Rafael Bertrand is truly excellent as the obsessed Dr. Masali, and special praise must also be heaped on cinematographer Victor Herrera for his work on "Dr. M." His B&W nighttime photography (most of the film does transpire at night) is a thing of real beauty, replete with moving shadows and dense, swirling mists; his work on another of Mendez' horror films from 1958, "The Living Coffin," seems far more pedestrian, in prosaic color. "Dr. M" is the kind of film that serves up a startling plot twist every few minutes or so. I would hate to spoil things for any potential viewer by saying too much, but thus feel that this minireview is not doing this tremendous picture justice. So please just trust me on this one--this film should be required viewing for all horror fans. The fine folks at Casa Negra should be thanked for rescuing this little gem from obscurity, and presenting it via a great-looking, excellently subtitled DVD, and with many fine extras, too. Again, gracias, Casa Negra.
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7/10
THE BLACK PIT OF DR. M (Fernando Mendez, 1958) ***
Bunuel197613 October 2006
Despite my satisfactory encounter with EL VAMPIRO (1957) a few years back, this is still just my second Mexican horror film of its vintage!

Given a complex and fascinating plot to work with - which has only the briefest concession to camp and, uncharacteristically for a horror film, is teeming with male protagonists (five, while there are only a couple of females of any importance) - a balance is reached between its intended literariness and the trademarks of the genre: foggy atmosphere, evocative décor and a bombastic yet effective score. The presence of Dr. Aldama's ghost is quite subtly but effectively established; besides, both Dr. Masali's expressionistic execution scene and the surreal first encounter between the two young lovers are stylishly realized - while the vicious attack of the manic woman and Elmer's resurrection emerge, perhaps, as the film's horror highlights. Furthermore, we get vividly essayed portrayals by the suave Ramon Bertrand as Dr. Masali and Carlos Ancira as Elmer - the latter, a cross between Dwight Frye and Peter Lorre (and helped by some splendid make-up), could well give the classic monsters a run for their money!

Though Masali and the young doctor (played by Gaston Santos) both vie for the girl's affection, there is very little rivalry between them let alone plots for revenge - as the film stresses Dr. Masali's single-mindedness in his search for knowledge regarding the afterlife. The asylum setting - and especially the imagery of outstretched hands through the bars of the cells - recalls BEDLAM (1946), while the hypnotic effect the music box has on the mad gypsy woman brings back memories of Bunuel's Mexican black comedy THE CRIMINAL LIFE OF ARCHIBALDO DE LA CRUZ (1955); also the scene where Masali/Elmer is discovered strumming on the violin is reminiscent of the Ape Man at the piano in RETURN OF THE APE MAN (1944)! There is one flaw with regards to the plot, however: it's inconceivable that, even if Masali was discovered locked in with the woman's corpse, no one suspected Elmer of having killed her for disfiguring him! Other amusing flubs include the scene in which the 'monster' - engulfed in flames - pauses to open a door before exiting a room screaming, the fact that the gypsy is able to effortlessly hurl a massive cupboard at the asylum orderlies confronting her, and the shot - accompanied by a histrionic single note on the soundtrack - early on where Dr. Aldama's coffin is opened prior to burial, almost as if to assure us that it is he...but, other than that, this particular sequence is comparable to the opening moments of James Whale's FRANKENSTEIN (1931)!

The DVD transfer is imperfect but not intrusively so, apart from some persistent hum on the soundtrack. The supplements are extensively researched and highly interesting (in particular, the Audio Commentary); the still gallery suggests that it's possible that some asylum footage has gone missing as it features a hulking, chained-up character who isn't seen in the actual film! Also, given that THE BLACK PIT OF DR. M wasn't released in the U.S. by the notorious K. Gordon Murray, the information imparted about him here isn't really pertinent to this release - though I didn't mind having it in the least, being all new to me; in fact, the English-dubbed version is, for all intents and purposes, deemed lost - even if Casanegra attempted to make amends by presenting the full-length English translation via a copy of the script (in rather too miniscule a font to be easily legible!) prepared for U.S. consumption.

As with the same director's EL VAMPIRO (which is upcoming on R1 as a 2-Disc Set accompanied by its sequel THE VAMPIRE'S COFFIN [1958]), then, this one emerges as a genuine classic of the horror genre and one that should be much better known. This viewing has kicked off my proposed Halloween marathon in a big way; I'm very much looking forward now to the rest of the Mexican titles which are coming up this week - but it has also made me yearn to check out the other films mentioned in the various supplements and which have yet to see the light of day on DVD...
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9/10
The Black Pit and the Dubbing Question
Swithin3 January 2009
Warning: Spoilers
"The Black Pit of Dr. M." is indeed a very special horror film. But I miss the dubbed version -- not because I need to understand every word, but because there was something special about the dubbed version of this particular film. It was a kind of strange, funny, translation, with lines like, "Yes, it's me, I came back in Elmer's body." And the actors sounded kind of odd as well.

For years, I thought the violin piece played by Dr. M./Elmer was simply the theme from "The Black Pit of Dr. M." But then at a concert I attended it was on the program! It's called "Csardas," and is by a composer named Monti. You can find it on YouTube.

But somebody, give us back that glorious dubbed version we enjoyed on Chiller Theater so many years ago!
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5/10
Anybody seen an English dubbed/subtitled print?
evilskip24 June 2001
There isn't an english dubbed or subtitled print to be had of this film.That is too bad because it is a creepy little number.Having watched the Spanish language print a few times I have gleaned a little understanding of what is going on.But full comprehension would be helped if the dialogue could be followed.

Dr M runs an insane asylum with Dr Gonzalez and a third doctor.Dr M makes a pact with the third doctor.Whichever of the two dies first will come back to explain death to the survivor.Well the other doctor dies.He not only comes back but he tells Dr M that he too will join him in death in 3 months(?).

Things aren't going well at the asylum.One of the most violent patients escapes.She then throws a bottle of acid into the orderly Elmer's face.She is subdued but Elmer is horribly burned via the acid.

A young woman comes into Dr M's life.Since I don't speak Spanish I have no clue as to who she is.She also falls in love with a young man even though Dr M is in love with her.He plays the violin for her often( and yes this figures in).There is also the other doctor's ghost hanging around causing a few problems.

Elmer has his bandages removed and goes ape$*** when he sees how disfigured he is.He plots to kill the woman who disfigured him.Well that night the doc is playing the violin for the young girl (who is waiting for the young man).The lunatic escapes(helped by the ghost)and the grounds are in an uproar.Elmer finds her and aided by the ghost stabs her to death.Elmer takes off and Dr M finds the dead lunatic.Dr M is arrested for her murder.

Dr M is jailed for the murder of the lunatic.After hearing of this Elmer writes a confession.But on his way to turn himself in he either dies of a heart attack or the ghost kills him.The ghost causes the note to blow away in the wind.

Will Dr M pay the ultimate price?There is still a lot of movie left for you to find out.

There are some absolutely creepy and stunning shots in this movie.The asylum is creepy and is fog shrouded.The scene where Dr M is stopped in front of the hanging platform is back lit and chilling.There is a graveyard scene that is very well done also.

Again I really wish I could understand the dialogue as it would explain who the juvenile leads are.But it is certainly worth a look in any language.
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10/10
Now On DVD This Movie Still Has Plenty Of SCARES
sls7523517 September 2006
This is in regard to the review below of the movie "The Black Pit Of Dr. M". You are correct when you said the movie went by another name. Years ago it used to show on "CHILLER THEATER" and it played under the name of "The Black Pit Of Dr. X" with English subtitles, it was also shown from time to time with English dubbing. This movie has just been released on DVD and you have a choice at the start of the movie, either English OR Spanish. But if it changes anything at all I have yet to find it. Still no English dubbing unless I've hit something wrong on the DVD (I tried it several times). Instead I ended up watching it in Spanish with English subtitles (which was alright with me since my Spanish is a little rusty). The movie has held up extremely well over the years and is as frightening today as it was the first time I saw it. The only small drawback may be the Soap Opera music played during the so called love scenes. There are tons and tons of what seem to be supernatural atmosphere and this movie will scare the pants off you. Enjoy!
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7/10
Mystery of Beyond the Grave
claudio_carvalho8 April 2023
When Dr. Jacinto Aldama (Antonio Raxel) is near death on his bed, Dr. Mazali (Rafael Bertrand) demands him about their pact to return from beyond to tell how the afterlife is. Soon Dr. Mazali has a séance with Dr. González (Luis Aragón), and Dr. Aldama comes and tells him that three months later, there will be a closed door at 9;00 PM that will show him the afterlife and them he will return in flesh, but he will be punished. Meanwhile, the performer Patricia Aldama (Mapita Cortés) is visited by a mysterious man that tells her that she has a key that must be delivered to Dr. Mazali and receive an inheritance from her father. When she arrives at the sanatorium, Dr. Mazali is treating a violent gypsy woman that throws acid on the face of the nurse Elmer (Carlos Ancira) that is deformed. While waiting for Dr. Mazali, Pat meets the newly graduated doctor Dr. Eduardo Jiménez (Gastón Santos) that will work in the mental institution. Soon the scheduled day comes, deeply affecting the life of Dr. Manzi.

"Misterios de ultratumba", a.k.a "The Black Pit of Dr. M", is a 1959 black-and-white Mexican horror movie with a great story about the afterlife. The plot is well-written and scary, with a doctor expecting to learn about the beyond and being punished in the end. My vote is seven.

Title (Brazil): "Mistério de Além-Túmulo" ("Mystery of Beyond the Grave)
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5/10
Back Pit of Dr. M
BandSAboutMovies20 June 2022
Warning: Spoilers
Released as The Black Pit of Dr. M in the U. S., this movie explores man's fascination with what comes after this world.

Dr. Mazali (Rafael Bertrand) and Dr. Jacinto Aldama (Antonio Raxel) make a bet with one another: whoever dies first will return to tell the other what happens after death. Aldama goes first and appears to Mazali during a seance, telling him that within three months, he will know everything about the afterlife.

Aldama's ghost leads Patricia (Mapita Cortés) - also his daughter, but that's a spoiler - to the insane asylum Mazali leads. The older doctor falls for her, but she and an intern named Eduardo (Gastón Santos) are in love. He also lets another inmate out of her cell and she instantly burns an orderly with acid right to the face. She's murdered, Mazali takes the fall and heads to the gallows, proving that he will indeed soon know the afterlife.

While most early Mexican horror repeats the Universal horror movies and most Americans only know lucha movies to be the rest of the genre output from south of the border, the truth is that there are moments of sheer gothic dread for those willing to look. I'd definitely recommend this movie - the opening with the mental patients filling the frame is harrowing and a man rises from his grave in an incredibly unsettling fashion - as well as Hasta el Viento Tiene Miedo.

This was dubbed into English at one point, but that print is believed to be lost.
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Traditional Gothic horror from Mexico.
chaos-rampant2 July 2008
I couldn't think of a place more far-removed from the dreary streets, Gothic cathedrals, stone gargoyles and misty back-alleys that have come to be associated the Gothic horror sub-genre, than Mexico. Yet here we have a pure Gothic story told in the most traditional of ways. Fernando Mendez throws everything and the kitchen sink in the mix, from disfigured monsters and a madhouse to spectral ghosts and atheistic scientists and I'm happy to report that it works far better than one would expect from a Mexican b-movie without it becoming picturesque or unintentionally comedic. The only fault that I find with Misterios de Ultratumba (other than failing to deliver promised black pits) is that it doesn't try to push the envelope. It's content to be a very traditional Gothic horror picture with a simplistic story. If it weren't for some impressive stylistic flourishes (like the gallows scene for instance) and the creepy atmosphere, one could be forgiven for totally dismissing it as a "seen-better" case. As it is, fans of 30's Universal horror and Hammer from around the same time will probably like it.
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7/10
Cheating the death may a forbidden and swampy ground to walk !!!
elo-equipamentos12 January 2021
Unfortunately the Mexican cinema is still unknown in Brazilian market, now the DVD's advent it changes a little bit in this context, have been arrived valuable movies lately, we Latin American people are tightly propelled to believe in the ghosts, wraiths, zombies and all stories beyond the grave, it's make part of our cultural heritage, "Misterios de Ultratumba" fits perfect in this odd background, where two Doctors made a deal, whoever go to the grave first should be back to tell the secret to live forever, the elder one Dr. Jacinto dies first, shortly Dr. Mazali makes contact through a psychic where the late Dr. Jacinto attends and warning his friend that cheat the death may cost a high price to pay, even so Dr. Mazali is keen take the plunge, thus the arrangement is carried out, in three months the switch will be made, in the meantime Dr. Jacinto as spirit appears to his forsaken daughter Patricia Aldama, asking for her looking for Dr. Mazali at insane asylum to know about his died father, whom she never knew before, a gripping terror mixing many profane elements utterly entrenched at Mexican culture, cheating the death is egregiously forbidden and noisome for religious people like us, the eerie atmosphere and a well-crafted screenplay beef up the picture, till the make-up is enough compelling, it overall doesn't owe nothing for foreigners terror productions!!

Thanks for reading.

Resume:

First watch: 2021 / How many: 1 / Source: DVD / Rating: 7
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10/10
Emotional and creepy. Another lesson in atmosphere!
insomniac_rod10 February 2007
Warning: Spoilers
Thank you again CasaNegra. An extremely underrated if not forgotten key piece of Mexican classic Horror finally gets a decent release on DVD. To be honest, I have never found this one even on VHS and I'm from Mèxico damn it. The movie was shown at 11:00 P.M. on local t.v. but it's been a while since it aired for the last time. Oh, and forget about the English title! I has minimal or nothing to do with the plot. In fact, the word "ultratumba" was used in many Mexican Horror movies from that time. "Graveyard Mysteryes" would be a more adequate title.

Anyways, this movie perfectly displays how Mexican Horror cinema was highly influenced by Gothic atmospheres and stories. In the likes of "La Maldiciòn de la Llorona", this movie centers it's creepiness on settings and atmosphere. The settings are ahead of it's time because it was very difficult back in the 50's to film on mental institutions; the graveyard setting is also terrifying and macabre. By the way, that setting reminds me of my favorite scene of the movie; the "living dead" doctor returning to play his violin. That's a scene that hasn't vanished from my mind since a child.

The plot is very interesting and perfectly displays Mexican culture's opinion for death and how sometimes, we (Mexicans) can't accept or deal with it. Yes, there are some unitentionally funny moments mainly because in Mexican culture there's a high amount of "happiness" and "humor" even on the most difficult and sad moments.

The score is another important part of the movie. The orchestra truly created a chilling score that plays an important role in the most important moments. Gastòn Santos and Beatriz Aguirre shine with their performances.

Please, track down this movie and you will notice that Mexican Gothic can match anytime European Gothic. If you enjoyed this movie, I urge you to watch "La Maldiciòn de la Llorona". It's truly sad that in my country these kind of movies aren't even known!
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10/10
A Masterpiece! Plain and Simple...
gravelbreath20 February 2006
The US release of this film was called "The Black Pit of Dr M." and was brought to the US (along with several other great Mexican horror classics) from Mexico by B movie maven, K Gordon Murray. As far as I am concerned this film is one of the absolute treasures of Mexican Cinema. How often would you hear that about a Horror film? Fernando Mendez's great horror masterpiece is so rich in atmosphere and boasts such beautiful, Gothic "mise en scene" that it looks like a true Gothic fairy tale painting has been struck right on the screen. I've seen scores of classic horror films and I have yet to see one that matches the almost over-the-top lush style and atmosphere that Mendez has created here. The setting is an old Hacienda, shrouded in mist, filled with exotic plants and photographed with such care it is almost mesmerizing to see. This Hacienda is an insane asylum headed up by Dr. M. When a spirit conjurer is called in to resurrect the life of a man who was wrongly executed, vengeance, murder and mayhem from beyond the grave ensues. A wonderful, supernatural tale, told in a lyrical yet almost surreal fashion combined with unrelenting, spooky visuals makes this greatly under-appreciated film an absolute must see.
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10/10
Horror doesn't get any creepier than this
Coventry24 November 2006
Strrrrrrrrrrrrike TWO for Mexican horror cinema! After seeing the already astonishing "Curse of the Crying Woman", I got really intrigued by this nation's extremely underrated horror heritage and – big surprise – this "Black Pit of Dr. M" is even better! This is one of the darkest and scariest films ever made and it features some of the absolute greatest Gothic-horror themes imaginable. We've got mad scientists, eerie graveyards and mental institutions, loud thunderstorms, séances and of course a tragic love affair. The film starts with an atmospheric voice-over reassuring us that whatever lies beyond death should always be kept a secret. Two obsessive scientists once tried to discover if there's any way of getting back among the living and "The Black Pit of Dr. M" tells their horrid story. Dr. M(asali) and his colleague Dr. Aldama made a pact stating that the first of them to die has to come back and inform the other about the secrets of resurrection. When Dr. Aldama dies, he keeps his promise but also warns his colleague about the dangers of toying with the afterlife. Naturally, Dr. neglects this good advise and mysterious events start to take place, all indicating his own death on the fifteenth of November. This is a super-creepy film with a constantly ominous atmosphere and some of the most petrifying set pieces I've ever beheld. Every sequence simply oozes suspense, whether set in the asylum (where a crazed gypsy woman runs amok) or in Dr. M's own hacienda, where Dr. Aldama's spirit still dwells around. The outdoor filming locations are always enshrouded with fog and the nights seem to last three times as long as the days. The sinister music and sober B&W photography only increase the creepiness, while the performances of these fairly unknown Mexican actors and actresses are more than reasonable. There are some minor holes in the plot occasionally, but I'm really not in the mood to nag about those, as I personally was too overwhelmed by the intensity of this film. Horror films, especially Gothic ones, really don't get any creepier than this one. Make this a top priority on your must-see list.
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The only movie I walked out of because it was too scary.
cgoodrich9419 June 2004
I remember years ago, I saw this movie at a drive-in in Portland, Oregon. However, I thought the title then was "The Black Pit of Dr. X," and it was in English. I remember the part where the disfigured doctor returns from the grave and starts to play his violin. At that point I left the theater. Ever since, I've wanted to see it again to know how it ends. So there was at one time a print of this movie in English. Whether it is available now is another question. If anyone knows of an available copy (in English or Spanish), I would be interested in checking it out. I would also be interested to know if anyone has seen it recently (within the last few years) and where he/she saw it. Thank you.
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8/10
The Black Pit of Dr. M
Scarecrow-8813 May 2007
Warning: Spoilers
Dr. Masala(Rafael Bertrand), the prestigious doctor of a sanitarium, wishes to know what lies beyond life, but wants to return to flesh after death. He, through a séance, summons the recently deceased Dr. Jacinto Aldama(Antonio Raxel)wanting that promise they made in a pact(..that being which ever passed first would provide the other with the answer and return to flesh)fulfilled. The spirit of Aldama informs Mazali that if he goes through with what he desires, certain horrific consequences would occur to him after returning from the death to flesh. Mazali doesn't care so Aldama tells him that certain events will unfold as a chain reaction leading to his wish being accomplished. Aldama visits the daughter he neglected in life(..although, she doesn't know it is him at that moment), the lovely Patricia(Mapita Cortés)and explains to her that a key should be taken to a man named Mazali. Meanwhile, a new student of Mazali's, Eduardo Jimenez(Gastón Santos)has envisioned Patricia in a dream and upon seeing her in a dance hall, he is pretty flummoxed to say the least. Even odder is that she has dreamed about him, also. It's as if they were fated to meet. They meet again at the office of Mazali who had just finished plastic surgery on an orderly named Elmer(Carlos Ancira)whose face was horribly scarred when a wacko goes berserk during an experiment gone awry. Mazali was testing the nutcase's ability of calm with the tune of a music box which accidentally shuts with the result being her violent outburst on the staff. The acid burn on Elmer's face results in his madness which later culminates into violent revenge when he kills the wackjob with a certain knife..this certain knife that is found in a box opened by the key Patricia hands to Mazali! Each event unravels the unfortunate demise of Mazali who is framed by the spirit of Jacinto Aldama himself for the murder of his insane patient. Later Elmer dies and is buried(he has written, however, a confession to the dead woman's murder) After Mazali's is hung by the neck at the gallows, the dead body of Elmer is resurrected and whose spirit fills that corpse risen..Mazali himself! Dr. Gonzalez(Luis Aragón)was Mazali's assistant doctor at the asylum and present to all of his activities. Much to his amazement, Gonzalez realizes that the pact made between two doctors was met and that Mazali is now alive in the scarred Elmer. The tension is ratcheted up when Mazali, growing mad and in love with Patricia, will do whatever it takes to remain alive even as the confession of the one who used to possess his host body is found.

The main theme here is the tragedy of Mazali, an atheistic scientist who wished to remain alive yet understand what lies beyond this mortal world. Atmospherically rich with an often pounding, unnerving score(with good use of the organ)really give this Gothic Mexican flick it's flavor. Spooky, with good contrast between shadow and light..not to mention fine photography and the setting around an asylum is perfect for a supernatural story.
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8/10
Another fascinating showcase of Mexican horror!
The_Void22 December 2006
Casa Negra, the DVD releasing company with the foresight to release a whole host of Mexican horror films including this one, really have been a god send for fans of cult horror movies. The more Mexican horror I see, the more impressed I become - and The Black pit of Dr M is yet another major Mexican highlight. The film takes obvious influence from the classic American Universal horror of the 1930's, but it takes this influence and crafts a sprawling and mostly original tale of terror from it. The Mexicans, judging by these recent releases, seem to love supernatural horror, and that makes up a big part of the backbone of this film. We focus on two doctors - Dr. Aldama and Dr. Mazali. They have made a 'death pact', in which the first to die will come back and tell the other the secret of life after death. Dr. Mazali is the one fortune enough to stay alive, and after a posthumous visit from Dr Aldama, he finds out that the secret will be revealed to him on the fifteenth of November...but is the price of cheating death too high for the curious Dr Mazali?

The best thing about this film is undoubtedly the thick and foreboding atmosphere which permeates every scene. The atmosphere is backed up by an over the top but effective score, which grabs your attention every time it features; although it has to be said that using it a little less wouldn't have harmed the film too much. Like the later film, The Witch's Mirror, this one attempts to build in a handful of sub-plots, but this time they don't intrude on the central plot, and director Fernando Méndez manages to pull all the elements of the story together for a chilling and effective climax. The film features a number of memorable sequences - the standout for me was the sequence with the gallows pole, and the one that follows immediately after. Director Fernando Méndez keeps the film intriguing throughout, and The Black Pit of Dr M never becomes boring. The opening and ending sequences add an extra little bit of interest to an already fascinating slice of world cinema, and overall; I have to say that The Black Pit of Dr M is one of the finest Mexican horror films I've seen, and comes highly recommended!
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8/10
First seen on Pittsburgh's Chiller Theater in 1967
kevinolzak5 May 2020
1958's "Black Pit of Dr. M" ("Misterios de Ultratomba" or Mysteries of the Grave) was among the least seen Mexican horror films to cross north of the border, perhaps because K. Gordon Murray was not involved in dubbing or distribution. There were familiar names behind the camera however, screenwriter Ramon Obon also responsible for "The Swamp of the Lost Monsters," "The Vampire," "The Vampire's Coffin," "The Living Coffin," and "The World of the Vampires," director Fernando Mendez at the helm for all but the first. Unlike the multitude of Aztec mummies, masked wrestlers, or Universal-style vampires parading in tuxedos, this turns out to be a far darker and genuinely frightening affair, more realistically along the lines of Obon's one directorial outing, "100 Cries of Terror" from 1964. Easily the standout is Rafael Bertrand as Dr. Mazali, who is present to see his asylum partner Dr. Aldama (Antonio Raxel) breathe his last, only to remind him of their pact, that the one who dies first must leave a sign to the other of a way to return to the living after death. A seance brings back Aldama's spirit, revealing that his promise to Mazali requires a three month time span, strange occurrences forming a chain of events culminating in one door opening, then closing, and only then will the truth behind eternal darkness finally come to light. We are first introduced to the late doctor's dancer daughter Patricia (Mapita Cortes), her suitor Eduardo Jimenez (Gaston Santos), and the clever and resourceful madwoman (Carolina Barret) who escapes after throwing acid in the face of hapless attendant Elmer (Carlos Ancira), rendering him a disfigured horror. All the while the black clad ghost of Aldama patiently glides through the mist as a key unlocks Patricia's heritage, a sharpened letter opener foretells doom to whoever uses it for evil, and the fateful door that closes behind Mazali does indeed lead him to a swift execution, finally gaining the answer long sought at a terrible cost. There's a fine line between Mazali's compassion and obsession (secretly in love with the unknowing Patricia), only spilling over into complete madness once he returns in a different body, rising from a fresh grave before revealing his true identity by playing the violin. Rafael Bertrand may be better known for playing the police inspector opposite Boris Karloff in 1968's "Snake People," but acquits himself well in the most challenging role, criminally second billed to handsome Gaston Santos, from "The Swamp of the Lost Monsters" and "The Living Coffin," practically invisible stuck in soppy romantic drivel, and unyielding to any belief in the afterlife.
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9/10
Mexcellent!
BA_Harrison9 June 2023
Fernando Méndez's El Vampiro (1957) was an atmospheric but predictable horror heavily influenced by Universal's classic vampire films; the sequel, The Vampire's Coffin, was a routine effort that lacked the gloomy gothic vibe of the original. The director's next horror, Misterios de ultratumba (AKA Black Pit of Dr. M) was anything but conventional, a one-of-a-kind, unpredictable slice of the macabre with twists and turns throughout.

Rafael Bertrand plays Dr. Mazali, who has an agreement with his fellow physician Dr. Jacinto Aldama (Antonio Raxel): whichever one of them dies first must enable the other to discover what is beyond death by allowing them to visit the afterlife and then return. Aldama is the first to cark it, and so Mazali contacts his spirit via seance: the dead man leaves a cryptic message, saying that Mazali must wait three months for a 'door to close', and that strange events will occur in the meantime. And that is precisely what happens.

To say any more about the plot would be to ruin the experience, but here's a few of the things that go to make this such a wonderfully original and unmissable movie: a mist-shrouded lunatic asylum; a crazy gypsy woman with the strength of ten men; a male nurse horribly disfigured by acid (the actor sporting excellent make-up); a chilling execution by hanging; a graveyard scene in which a dead man crawls his way out of his grave; and a cool full-body-burn stunt. All that and the very lovely Mapita Cortés as Aldama's daughter Patricia.

8.5/10, rounded up to 9 for IMDb. Well worth checking out.
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8/10
Keeps you watching sure enough
iljavenissov29 September 2021
Whenever you think the film doesn't really go anywhere, it manages to introduce something worth while and maintain the viewer's interest. There's a slimy love story that tends to play out very corny, but other than that it's quite captivating.
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