Madame Death (1969) Poster

(1969)

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6/10
Strange surprise from Mexico
jluis198430 October 2006
In 1968, legendary horror icons John Carradine and Basil Rathbone traveled to Mexico to film "Autopsia De Un Fantasma", a low-budget horror movie that went to become a Cult film due to its cast. By strange reasons (some state that Carradine's career was experiencing a dry spell at the time), Carradine stayed after that and made four low-budget horror films for producer Luis Enrique Vergara. In Filmica Vergara Productions, Carradine would face Mexican wrestler Mil Máscaras in "Pacto Diabólico" ("Diabolical Pact") and "Enigma De Muerte" ("Secret of Death"), as well as playing the old Count Dracula one more time in "Las Vampiras" ("The Vampire Girls"), but the best of the four films would be the last one, an odd slasher with sci-fi undertones named "La Señora Muerte" ("Mrs. Death").

"La Señora Muerte" is the story of Marlene (Regina Torné), a successful fashion designer who is deeply in love with his husband, Dr. Andrés (Victor Junco) and has a life of happiness. However, this soon comes to a sudden end when Andrés has a fatal heart attack due to Cancer. Before collapsing, Andrés asks Marlene to take him to Dr. Favel (John Carradine), as he will be the only one able to help her. In Dr. Favel's lair, the strange scientist attempts to bring back Andrés using Marlene's blood in a radioactive experiment that tragically fails, making Marlene's body "unstable" due to radiation (making her go from deformed creature to beautiful woman at moments). Favel thinks he needs larger amounts of women's blood, so now Marlene must kill for blood not only to return to normality, but also to save her husband's life.

At first sight, "La Señora Muerte" looks like a typical horror film about a mad scientist (with flashy machines and a hunchbacked assistant), however, after Marlene becomes mutated, the film leaves Dr. Favel and becomes a really original slasher were the focus is not on the victims, but on the killer herself. We really can see the progression of this female serial killer, as her first killings are exact and effective, but as guilt begins to corrode her, her spirit begins to crumble. Written by Ramón Obón, the film is a nice surprise, as the sudden change of tone (from sci-fi to slasher) is actually beneficial, and really sets the film apart from other examples of Mexican horror (it even feels as if it was written by two very different writers).

As the last film of Jaime Salvador (experienced Mexican director who started with the excellent "El Jorobado" back in 1943), the film could be seen as yet another example of the bad state of Mexican industry after the end of the "Golden Age of Mexican Cinema". While "La Señora Muerte" is not really a bad film, Salvador's execution of the script is very anachronistic at times (the scenes with John Carradine seem to be taken out of a 50s film and forced into the movie), although to his credit, some of the scenes of the "slasher part" of the film are very well crafted, in an almost Giallo style.

While John Carradine's presence is surprising, and gives the film the feeling of a rarity, his performance is kind of regular, and although somewhat effective, at times he feels definitely out of place (the bad way the script is structured in his scenes doesn't really help him). Still, he manages to be haunting at times, despite what he had to work with (and the awful Spanish dubbing his character suffers). Quite and opposite image is Regina Torné as Marlene, who really transmits the pain and the suffering of someone who is forced to kill to survive, almost like a modern vampire. The rest of the cast is pretty average and simply are there to do the job.

The main problem of "La Señora Muerte" is neither the low-budget nor Salvador's anachronistic direction, the real problem is that the movie feels as two very different films mixed together. What could had been an excellent Giallo style slasher suffers the inclusion of themes and motives of a 50s mad scientist tale, and the contrast between them is huge. While the "slasher part" is dark, creepy and almost elegant, the "mad scientist part" has bright colors, bad special effects and hammy acting; and is this sharp contrast between them what in the end almost kills the film, as it feels as if the mad scientist story arc was included just to get Carradine in the movie.

"La Señora Muerte" is an oddity not only because of the inclusion of John Carradine in the cast, but also because of the strange way the film is crafted, as well as the inventive slasher story arc it has. While it would be easy to discard it as another 60s bad horror (as the first scenes seem to point out), it becomes into a different kind of beast past the wacky intro. A lost obscure gem that deserves at least more recognition. 6/10
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4/10
Regina Torne is a very striking looking women
christopher-underwood7 March 2013
Bit of a mess, this. But where to start? Let's start positively - Regina Torne is a very striking looking women, I see she had a considerable film career in Mexico and made 9 films in the same year as this little number. Its not saying a lot, of course, but she does give a better performance than the hammy John Carradine, who made several films in Mexico at this time, maybe because he couldn't find his way home. There is a daft mad scientist theme here and a female killer theme. Supposedly linked but I'm not convinced, the early scenes with Ms Torne donning the leather gloves and doing a giallo, are promising but in the end she seems overcome with Carradine's over acting and this whole thing ends in farce. I feel I should also point out that this film has the dullest, most drawn out sequences of poor fashion shows I've ever seen. The costumes, the girls, the mannerisms - agh!
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4/10
John Carradine and Luis Enrique Vergara, chapter 2
kevinolzak7 June 2022
1967's "Madame Death" (La Senora Muerte) was John Carradine's second Mexican feature for producer Luis Enrique Vergara, it began shooting July 4 right after completion of "Jekyll and Hyde: Pact with the Devil," from the same director and writer, Jaime Salvador and Ramon Obon Jr. As weak as the previous entry, this one at least benefits from a stronger turn from Regina Torne, doing a short topless bit instead of Isela Vega, truly giving her all for a sketchy character that we never warm up to, so devoted to her older husband that she allows Carradine as Dr. Favel to try to revive him after a near fatal heart attack. Blood is as always the needed ingredient for any mad scientist's success, but Regina's Marlene suffers the disfigurement of half her once lovely face when she becomes a willing donor, systematically stalking various girls employed in her fashion house (shades of Mario Bava's "Blood and Black Lace"), and neatly setting up an adulterous coworker as a suspect, then letting him off the hook by continuing her murder spree. The pacing drags for lengthy sequences where the girls show off their wares, and occasional attempts to earn sympathy for Marlene fall flat because she is never properly set up beforehand. Carradine was coming off the set of Ted V. Mikels' "The Astro-Zombies," looking quite at home in the same mad lab with deformed, mute assistant Laor. The scene where Laor gets out of line with Marlene forces the doctor to bring out the ever present whip, in a priceless bit that was copied by Woody Allen for 1972's "Every Thing You Always Wanted to Know About Sex but Were Afraid to Ask." Also back from the Jekyll/Hyde fiasco, Isela Vega has more to do as model Lisa, though she still comes to a bad end. It is entirely due to Regina's performance that her climactic demise carries some meaning, Laor a tearful wreck over her corpse, which suddenly transforms back into her formerly beautiful self. This was clearly no stretch for Carradine, setting up the plotline for 21 minutes, then vanishing for all but two scenes the rest of the way, a miniscule 13 1/2 minutes screen time, never once shown doing anything with the blood that Marlene has extracted from her victims, ostensibly to keep her husband alive and not, as many reviewers state, to simply restore her beauty as in "Eyes Without a Face," "Atom Age Vampire," or "The Awful Dr. Orlof." Next up for Carradine will be "The Vampire Girls" and "Secret of Blood," opposite champion Luchador Mil Mascaras.
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7/10
A mess but fun
BandSAboutMovies30 June 2020
Warning: Spoilers
If you're anything like me, you were probably wondering when John Carradine would show up in the Mexican horror movies we've been sharing over the last few days. It seems like in the late 60's, if you were making a movie that anything to do with suspense or monsters, Carradine would magically appear on your set. For the price of a carton of untipped Player's and several bottles of Chivas Regal, he would be in your film no questions asked.

Carradine goes one better in this film by providing the introduction. Seriously, you don't know how many drinks I would have poured out for this man.

How did he get to Mexico, you may ask? Carradine and Basil Rathbone had gone to Mexico Autopsia De Un Fantasma in 1968 and for some reason, Carradine would stay behind to make four more movies for Luis Enrique Vergara. He'd appear opposite Mil Mascaras in Pacto Diabolico and Enigma Muerte while showing up as the skinniest of Draculas in Las Vampiras before making this movie.

Marlene (Regina Torne, who went on to appear in many a telenovela) is a fashionista dealing with the loss of her husband and, just as suddenly, the loss of half of her face to a strange disease. She turns to mad scientist Dr. Favel (who else other than Carradine?), who has a simple solution: let's kill some young women and harvest their blood. He also claims that he can bring her husband back to life with some more work on her part.

Known as Madame Death up here and as The Death Woman in the UK, this is the kind of movie where models die left and right while hunchbacks attempt to assault people and need to be reminded of their place with the cut of the whip. Also, a guillotine in a wax museum is put to good use.
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