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Alucarda

Alucarda (Spanish: Alucarda, la hija de las tinieblas, or Alucarda, the daughter of darkness) is a 1977 English-language Mexican supernatural horror film directed by Juan López Moctezuma, and starring Tina Romero, Claudio Brook, Susana Kamini, and David Silva. A loose adaptation of Carmilla (1872), it revolves around two teenage orphan girls living in a Catholic convent, who unleash a demonic force and become possessed.

Alucarda
Theatrical release poster
SpanishAlucarda, la hija de las tinieblas
Directed byJuan López Moctezuma
Written by
  • Alexis Arroyo
  • Juan López Moctezuma
Based onCarmilla
by Sheridan Le Fanu[3]
Starring
Distributed by
  • Yuma Films
  • Films 75
Release dates
  • March 10, 1977 (1977-03-10) (Paris Fantastic Film Festival)[1]
  • 1978 (1978) (United States)[2]
Running time
77 minutes[4]
CountryMexico
LanguageEnglish

Though a Mexican production, the film was shot in English. Internationally, it was released under several alternate titles, including Innocents from Hell and Sisters of Satan. The film has been noted by film scholars for its themes regarding national tradition versus modernity, as well as the tensions between science and religion, and the failures of both. Because of its depiction of nuns in emotionally-heightened, supernatural situations, the film has been associated with the nunsploitation genre.

Plot edit

In 1850, Lucy Westenra gives birth to a daughter, Alucarda, in a derelict colonial palace in the woods. Immediately after the child is born, Lucy begs a hunchbacked gypsy to bring Alucarda to a nearby stone-walled convent inhabited by an order of Catholic nuns, as she fears the devil will claim her daughter. As the gypsy flees with the infant, a demonic voice emanates throughout the palace as Lucy dies of complications from childbirth.

Fifteen years later, a teenaged Alucarda still resides at the convent. Alucarda swiftly takes an interest in Justine, a new orphan her age who has arrived, and is eager to become her friend. Alucarda quickly refers to Justine as her sister. While playing in a forest, Alucarda and Justine witness a band of gypsies holding a funeral procession. One of the men—the hunchback who helped deliver Alucarda—offers to sell Alucarda an amulet. Shortly after, the girls stumble upon the abandoned palace, and wander into a crypt. There, Alucarda professes her love for Justine, and the two make a pact that they shall die together. In the crypt, they unwittingly open the grave of Alucarda's mother, and are immediately overcome by a powerful supernatural force that reduces Alucarda to tears.

Later, during mass, Justine inexplicably faints. While Alucarda tends to Justine in her room, she goes into a fit and begins wildly reciting the names of demons. The hunchback gypsy appears in the room as Alucarda invokes Satan, and the girls, nude, perform a blood ritual. Meanwhile, while praying, Sister Angélica has a vision of Alucarda and Justine performing a Satanic ritual with the gypsies in the woods and engaging in a mass orgy. During the ritual, one of the priestesses is stricken down by Sister Angélica's invocation of God, and is killed.

The next day during school, Alucarda and Justine begin chanting and professing their dedication to Satan, much to the horror of the nuns and their peers. The nuns make several unsuccessful attempts to have the girls repent, one of which ends with Alucarda attempting to seduce Father Lázaro during confession. Lázaro and the nuns, horrified by this, engage in a mass flogging of each other as punishment for their failure to save the girls from demonic influence. After, Lázaro concludes they must perform an exorcism of Justine, who has grown progressively ill. During the exorcism, they bind Justine to a cross and poke at her flesh with instruments, eventually causing her to bleed to death. Dr. Oszek, arriving to examine Justine, walks in on the exorcism and is horrified by what he sees. Deeming the practice archaic and sadistic, Oszek takes Alucarda with him, fearing for her life.

Alucarda awakens in Dr. Oszek's home, frightened and confused, and is comforted by his blind daughter, Daniela. Meanwhile, Oszek is summoned back to the convent, where the nuns have found that Justine's corpse has disappeared. Upstairs, Sister Germana is found inexplicably burned alive. When her body reanimates, Father Lázaro bludgeons and ultimately decapitates her. The event challenges Oszek's science-based beliefs, and he flees back home, fearing for Daniela's safety; upon arriving, he finds Alucarda and Daniela are both gone.

Oszek is led to the abandoned crypt by the nuns, who suspect Alucarda might have gone there. Inside, Sister Angélica finds Justine's body lying in a blood-filled coffin. Now a vampire, Justine attacks Sister Angélica, but Angélica manages to stop the attack by praying. Oszek interjects and pours holy water on Justine, driving her into a fit, and she bites Angélica's neck before disintegrating. Followed by Oszek, several monks carry Angélica's body back to the convent, where Alucarda has arrived with Daniela. Using supernatural powers, Alucarda begins destroying the convent and causing various clergy to spontaneously combust in the grotto. Upon witnessing Angélica's corpse, Alucarda is suddenly overcome with sorrow, and goes into a fit of rage at the base of a burning crucifix in the chapel. After she collapses, Alucarda's body disappears into the ground as Father Lázaro and Oszek look on.

Cast edit

Themes edit

"In Alucarda, the triumph of science or religion is turned on its head. The world in crisis defined by the unreasonable, the unexplainable, and the unsolvable is not salvaged by reason or faith."

–Film scholar Doyle Green on the film's overarching themes[5]

Some scholars, such as Frances Di Lauro, have noted that Alucarda is undergirded by anti-government and anticlerical sentiments that are manifested in the exaggerated idolatry, representations of clerics as tyrants and persecutors, and overt iconoclasm.[6] Tensions between modernity and tradition are also prominent themes.[7][8] Film scholar Doyle Green characterizes the film as an "apocalyptic collision of modernity and tradition in a perpetual Dark Age."[5] Scholars Raúl Rodríguez-Hernández and Claudia Schaefer contextualize this clash (and the film's representation of it) within Mexico's national history, exemplifying "literary and cinematic representations of persistent clashes between tradition and modernity, myth and reason. The added dimension of visibly transgressive actions taken by two young women against teachings, structure, and moral guiding principles of the church speaks directly to a post-1968 generation that celebrates the body but has lost faith in the society's master narratives."[7] Aesthetically, Rodríguez-Hernández and Schaefer note visual references to Francisco Goya's Los caprichos, specifically during the sequence in which Alucarda and Justine engage in the blood ritual with the hunchbacked gypsy.[9]

Green also interprets Alucarda as being preoccupied with themes of mental illness and the handling of it within the Catholic Church.[10] Green states that, in the film, "the convent becomes a psychiatric domain without psychiatry," a theme also explored significantly in Ken Russell's The Devils (1971).[10] Because of these shared depictions of Catholic clergy—specifically nuns—in the context of hysteria, Green notes that both films became associated with the nunsploitation genre.[10] The tension between science and religious dogma has been noted as another theme, specifically in the final act, during which the logically-minded Dr. Oszek—a man of science—is faced with supernatural occurrences he cannot rationalize.[11]

Alucarda is also associated with the vampire movie genre, although it is not a traditional vampire movie. Many critics have noted its similarities to Joseph Sheridan Le Fanu's early vampire novella Carmilla, especially the romantic relationship between the main female characters.[2][12] According to director López Moctezuma, "the film draws on the vampire tradition, and in a way the protagonist is a female vampire … but not in the sense of a blood drinker."[13] The title of the film and the name of its eponymous character is derived from Dracula spelled backwards, a derivation also used in the form of "Alucard" in other vampire-related media.[14]

Release edit

Alucarda opened at the Paris International Festival of Fantastic Film in March 1977.[1] The film was released under the title Sisters of Satan in the United States in 1978,[2][15] and subsequently released on video under various titles including Sisters of Satan, Innocents from Hell, and Mark of the Devil 3.[16]

Critical response edit

Columnist Michael Weldon of the Psychotronic Video Guide wrote that the film was "The strongest, most imaginative, and visual witch movie since Ken Russell's The Devils."[17]

David Wilt of the University of Maryland's Mexican Film Resource Page notes that the film is "visually, a rather stylish and interesting picture," comparing it to the work of Alejandro Jodorowsky.[15]

Mexican filmmaker Guillermo del Toro has also expressed his appreciation for the film and other works from director Juan López Moctezuma.[18]

Home media edit

Mondo Macabro released a special edition DVD edition of Alucarda in 2002.[19]

See also edit

References edit

  1. ^ a b "Les Festival international de Paris du film fantastique". Cinéma (in French). Paris, France: Fédération française des ciné-clubs (217–222): 14. 1977.
  2. ^ a b c Shipka, Danny; Beliveau, Ralph, eds. (2017). International horror film directors : global fear. Intellect Ltd. p. 85. ISBN 9781783206537.
  3. ^ Maxford 2019, p. 476.
  4. ^ . Roxie Theater. 24 August 2017. Archived from the original on 20 April 2021. Retrieved 5 June 2020.
  5. ^ a b Green 2007, p. 91.
  6. ^ Di Lauro 2006, pp. 27–30.
  7. ^ a b Rodríguez-Hernández & Schaefer 2019, p. 161.
  8. ^ Green 2007, p. 88.
  9. ^ Rodríguez-Hernández & Schaefer 2019, p. 160.
  10. ^ a b c Green 2007, p. 70.
  11. ^ Rodríguez-Hernández & Schaefer 2019, p. 161—163.
  12. ^ "Demon Lung Pays Tribute to a Classic Mexican Lesbian Vampire Flick With New Album 'A Dracula'". Vice. 20 July 2015. Retrieved 5 June 2020.
  13. ^ Greene, Doyle (2007). The Mexican cinema of darkness : a critical study of six landmark horror and exploitation films, 1969-1988. McFarland & Company. p. 69. ISBN 978-0786429998.
  14. ^ Di Lauro 2006.
  15. ^ a b Wilt, David (2000). "Alucarda review". Mexican Film Resource Page. University of Maryland, College Park. Archived from the original on January 21, 2020. Retrieved January 21, 2020.
  16. ^ Stine 2015, p. 41.
  17. ^ . Archived from the original on July 2, 2016.
  18. ^ . Archived from the original on February 12, 2009.
  19. ^ Broughton, Lee (August 27, 2002). "DVD Savant Review: Dr Jekyll Versus the Werewolf & Alucarda". DVD Talk. Archived from the original on January 21, 2020.

Sources edit

  • Di Lauro, Frances (2006). "Moctezuma's Revenge: Iconoclasm in Film". In Di Lauro, Frances (ed.). Through A Glass Darkly: Reflections of the Sacred. Sydney, Australia: Sydney University Press. ISBN 978-1-920-89854-0.
  • Green, Doyle (2007). The Mexican Cinema of Darkness: A Critical Study of Six Landmark Horror and Exploitation Films, 1969-1988. Jefferson, North Carolina: McFarland. ISBN 978-0-786-42999-8.
  • Maxford, Howard (2019). Hammer Complete: The Films, the Personnel, the Company. Jefferson, North Carolina: McFarland. ISBN 978-1-476-62914-8.
  • Rodríguez-Hernández, Raúl; Schaefer, Claudia (2019). The Supernatural Sublime: The Wondrous Ineffability of the Everyday in Films from Mexico and Spain. Lincoln, Nebraska: University of Nebraska Press. ISBN 978-1-496-21499-7.
  • Stine, Scott Aaron (2015). The Gorehound's Guide to Splatter Films of the 1960s and 1970s. Jefferson, North Carolina: McFarland. ISBN 978-0-786-49140-7.

External links edit

alucarda, spanish, hija, tinieblas, daughter, darkness, 1977, english, language, mexican, supernatural, horror, film, directed, juan, lópez, moctezuma, starring, tina, romero, claudio, brook, susana, kamini, david, silva, loose, adaptation, carmilla, 1872, rev. Alucarda Spanish Alucarda la hija de las tinieblas or Alucarda the daughter of darkness is a 1977 English language Mexican supernatural horror film directed by Juan Lopez Moctezuma and starring Tina Romero Claudio Brook Susana Kamini and David Silva A loose adaptation of Carmilla 1872 it revolves around two teenage orphan girls living in a Catholic convent who unleash a demonic force and become possessed AlucardaTheatrical release posterSpanishAlucarda la hija de las tinieblasDirected byJuan Lopez MoctezumaWritten byAlexis Arroyo Juan Lopez MoctezumaBased onCarmillaby Sheridan Le Fanu 3 StarringTina Romero Claudio Brook Susana Kamini David SilvaDistributed byYuma Films Films 75Release datesMarch 10 1977 1977 03 10 Paris Fantastic Film Festival 1 1978 1978 United States 2 Running time77 minutes 4 CountryMexicoLanguageEnglishThough a Mexican production the film was shot in English Internationally it was released under several alternate titles including Innocents from Hell and Sisters of Satan The film has been noted by film scholars for its themes regarding national tradition versus modernity as well as the tensions between science and religion and the failures of both Because of its depiction of nuns in emotionally heightened supernatural situations the film has been associated with the nunsploitation genre Contents 1 Plot 2 Cast 3 Themes 4 Release 4 1 Critical response 4 2 Home media 5 See also 6 References 7 Sources 8 External linksPlot editIn 1850 Lucy Westenra gives birth to a daughter Alucarda in a derelict colonial palace in the woods Immediately after the child is born Lucy begs a hunchbacked gypsy to bring Alucarda to a nearby stone walled convent inhabited by an order of Catholic nuns as she fears the devil will claim her daughter As the gypsy flees with the infant a demonic voice emanates throughout the palace as Lucy dies of complications from childbirth Fifteen years later a teenaged Alucarda still resides at the convent Alucarda swiftly takes an interest in Justine a new orphan her age who has arrived and is eager to become her friend Alucarda quickly refers to Justine as her sister While playing in a forest Alucarda and Justine witness a band of gypsies holding a funeral procession One of the men the hunchback who helped deliver Alucarda offers to sell Alucarda an amulet Shortly after the girls stumble upon the abandoned palace and wander into a crypt There Alucarda professes her love for Justine and the two make a pact that they shall die together In the crypt they unwittingly open the grave of Alucarda s mother and are immediately overcome by a powerful supernatural force that reduces Alucarda to tears Later during mass Justine inexplicably faints While Alucarda tends to Justine in her room she goes into a fit and begins wildly reciting the names of demons The hunchback gypsy appears in the room as Alucarda invokes Satan and the girls nude perform a blood ritual Meanwhile while praying Sister Angelica has a vision of Alucarda and Justine performing a Satanic ritual with the gypsies in the woods and engaging in a mass orgy During the ritual one of the priestesses is stricken down by Sister Angelica s invocation of God and is killed The next day during school Alucarda and Justine begin chanting and professing their dedication to Satan much to the horror of the nuns and their peers The nuns make several unsuccessful attempts to have the girls repent one of which ends with Alucarda attempting to seduce Father Lazaro during confession Lazaro and the nuns horrified by this engage in a mass flogging of each other as punishment for their failure to save the girls from demonic influence After Lazaro concludes they must perform an exorcism of Justine who has grown progressively ill During the exorcism they bind Justine to a cross and poke at her flesh with instruments eventually causing her to bleed to death Dr Oszek arriving to examine Justine walks in on the exorcism and is horrified by what he sees Deeming the practice archaic and sadistic Oszek takes Alucarda with him fearing for her life Alucarda awakens in Dr Oszek s home frightened and confused and is comforted by his blind daughter Daniela Meanwhile Oszek is summoned back to the convent where the nuns have found that Justine s corpse has disappeared Upstairs Sister Germana is found inexplicably burned alive When her body reanimates Father Lazaro bludgeons and ultimately decapitates her The event challenges Oszek s science based beliefs and he flees back home fearing for Daniela s safety upon arriving he finds Alucarda and Daniela are both gone Oszek is led to the abandoned crypt by the nuns who suspect Alucarda might have gone there Inside Sister Angelica finds Justine s body lying in a blood filled coffin Now a vampire Justine attacks Sister Angelica but Angelica manages to stop the attack by praying Oszek interjects and pours holy water on Justine driving her into a fit and she bites Angelica s neck before disintegrating Followed by Oszek several monks carry Angelica s body back to the convent where Alucarda has arrived with Daniela Using supernatural powers Alucarda begins destroying the convent and causing various clergy to spontaneously combust in the grotto Upon witnessing Angelica s corpse Alucarda is suddenly overcome with sorrow and goes into a fit of rage at the base of a burning crucifix in the chapel After she collapses Alucarda s body disappears into the ground as Father Lazaro and Oszek look on Cast editTina Romero as Alucarda Lucy Westenra Susana Kamini as Justine David Silva as Father Lazaro Claudio Brook as Dr Oszek Hunchbacked Gypsy Lily Garza as Daniela Oszek Tina French as Sister Angelica Birgitta Segerskog as Mother Superior Adriana Roel as Sister Germana Martin LaSalle as Brother Felipe Edith Gonzalez as Village GirlThemes edit In Alucarda the triumph of science or religion is turned on its head The world in crisis defined by the unreasonable the unexplainable and the unsolvable is not salvaged by reason or faith Film scholar Doyle Green on the film s overarching themes 5 Some scholars such as Frances Di Lauro have noted that Alucarda is undergirded by anti government and anticlerical sentiments that are manifested in the exaggerated idolatry representations of clerics as tyrants and persecutors and overt iconoclasm 6 Tensions between modernity and tradition are also prominent themes 7 8 Film scholar Doyle Green characterizes the film as an apocalyptic collision of modernity and tradition in a perpetual Dark Age 5 Scholars Raul Rodriguez Hernandez and Claudia Schaefer contextualize this clash and the film s representation of it within Mexico s national history exemplifying literary and cinematic representations of persistent clashes between tradition and modernity myth and reason The added dimension of visibly transgressive actions taken by two young women against teachings structure and moral guiding principles of the church speaks directly to a post 1968 generation that celebrates the body but has lost faith in the society s master narratives 7 Aesthetically Rodriguez Hernandez and Schaefer note visual references to Francisco Goya s Los caprichos specifically during the sequence in which Alucarda and Justine engage in the blood ritual with the hunchbacked gypsy 9 Green also interprets Alucarda as being preoccupied with themes of mental illness and the handling of it within the Catholic Church 10 Green states that in the film the convent becomes a psychiatric domain without psychiatry a theme also explored significantly in Ken Russell s The Devils 1971 10 Because of these shared depictions of Catholic clergy specifically nuns in the context of hysteria Green notes that both films became associated with the nunsploitation genre 10 The tension between science and religious dogma has been noted as another theme specifically in the final act during which the logically minded Dr Oszek a man of science is faced with supernatural occurrences he cannot rationalize 11 Alucarda is also associated with the vampire movie genre although it is not a traditional vampire movie Many critics have noted its similarities to Joseph Sheridan Le Fanu s early vampire novella Carmilla especially the romantic relationship between the main female characters 2 12 According to director Lopez Moctezuma the film draws on the vampire tradition and in a way the protagonist is a female vampire but not in the sense of a blood drinker 13 The title of the film and the name of its eponymous character is derived from Dracula spelled backwards a derivation also used in the form of Alucard in other vampire related media 14 Release editAlucarda opened at the Paris International Festival of Fantastic Film in March 1977 1 The film was released under the title Sisters of Satan in the United States in 1978 2 15 and subsequently released on video under various titles including Sisters of Satan Innocents from Hell and Mark of the Devil 3 16 Critical response edit Columnist Michael Weldon of the Psychotronic Video Guide wrote that the film was The strongest most imaginative and visual witch movie since Ken Russell s The Devils 17 David Wilt of the University of Maryland s Mexican Film Resource Page notes that the film is visually a rather stylish and interesting picture comparing it to the work of Alejandro Jodorowsky 15 Mexican filmmaker Guillermo del Toro has also expressed his appreciation for the film and other works from director Juan Lopez Moctezuma 18 Home media edit Mondo Macabro released a special edition DVD edition of Alucarda in 2002 19 See also editSatanico pandemonium a 1975 Mexican horror film with thematic similaritiesReferences edit a b Les Festival international de Paris du film fantastique Cinema in French Paris France Federation francaise des cine clubs 217 222 14 1977 a b c Shipka Danny Beliveau Ralph eds 2017 International horror film directors global fear Intellect Ltd p 85 ISBN 9781783206537 Maxford 2019 p 476 Alucarda A masterpiece of Mexican arthouse horror Roxie Theater 24 August 2017 Archived from the original on 20 April 2021 Retrieved 5 June 2020 a b Green 2007 p 91 Di Lauro 2006 pp 27 30 a b Rodriguez Hernandez amp Schaefer 2019 p 161 Green 2007 p 88 Rodriguez Hernandez amp Schaefer 2019 p 160 a b c Green 2007 p 70 Rodriguez Hernandez amp Schaefer 2019 p 161 163 Demon Lung Pays Tribute to a Classic Mexican Lesbian Vampire Flick With New Album A Dracula Vice 20 July 2015 Retrieved 5 June 2020 Greene Doyle 2007 The Mexican cinema of darkness a critical study of six landmark horror and exploitation films 1969 1988 McFarland amp Company p 69 ISBN 978 0786429998 Di Lauro 2006 a b Wilt David 2000 Alucarda review Mexican Film Resource Page University of Maryland College Park Archived from the original on January 21 2020 Retrieved January 21 2020 Stine 2015 p 41 Mondo Macabro s Alucarda special edition DVD Archived from the original on July 2 2016 horrortalk com Alucarda DVD review Archived from the original on February 12 2009 Broughton Lee August 27 2002 DVD Savant Review Dr Jekyll Versus the Werewolf amp Alucarda DVD Talk Archived from the original on January 21 2020 Sources editDi Lauro Frances 2006 Moctezuma s Revenge Iconoclasm in Film In Di Lauro Frances ed Through A Glass Darkly Reflections of the Sacred Sydney Australia Sydney University Press ISBN 978 1 920 89854 0 Green Doyle 2007 The Mexican Cinema of Darkness A Critical Study of Six Landmark Horror and Exploitation Films 1969 1988 Jefferson North Carolina McFarland ISBN 978 0 786 42999 8 Maxford Howard 2019 Hammer Complete The Films the Personnel the Company Jefferson North Carolina McFarland ISBN 978 1 476 62914 8 Rodriguez Hernandez Raul Schaefer Claudia 2019 The Supernatural Sublime The Wondrous Ineffability of the Everyday in Films from Mexico and Spain Lincoln Nebraska University of Nebraska Press ISBN 978 1 496 21499 7 Stine Scott Aaron 2015 The Gorehound s Guide to Splatter Films of the 1960s and 1970s Jefferson North Carolina McFarland ISBN 978 0 786 49140 7 External links editAlucarda at AllMovie Alucarda at IMDb Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Alucarda amp oldid 1170941994, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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