IMDb RATING
6.0/10
1.3K
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A young couple are tricked into going into a sinister house where a coven of devil-worshipers waits for them.A young couple are tricked into going into a sinister house where a coven of devil-worshipers waits for them.A young couple are tricked into going into a sinister house where a coven of devil-worshipers waits for them.
Ángel Aranda
- Bruno
- (as Angel Aranda)
Mariana Karr
- Ana
- (as Marian Karr)
José María Guillén
- Andrés
- (as Jose Maria Guillen)
Luis Barboo
- Guarda
- (as Luis Bar-boo)
José Pagán
- Médico
- (as Jose Pagan)
Ascensión Moreno
- Vecina
- (as Ascension Moreno)
Fernando Jiménez del Oso
- Self
- (uncredited)
Óscar Simón
- Fraile
- (uncredited)
- Directors
- Writer
- All cast & crew
- Production, box office & more at IMDbPro
Storyline
Did you know
- ConnectionsFeatured in The Devil's Disciples (2006)
Featured review
I wouldn't have been surprised to find out that, Carlos Puerto, the obscure director of this Spanish horror semi-classic was actually a pseudonym for the more famous Spanish/English director Jose Larraz. Puerto is apparently a real guy, even though his film is eerily similar to many of those of Larraz with its plot of an innocent couple being lured to a remote house in the wilderness and being preyed on by a satanic coven of sexual degenerates.
The good news though is that this tends to eerily resemble a good Larraz film like "Symptoms" or "Vampyres" rather than a bad Larraz film like "Whirlpool" or "Black Candles". The bad news is that this suffers from the same problem of many (especially latter-day) Larraz films and many other films of the post-Franco "destapa" period--the emphasis on softcore sex and gratuitous nudity at times brings the story to a complete standstill and threatens to overwhelm any suspense or tension the story has built up. Luckily though the film is fairly skillfully done and the acting is good (I don't know who any of these actors are, but they're better than almost anyone Larraz ever worked with).
The ending is especially non-sensical even as far as Eurohorror goes, and dog lovers might not like the movie much, but it's still one of the better Spanish horror films I've seen from this period and the new DVD is widescreen and looks really good. Mirala!
The good news though is that this tends to eerily resemble a good Larraz film like "Symptoms" or "Vampyres" rather than a bad Larraz film like "Whirlpool" or "Black Candles". The bad news is that this suffers from the same problem of many (especially latter-day) Larraz films and many other films of the post-Franco "destapa" period--the emphasis on softcore sex and gratuitous nudity at times brings the story to a complete standstill and threatens to overwhelm any suspense or tension the story has built up. Luckily though the film is fairly skillfully done and the acting is good (I don't know who any of these actors are, but they're better than almost anyone Larraz ever worked with).
The ending is especially non-sensical even as far as Eurohorror goes, and dog lovers might not like the movie much, but it's still one of the better Spanish horror films I've seen from this period and the new DVD is widescreen and looks really good. Mirala!
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Details
- Release date
- Countries of origin
- Language
- Also known as
- Don't Panic
- Filming locations
- Madrid, Spain(Exterior)
- Production companies
- See more company credits at IMDbPro
- Runtime1 hour 22 minutes
- Sound mix
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