The Body Snatcher (1957) Poster

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7/10
Great!
BandSAboutMovies22 June 2020
Warning: Spoilers
This movie actually played in the U.S. as a bad translation - but one more apt to get people into the theaters perhaps thinking they were seeing another film - The Body Snatcher. It was inspired by Universal's Frankenstein and was an attempt to take as much of that film as possible while avoiding any potential lawsuit.

Between this film and El Vampiro, Fernando Mendez was able to usher in what many see as a golden age of Mexican cinema.

Police Captain Carlos Robles has a problem. Someone is killing Mexico's greatest athletes and he doesn't know that it's scientist Don Panchito. Turns out that Don is slicing the heads of these sports stars open, plopping in an animal brain and conquering death itself. Who knew it was so easy?

Robles gets pro wrestler Guillermo Santana (Wolf Ruvinskis) to act as bait. There's a great wrestling training scene here that shows just how hard hitting 1950's lucha was, probably due to how much harder the rings themselves were.

The plan goes wrong and Santana is now transformed into an ape. So Evil Don does what mad scientists in Mexican movies do best: he sends him to the wrestling arena with a mask on and tells him to kick some culo.

Don't ask how the monkey brain keeps his personality or why he's wrestling, just go with the flow.

Santana goes wild, breaking free of his programming somewhat to kill Don, kidnap an old girlfriend and lead police on a chase across the rooftops of Mexico CIty before his best friend has to gun him down.

This is 80-minutes of sheer delight. You really owe it to yourself to track this down, because it's an absolute blast.
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7/10
Wrestlers and Horror?! More than welcomed!
insomniac_rod25 March 2006
I like the opening of the movie very much because it tries to set the tone for the rest of the running time. It's a graveyard at night, when suddenly a grave digger pops out of a grave. I must admit that I didn't expect the scene!. Anyways, soon we are introduced with a mad doctor that steals corpses of athletes (mainly wrestlers) for "evil" purposes. Soon after we know the diabolical plans, we are introduced with our hero. The wrestler starts the special mission because this grave digging and stealing is getting national attention.

The settings of the movie are pretty damn good and tend to create a creepy atmosphere which later is turned into a fantasy world. The wrestlers are more than welcome in the plot! But I didn't buy their dialogs. Well, they weren't very good actors in the first place.

The acting of the rest of the cast is pretty good for it's time and for the movie's plot. Rubinski (not Rubinskis as listed on IMDb) delivers a solid and believable performance. The main problem with the movie is that it gets boring after the half. There aren't that many emotions or action. Still, it worths a watch.
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5/10
The Lucha Libre Snatcher.
morrison-dylan-fan9 October 2019
Warning: Spoilers
After finding Una rata en la oscuridad (1979-also reviewed) a delight,I decided to continue to open Mexican Horror titles I've gathered waiting to be watched. Intrigued by what sounded like a unique mix the flick offered,I stepped in the ring with the body snatcher.

View on the film:

Filmed at a real wrestling show, co-writer/(with Alejandro Verbitzky) writer/director Fernando Mendez & cinematographer Victor Herrera bring the action to life, with a elbow drop landing on stylish close-ups on the faces of audience members gripped by the match, landing a pin fall with a unsettling stamped match finish.

Holding back on the King Kong-inspired body snatching horror in order to have it be the finishing move of the flick, Mendez grapples the majority of the movie as a crime flick with a scatting of Mad Scientist kidnapping/ reviving the dead antics,who come back to life by stylish dissolves, but are soon back in the morgue thanks to the bone-dry script, which fails to piledriver tense mystery or creepy horror onto the body snatcher.
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Its Not a Joke, It's Possible Match., Horror and Wrestlers in a Good Mexican Movie!
treada735 July 2005
In his pure style Fernando Mendez give to the wrestlers films an interesting vision of the horror, even with a very conventional script, he takes advance of the very popular wrestlers environment in Mexican society and gets memorable sequences of these fights, with professional wrestlers as the propitious victims of a mad doctor(Carlos Riquelme)customized as an old men lottery bills seller, who wants their powerful body condition to create a superior Monster. and was Ruvinskis the only wrestler who resist the operation to convert him in a strange monster with a gorilla brain, mixture of Frankenstein and King Kong ,he go up to a building just before to be killed.

Mendez mix maybe like any other director in Mexican films the horror and wrestlers and gets,with the support of an efficient casting –over all Wolf Ruvinskis ,good actor and wrestler,-a very entertained movie and one of the best of its genre.
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7/10
The beginning of the wrestling in movies a true Mexican Institution!!!
elo-equipamentos11 April 2023
The Mexican cinema didn't make so many horror movies, just in thirties some were made, but after the smashing success of Ladron de Cadáveres where the director Fernando Mendez mixing two genres as favorite Mexican wrestling with the hero wearing the exotic mask as that became a Mexican trademark in others wresting pictures as "Santo" a true Mexican institution due it had a fabulous box-office at its time, the actor Wolf Ruvinskis was the main exponent of this attraction for many years.

The picture is a true gem, aside some outliers easily perceived in the feature as the bad make up e some oddities in others sequences, the story is about a mad scientist professor (Carlo Riquelme) that looking for a perfect body to insert another brain, he has been failed twice until finds in the skilled rookie wrestling Guillermo Santana (Wolf Ruvinskis) aided by his bleak sidekick Cosme Ramirez (Yerye Beirute) to catch him.

Meanwhile the womanizer guy Guillermo starts court the beauty Lucia (Columba Dominguez) who got the top billing cast, actually Guillermo is an old buddy of the Captain Carlos Robles (Crox Alvarado) that introduced him in the wresting circuit to start training due Guillermo came from countryside to Mexico City to begin a successful career in this odd sport.

The picture is utterly well-done mainly in great photograph very alike American productions, plus the clever filmmaker inserts a humor and romance, although who stolen the picture quite is the multipurpose Carlo Riquelme playing a kind of double face character as lottery peddler as almost a beggar and also the criminal mad scientist that wants rule the world after they weird experiences work out, don't miss it if you like a fine horror mixing with science fiction!!

Thanks for reading.

Resume:

First watch: 2023 / How many: 1 / Source: DVD / Rating: 7.25.
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9/10
A well made under-rated horror/detective film.
drmazali20 January 2007
A dead wrestler who gets his brain transplanted with the brain of an Ape? Sound corny? I thought so too.. until I watched it. Though Ladron de Cadaveres may sound like another campy, Lucha Libre (or Santo style) film, it isn't. It's a very well photographed and masterfully directed Horror/Mad Science/Detective story shot much in the Noir style. Mendez was in his directing prime here and as usual per this era of Mexican Horror, the Gothic atmosphere helps make this film a joy to look at. The wrestling mixes well here I think because the wrestlers are not really part of the cast. They are more part of the story. The story involves a dead champion wrestler, some city cops hot on the trail of his killer and some scientists wanting to use the dead wrestler for a dark and twisted experiment which everybody learns was a huge mistake. The opening scene is great and sets the tone very well. This is another rarely seen Mexican classic that certainly deserves some admiration.
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9/10
Wrestlers and Monsters
EdgarST28 August 2017
After the release of Chano Urueta's 1953 movie about wrestling "La bestia magnífica (Lucha libre)", director Fernando Méndez took heed of its big financial success at the box office, recognizing the potential of adding wrestling matches to horror films. In September of 1957 he had the first horror hit of the year with this story of a country boy who arrives in México City, succeeds as a wrestler and is transformed into a monster by a mad scientist who makes criminal experiments with athletes and animals. To the success of the film helped the impressive presence of Wolf Ruvinskis, a handsome Argentinian professional wrestler and actor, born of Jewish parents in Latvia, who also played a key role in Urueta's movie.
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