The Ship of Monsters (1960) Poster

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7/10
A Charming (But Really Weird) Oddity
lemon_magic11 July 2016
Warning: Spoilers
Due to the difficulty of finding versions with English dubbing or subtitles, my exposure to Mexican B movies has been limited to a very few films. So I sort of knew what to expect when I stumbled across this movie on YouTube,but I was still surprised and pleased by how well this movie worked on its own (very odd) terms.

One thing I've gathered from my limited viewings is that a typical Mexican B-to-Z movie will have tropes and cultural backstories that may be old hat to the traditional audience for which it was made, but will come across as both odd and fresh to a "modern" American audience...and that the filmmakers from Churubusco studio and their peers weren't afraid to mix story elements from genres an American movie watcher wouldn't expect.

So "The Ship Of Monsters" is based on a Z movie level "Venus Needs Men" style plot as the excuse for the story, but includes a singing cowboy, his kid brother, 4 "monsters" (actually captured aliens from other planets), vampires, a romantic triangle, sight gags, slapstick, cat fights between the two female leads, really dark moments when people get hurt and killed, two hot babes who go adventuring in interplanetary space in bathing suits (including an INCREDIBLY hot actress that Irecognize from the "Samson" film mentioned above) and a robot who can't bend his legs. (What is it with Mexican film makers and robots without knees??)

And yet, it works, mostly thanks to the male lead, "Piporro" and his ability to somehow make some incredibly contrived songs, speeches,and jokes work. I couldn't help but compare him to Cary Grant (although not quite so suave).He's just incredibly likable and charming.

Also, the version I saw on YouTube used subtitles instead of dubbing (allowing the actors to sound like themselves instead of the usual florid English dubbing), and the subtitle translations were smooth and not awkward at all - whoever put them together knew his stuff and had time to do it right.

Is this a "good" film? Oh, Hell no. But the sheer novelty of the plot elements and the genial charm of the hero will probably win you over.
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7/10
Fun in Old Mexico
Bucs19609 July 2007
What a really great but ridiculous film starring one of the Wrestling Women (Lorena Velasquez) of Mexican films of that series. When I use the word "great", I really mean "so bad it's good".

The premise of the film is the old "taking Earthlings back to Venus, or a planet of your choice, to breed". Why the men of Venus can't cut the mustard is never made clear but nevertheless, it's the ever-popular Pipporo who gets the nod. He rides through the Mexican landscape warbling from the saddle while, somewhere behind a cactus, an accordion provides the back-up music. As might be expected, he is unwilling to make the trip to Venus, even though the aliens are wearing fishnet hose and reallllly high heels. So the girls unleash on mankind, some of the worst monsters conceived in film but to no avail. Pipporo 'aint leaving and in the end, the invaders are repulsed with weapons that wouldn't stop a gang of senior citizens on Valium.

This film is such fun that you have to love it. Check out the skeleton with a cow's head that keeps repeating "Ha, Ha, Ha". It's a blast!!!!
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7/10
Delirious fun with something for everybody
jamesrupert201418 April 2019
A low-budget Mexican science fiction movie with 'borrowed' Russian special effects about two Venusian women in space-bathing-suits (and their robot) who are searching for men to help repopulate their planet PLUS a singing cowboy, a vampire, space monsters, and a hint of interplanetary miscegenation - what more could anyone want?! The film stars Mexican comedian Eulalio González and despite some grisly scenes (at the expense of the very improbable looking monsters) is played strictly for laughs. Some of the special effects (such as the space-walk) were lifted from the excellent Russian futurist documentary 'Doroga k zvezdam' (1957), the rest are strictly bottom-of-the-barrel (except an oddly effective glimpse of the 'vampire' in flight). 'Ship of Monsters' is weird stuff but it is entertaining enough in a singular way and deserves to be better known in cult-film circles.
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A must Mexican made oddity.
youroldpaljim25 March 2001
This Mexican made film could be described as a science fiction/horror comedy/singing cowboy musical. The video copy I rented from my local video store was in Spanish with no sub titles, but even if you don't speak Spanish you should see it. The film is about a singing cowboy who plays the accordion and falls off his horse a lot, encountering two sexy alien women. The women bring them with an assortment of monsters, including a spider, an alien with his brains exposed and something that can best described as a bipedal saber tooth cat skeleton creature that appears to be the most evil one of the lot. The alien creatures are pretty cheap looking but perhaps that is part of the gag. One of the alien women is evil and is apparently a space vampire. The other alien women romances the hero and they even sing a duet together. The interior of the rocket in which the aliens arrive is pretty elaborate for a Mexican picture. There is also scene of a space station orbiting the Earth which seems to have been taken from some other film. There is one scene where the hero's son discovers is beloved pet cow has been turned into a skeleton by the evil alien women. Considering that this film seems to have been made to at least partially appeal to children, this scene is a bit rough.
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7/10
Wacky little gem among B-flicks
vodkapickleback30 January 2021
At a glance this title may not stand out, but it's worth your time, being a bit of a rare treat: a decently made B-flick with a sense of humor. That humor hasn't been lost in translation or obscured over time, either.

The premise: After many wars, Venus needs men, so they dispatch Gamma and Beta to scrape the bottom of the galactic barrel for any males they can manage to collect. (Seriously, any.) Next stop is Earth, where they meet a romantic, singing cowboy who's much less revolting than the others, but romance may be the least of the threats about to send the mission into chaos.

Beyond those basics, try to go in as unspoiled as you can manage. This movie has a handful of twists, and they really are more effective and funnier that way. The Ship of Monsters will certainly hit the B-sci-fi-horror spot with its black-and-white low budget aesthetic and wacky effects, but the film knows what it's doing, and entertains all on its own. Refreshing if you're used to uneven or lackluster old productions that need riffing to get through.
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9/10
Western/comedy/musical/scifi/horror/monster movie is infinitely better than it should be and is fun film that should be seen asap
dbborroughs22 May 2006
A must see movie for anyone who loves 1950's style scifi , Mexican movies or movies that are in their own little universe.

This is a Mexican scifi/monster/western/musical/comedy/horror film. It concerns a space ship piloted by two women (think Cat Women of the Moon or Queen of Outer Space) who land on earth with a ship of monsters. They get mixed up with a Mexican cowboy who's prone to song and who falls in love with one of the women. As you can guess the monsters get loose and pandemonium ensues.

Wow, wow and wow.

This is a fun film that is NOT a so good its bad film, its just a fun little movie that is very good on its own terms. Its clear that everyone knows that what they are doing is silly but they play it straight anyway and seem to be having a good time.

Being a monster junkie I was in heaven. Not only is there a great looking robot, but a strange talking skeleton, a weird little guy with a brain like head, a furry guy with long arms. a giant monster of some sort, a vampire and something else. Its a a wonderful assortment of monsters of the clearly men in suit variety. You'll laugh at them and probably find them charmingly hokey.

I really loved this film. Its a 9 out of 10 for me for the simple reason that I had to see this with out any English translation. Somehow I think that had I seen this in English this would have been even better since from the few words I could grasp it seemed to strike the right balance between serious and silly.

If you get the chance see this movie, its just a lot of fun and it will make you feel good.
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7/10
Asombroso!
ferbs5417 January 2021
Warning: Spoilers
There are certain films that are so outrageous, so bizarre, so very unique or dumbfounding, that the viewer cannot believe what he or she is looking at while watching them. Such motion pictures leave the viewer wondering things like: What were those filmmakers thinking? How can a movie like this possibly exist? Some of those films, such as "The Great Gabbo" (1929), "The Shanghai Gesture" (1941), "Blood Freak" (1972) and "The Worm Eaters" (1977), leave the viewer slack-jawed but with the desire never to see them again; they are unique but either tiresomely boring or unpleasantly repugnant. Others, such as "Plan 9 From Outer Space" (1959), "Gonks Go Beat" (1965) and "Barbarella" (1968), similarly leave the viewer stunned by their outre quality, but with the desire to watch the films again sometime; films that must be placed into that dubious category "so bad they're good." Writing of "Plan 9" is his wonderful reference volume "Cult Movies," Danny Peary tells us "To think that such in inept, berserk picture exists truly boggles the mind." And yes, there is certainly something both endearing and awe inspiring about those bizarre, one-of-a-kind films that still make us want to experience them again ... and again and again. Into that latter grouping, happily, must go the movie that I watched just the other evening, the Mexican wonder entitled "The Ship of Monsters." Originally released in Mexico City in January 1960 under the title "La Nave de los Monstruos," this unique, sui generis experience manages to conflate a singing cowboy, aliens, grotesque monstrosities from other worlds, comedy, a female vampire, musical/dance numbers and some truly delightful/awful special FX into one charming and unforgettable film experience. It is a film that I have seen clips of throughout the years, and indeed, any fan of sci-fi or horror films has most likely heard or read of this stunner from south of the border. Fortunately, in today's Digital Era, the viewing of the film is now a relatively easy matter, as I was happy to discover just recently.



In the film, the viewer learns that all the men of Venus have been wiped out in some kind of atomic holocaust. Thus, the female leader of the planet (Consuelo Frank) sends out a space vessel with the supremely important mission of bringing back males from all over the galaxy to help repopulate the dying world. The two-women crew of this mission consists of the Venusian captain Gamma (Ana Bertha Lepe, the former Miss Mexico 1953, and future star of numerous Santo movies) and Beta (Lorena Velazquez, Miss Mexico 1960, and future star of 1964's "The Wrestling Women vs. the Aztec Mummy"), supposedly the best navigator from the planet Ur (which this viewer took to mean Uranus), both of whom are major-league bombshells and appear throughout most of this film wearing one-piece bathing suits and high heels. The mission goes well, and the pair manages to find four alien males that they put into frozen stasis in their ship's hold. But problems arise when the ship's engine goes a bit haywire and the two are forced to make a landing on Earth, specifically in the area of Chihuahua, Mexico. There, they encounter Lauriano (Eulalio Gonzalez), a handsome, song-filled, good-hearted yet compulsive liar and braggart, who lives with his kid brother Chuy (Heberto Davila, Jr.). Passing themselves off as circus performers, Gamma and Beta introduce Lauriano to their robotic servant Torr (as lumbering a tin man as any since the one that appeared in 1954's "Devil Girl From Mars"), stash their four frozen aliens in a nearby cave (for some obscure reason) while they effect repairs, and simultaneously fall for the charms of the handsome Mexican showoff. And just when the viewer begins to think that things cannot possibly get any wilder here, it turns out that Beta has the ability to turn herself into a bat, and is in fact a vampiress who attacks an unfortunate local and drains him of his blood! For this crime, the Venusian leader sentences her to death whenever she should return, declaring "Drinking human blood is the worst crime in the galaxy!" And so, Beta does what any lusty and desperate bloodsucker might do: free the four frozen aliens and, with their assistance, plan to conquer all of planet Earth....



Packed into this fast-moving, 81-minute wonder are four musical numbers, an endless stream of very amusing one-liners, several scenes of goofy romance, two dukeouts between Lauriano and the assorted aliens, and a generous dollop of pleasingly inept special FX. Stealing the show, at least for this viewer, are the four aliens that have been captured by the two space vixens. First up for our delectation is the Martian Tagual, a diminutive, goggle-eyed, enormous-headed creature with a likewise huge (and very visible) corrugated brain. Uk, the muscle-bound cyclops, is very tall and very scaly, the self-described "King of the Fire Planet" (Mercury?), and is rarely seen without some thick white slaver dripping from his maw. Utirr, who calls himself the "Crassus of the Red Planet" (whatever a "Crassus" might be; and is that Mars again?), is a hairy and bipedal monstrosity with poisonous fangs. And lastly, and perhaps most bizarrely, is Zok, a skeletal alien whose race "lost their material form," and whose head is reminiscent of nothing less than a bony rendition of Svengoolie's Kerwyn. My poor powers of description cannot convey to you how truly outrageous these four appear on screen. The Ship of Monsters grows increasingly delirious as it proceeds, never more so than in the scene where Lauriano tries to steal some kind of control device from Beta's belt. Thus, as a distraction while in that torchlit cavern, he begins to sing a love song to the alien vampiress, pursuant to which the two break into a dance number. Mind boggling! Even more flabbergasting: the fact that the robot Torr, whom Lauriano has called Tractorr throughout, eventually winds up falling in love with a jukebox, which our hero strangely has in the living room of his "hacienda"! And the film builds to a socko conclusion, during which we are treated to a battle royale with Lauriano fighting Utirr, Chuy battling Tagual, and Torr duking it out with Uk. (Points off for the mysterious disappearance of Zok; I still can't figure out what happened to his bony presence.) It is all outrageous, wonderful, unique and extraordinary entertainment. Trust me ... you have never seen anything like it!



"The Ship of Monsters" has been directed with an emphasis on fast-moving fun by Rogelio A. Gonzalez from a script by Alfredo Varela, Jr. That script, as mentioned above, contains any number of amusing lines. For example, when Lauriano first sees a few of the alien monsters, he opines "Bunch of rebels without causes here." In regard to the horrendous Utirr, Gamma tells Beta "He's a male, a strange and terrible one, but a male nonetheless." (Hmm, perhaps this viewer would make out alright on Venus!) In a conversation between Tagual and Beta, the Martian tells the voluptuous sexpot "You're ugly. You lack the red beauty of the women of Mars." And when Lauriano first sees the cyclops Uk, he declares "Oh, brother, you're an ugly one. Looks like they carved you out with a hatchet!" As for those special FX that I mentioned, they are of the Ed Wood variety, surely, and like those in "Plan 9," they are endearingly cheesy. When Lauriano accidentally triggers some kind of antigrav effect on that belt's control device and floats into the air, absolutely no attempt is made to conceal the rope from which he is dangling. The creature costumes have been imaginatively constructed using a minimum of pesos, it seems, and the rocket ship's interior is just barely more impressive looking than the one to be found in that Ed Wood classic. The net result of all this is a truly unforgettable experience, and indeed, it seems to me that "The Ship of Monsters" will one day be getting its long overdue cult status. It is the kind of film that can be enjoyed by adults as well as by children. Little ones who are too young to read and follow along with subtitles - and I might add here that the print that I just watched of "The Ship of Monsters" was a very decent one with easily readable subtitles - should still be delighted with the enchanting visuals that this film dishes out in spades. This is the kind of picture that I can see being watched often, perhaps annually. Only the grumpiest of sourpusses will look upon this film with distaste; all others will surely be entertained on some level. As Lauriano himself might declare, it's just "Asombroso!"
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4/10
So goofy you need to see it!
planktonrules22 November 2015
This Mexican sci-fi movie is a must-see simply because it's so strange. Plus, it has a good heart and never takes itself seriously! The story is very similar to "Abbott & Costello Go to Mars"...combined with a monster movie! It begins with some super- hot Venusian ladies and their incredibly silly robot announcing that they are in search of men, as the last of their died off recently. So, they have accumulated a really bizarre menagerie of goofy looking monsters from various planets--and you assume these hotties are planning on breeding with these male creatures. However, before they can get their galactic groove on, they become stranded on Earth--which is fortunate because these Venusians thing human men are super-mega-hot! They are particularly infatuated with a singing caballero in a cowboy hat!

Later, the plans run amok when the nice sexy hot Venusian realizes her sexy leader is actually....a vampire!!!! Then the sexy vampire takes over, as her plan is to bring 'a wave of death and terror' on the Earth....along with her menagerie of nasty (and very silly looking) monsters. Can our super-mega-hot caballero possibly tame this she- devil or is the Earth doomed?

Where to begin?! Everything about this film is silly--from the space suits the Venusians wear (just bathing suits are all they need in space, apparently), the robot, the monsters and the plot...which is just insane! Still, there is a certain silliness about the film that make it worth seeing--particularly if you like insane movies!! And, this is pretty insane! Plus, the production values, while silly, are occasionally better than you'd expect from such a film. Not terrible....but very weird.
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10/10
The best 50's Mexican Sci-Fi film of them all
Moly11 January 1999
This is my favorite Mexican Sci-Fi film of the 1950's. Two voluptuous alien women round up hideous space monsters, including a giant tiki with an exposed brain, a spider, a cyclops, and a sabre-tooth tiger skeleton, with the help of a singing cowboy and a giant robot. Lorena Velazquez (Wrestling Women vs. the Aztec Mummy, Santo vs. the Vampire Women) is particularly lovely as one of the alien women. The sets are amazing, and the atmosphere is wonderfully retro-futuristic.
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6/10
¡Queso delicioso!
robotmonkeycat25 September 2022
Fun & funny Sci-Fi/Horror/Comedy.

It's pretty silly, but it hit my funny bone in all the right spots.

The story takes an unexpected turn in the middle, which made it all so much the better.

I loved everything about this movie: the performances, the sets, the space ladies & their costumes, the songs, the robot, & the space creatures.

All of the outer space shots are from other movies, but that's fine, as the were good shots.

Will watch again and would like to add to my DVD collection.

Highly recommended to fans of cheesy movies and a moderate recommendation to others.

Watched YouTube video on my phone, but it seems of excellent quality.
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5/10
Only minutes from Venus to Mexico, and they speak Spanish in both places.
mark.waltz24 March 2018
Warning: Spoilers
A charming Mexican cowboy becomes the desired target of two female astronauts from Venus, and when he isn't romancing them with song, he's fighting some odd looking monsters. This is deliciously silly fun that I discovered quite by accident, and able to understand pretty much everything going on in the Spanish print with no English subtitles. This is made on a shoestring budget, and the monsters are cheap looking, but there's something so sweet about the way this is done. A "Lost in Space" type robot even gets a love song, and the monsters get a few laughs too, especially one that encounters a cow and deals with it in a hysterical way. The women are commanding and sexy (with one having vampire inclinations) and the cowboy is obviously playing the Latin lothario with his tongue deeply embedded in his cheek. I'd love to find a dubbed or subtitled copy of this, but it's so deliciously simple that even an ignorant gringo like me can get every drift it presents.
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10/10
TWO things worth noting
pv613 March 2007
I love all Lorena Velazquez movies ( and she has quit a few! ), but this one is so special because of all the assortment of male monsters this two beautiful women from another planet had been collecting across the whole universe.

1) When Ana Bertha Lepe and Piporro use the elevator to get inside the spaceship, she has a dress in a different shade of gray than when she is actually in. The color changes during the elevator trip.

2) When the spaceship leaves the earth, you can see the planet earth with the actual lines around and from north to south like if they had used a Globe to make the scene.

See it! You will have a good time!
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6/10
A unique sci-fi film with singing!
mikemikeparker4 November 2023
I couldn't help but like this film. It has a crazy plot about Venusians running out of men and sending two utterly gorgeous women to earth to capture some men. They already have some weird creatures on their ship, which presumably are also to mate with! They meet a singing cowboy, played with great charm by Eulalio Gonzalez, who has to teach them what love is. Cue monsters, a robot and a vampire ...and, of course, love. The effects are generally pretty awful but the ship is cool and there are some very nifty devices, including a computer which is a sort of Wikipedia, a zapper which freezes people, a ray gun (more like a fire gun) and a handy box carried on the hip which is a deadly weapon. Great fun, however ridiculous it is. The star is Gonzalez but Ana Bertha Lepe is extremely seductive...and the swimming costume pilot's uniform is a welcome addition to the plot!
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1/10
Best Mexican Sci-Fi Film Ever Made...1 star
arthur_tafero27 July 2018
The headline says it all. With a robot borrowed from the worst film of all time "Flying Saucers Over Istanbul"", this film is only marginally better. "Istanbul" had a 0 stars rating, and this one has a 1 star rating. That is because they spend 30 seconds at the beginning of the film explaining the atom. That's it. After that, its all downhill. Mexico has never made another science-fiction film since (to my knowledge). Thank you for your restraint.
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10/10
Little B-movie made with a big heart!
insomniac_rod2 June 2007
A Mexican Sci-fi/Western starring the late but always great Piporro and Ana Bertha Lepe. This is a sui generis movie because the b-movie market in México during the late 50's was really poor in production values mainly but this movie is the exception. This is probably the best of it's kind. I mean, the best b-sci-fi flick Mexican movie of probably 50 years. It's no wonder this movie it's ahead of it's time mainly because it's heavily influenced by American productions but still the effort is recognized. GREAT f/x and art direction. This is a likable, entertaining, cultural movie.

An earth Mexican cowboy is the only hope for humanity to confront four monsters that have been commanded to destroy: animals and humanity mainly. The monsters are really cool and you can see the effort of the production. There is a cyclops monster in the likes of "Clash Of The Titans", a short martian with a gigantic brain, an ape type gigantic monster, and a skeleton in the likes of "Sinbad and his 7th Voyage". All of them are menacing but Piporro faces them with his comedic Norteño attitude and his gun. After a first encounter with them, he goes to a local cantina (bar) and with the aid of a beer and Tequila he recovers his strenght and faith and faces the monsters for once and all. Oh and there's also room for some Norteño singing! Piporro delivers a comedic performance that relies on his on-screen charisma and his over the top Norteño attitude. He is supposed to be the brave cowboy but he gives the character his own charm.

Lorena Velázquez is really beautiful and sexy and delivers a great performance as the aspiring Mars Queen. She's always great and this is no exception. She looked gorgeous and sexy with his one-piece outfit. Hot. And her dialogs are very evil! There's always a room for cheese and in these performances there wasn't exception.
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8/10
The way B-movies supposed to be made
edmar_mota1 September 2005
Warning: Spoilers
This is a cute sci-fi/comedy/horror flick from Mexico. Eulalio Gonzales (aka Piporro) is a cowboy that tells many lies to impress others at the local bar. Two beautiful Venusians (well they come from planet Venus) are send to the space to obtain the best males to be the fathers of new off-springs because Venus males are dying (maybe are all queer, they don't explain). So they come to earth and apparently Piporro is the best male earth can offer, so they try to kidnap he. The males of other planets (in this case monsters like a cyclops, a spider and a blood sucking guy with a huge exposed brain) got unleash because one of the Venusians is really a vampire and sees the opportunity to conquer earth with their help. Piporro, his nephew and the other kinky Venusian will try to stop the evil monsters. La nave de los mounstros probe what a B-movie should be. It doesn't try to be very dramatic (like Gringo b-movies) because we ALL KNEW that the monsters are made of cheap plastic (well even a today kid will laugh) because of the tight budget. And doesn't try to be an all comedy (because it will lose its charm). For all you non-Spanish speakers is better that you try to get a copy with subtitles (or better with a decent dubbing) because you will miss some great jokes and cheap dialog you won't find on any gringo B-movie. (I refuse to call anything coming from the United States "american" because we all -from Canada to Chile- live in a continent named America and so we all "americans" not just they)
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8/10
Update
libra770186 June 2012
Warning: Spoilers
In the beginning there was the atom (picture) and the galaxy (picture of planet earth). Men from Venus are extinct because of some atomic war. 2 Women are sent around the Universe to collect men samples to bring back to Venus and then choose which ones are good to breed with. The women travel around the Universe in bathing suits and high heels. The men they have collected, since they're not human-like, are considered ''monsters'', and among them, there's even a talking dog-like skeleton. When they arrive on Earth, they like what they see and vice-versa, so they decide to discard all the monsters and take home only good looking humans. Plans go awfully wrong when one of them (Velázquez), not being actually from Venus but from a Vampire planet, take over and decide to take a side with the monsters and stay on Earth, so she can be the queen.

The comedy is very good with some goofs that shouldn't be taken into consideration. Piporro is at his best.
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10/10
A perfect movie
BandSAboutMovies24 June 2020
Warning: Spoilers
Rogelio A. Gonzalez made more than 70 movies, but I wonder if he ever made anything near as good as this movie, which is perhaps one of the strangest films I've ever had the delight to witness.

I was wondering how to even describe this movie. Basically, Gamma (Ana Bertha Lepe, Miss Mexico 1953 and a third-runner up for Miss Universe) and Beta (Lorena Velazquez, Miss Mexico 1960 and also Zorina queen of the vampires in Santo vs. Las Mujeres Vampiro) have come from Venus to find men to repopulate their planet. Of course, they can't resist biting people or falling in love with Lauriano (Eulalio "Piporro" Gonzalez, one of the kings of golden age of Mexico comedy and the literal embodiment of Northern Mexican culture), a singing cowboy.

Sure, that would set up a great movie, but this is Mexico. Which means that the ship has a robot named Tor who is collecting a whole bunch of monsters - why, the title translates as Ship of Monsters, surprise! - and those monsters are about to go crazy. There's Uk the cyclops, the many armed Carasus, Prince of Mars Tagual, Utirr the spider and the dinosaur skeleton named Zok. Also, Tor falls for a jukebox. And some of the special effects were ripped off from the Russian movie Road to the Stars.

Imagine if Ed Wood lived in Mexico, had a better budget, lucked out and had magnificent actresses willing to wear swimsuits and high heels, as well as a singing cowboy. Then we'd cut open slice open a peyote cactus and make him sit in a cave until he made this and it still might not this charming and odd.
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10/10
"I will devour your entrails..."
poe-4883329 July 2016
Warning: Spoilers
THE SHIP OF MONSTERS has it all- and THEN some. There are at least four songs sung by our hero, one Laureano Gomez; two unbelievably voluptuous vixens from Venus in search of Love, Gamma, played by Ana Lepe, and Beta, played by Lorena Velasquez (of EL SANTO VERSUS THE VAMPIRE WOMEN fame); four Monsters- all Males- kidnapped from various planets (whose VERY creepy and amazingly VARIED voices make this one worth seeing- and hearing) (and, if some of these guys look vaguely familiar, it's because they've been featured in several El Santo movies) (think Paul Blaisdell's INVASION OF THE SAUCER MEN and IT!, THE TERROR FROM BEYOND SPACE and you'll feel right at home); a robot called Torr (referred to throughout by Gomez as "Tractorr") who falls for a jukebox ("What lovely BULBS you have," he breathes when first the two meet; by movie's end, they're winging away together in the spaceship to his homeworld, singing a duet); humor, that all-important ingredient missing from far too many of the American Poverty Row Fright Films of the same Era; and Ana Lepe (I mentioned her already... ?). I can't remember the last time I had this much fun watching a Monster Movie. Like I said: this one's got it all- and THEN some.
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