El hombre que podía engañar a la muerte
Título original: The Man Who Could Cheat Death
PUNTUACIÓN EN IMDb
6,3/10
2,5 mil
TU PUNTUACIÓN
Añade un argumento en tu idiomaA centenarian artist and scientist in 1890 Paris maintains his youth and health by periodically replacing a gland with that of a living person.A centenarian artist and scientist in 1890 Paris maintains his youth and health by periodically replacing a gland with that of a living person.A centenarian artist and scientist in 1890 Paris maintains his youth and health by periodically replacing a gland with that of a living person.
Arnold Marlé
- Dr. Ludwig Weiss
- (as Arnold Marle)
Ronald Adam
- Second Doctor
- (sin acreditar)
Marie Burke
- Woman At Private View
- (sin acreditar)
Renee Cunliffe
- Tavern Customer
- (sin acreditar)
John Harrison
- Servant
- (sin acreditar)
Ian Hewitson
- Roget
- (sin acreditar)
Gerda Larsen
- Street Girl
- (sin acreditar)
Charles Lloyd Pack
- Man At Private View
- (sin acreditar)
Louis Matto
- Tavern Customer
- (sin acreditar)
Frederick Rawlings
- Footman
- (sin acreditar)
Michael Ripper
- Morgue Attendant
- (sin acreditar)
Denis Shaw
- Tavern Customer
- (sin acreditar)
Barry Shawzin
- Third Doctor
- (sin acreditar)
Argumento
¿Sabías que...?
- CuriosidadesHazel Court played the Anton Diffring sculpting scene topless. Only her bare back is shown in the British and U.S. versions, but her breasts are visible in the scene shot for European versions. It was one of the first nude scenes of its kind to be shot in England. They cleared the set and had just a skeleton crew. She said she agreed to do it because the scene warranted the nudity and it was shot beautifully. If had been gratuitous, she'd have refused.
- PifiasChristopher Lee's hairline raises and lowers from scene to scene.
- Citas
Janine Du Bois: [about the disappearance of Margo] But that's terrible. What could have happened?
Inspector Legris: Quite a number of things could have happened, Man'selle, and it's up to me to find out the one that did.
- Versiones alternativasThe "European" print of the film includes scenes of a topless Hazel Court.
- ConexionesFeatured in Aweful Movies with Deadly Earnest: The Man Who Could Cheat Death (1966)
Reseña destacada
The Man Who Could Cheat Death is directed by Terence Fisher and adapted to screenplay by Jimmy Sangster from the Barré Lyndon play The Man in Half Moon Street. It stars Anton Diffring, Hazel Court, Christopher Lee, Arnold Marlé, Francis de Wolff and Delphi Lawrence. Out of Hammer Film Productions, music is by Richard Rodney Bennett and Technicolor photography by Jack Asher.
Paris 1890 and sculptor Georges Bonnet (Diffring) has perfected a way to halt the aging process. Trouble is that it involves murdering young women so as to extract their parathyroid gland to formulate his eternal life elixir.
Disappointingly weak Hammer Horror that would be near unwatchable were it not for the efforts of Asher, Fisher and Bernard Robinson (production design). The source story is made to measure for Hammer, where berserker science mixes with Gothic murder tones, all the ingredients are there for a lively fusion of Dr Jekyll and Mr Hyde with The Picture of Dorian Gray. But the film is more concerned with much talking and posturing, thinking that sci-fi babble and moral quandaries are going to keep things interesting. We of course want some meat and reasoning for main characters to impact on the plotting, but using up an hour for it, in a film that only runs an hour and twenty minutes, leaves very little room for thrills and drama. It also demands that the finale be explosive, a whirlwind of horror revelations and biting comeuppance, sadly the ending we get is rather a damp squib.
Things aren't helped by the casting of Diffring, who overacts far to often, or that Lee is underwritten and firmly disinterested in making the thin characterisation work. Court looks ravishing and gives the film its best performance, but she is also hindered by a bare bones script from the usually excellent Sangster. The story just plods to its inevitable conclusion, the screenplay never daring to veer away from the safe formula road. While much of the detective work from de Wolff's Inspector LeGris leaves a great deal to be desired. On the plus side it looks real nice, a triumph over low budget restrictions, the minimal sets dressed in period splendour, the colour sizzling and Fisher uses wide shots to make certain scenes that are played out on tiny sets actually look expansive.
Devoid of up-tempo terror and finishing on a whimper, this is very much average Hammer and not easily recommended to the horror faithful. 5/10
Paris 1890 and sculptor Georges Bonnet (Diffring) has perfected a way to halt the aging process. Trouble is that it involves murdering young women so as to extract their parathyroid gland to formulate his eternal life elixir.
Disappointingly weak Hammer Horror that would be near unwatchable were it not for the efforts of Asher, Fisher and Bernard Robinson (production design). The source story is made to measure for Hammer, where berserker science mixes with Gothic murder tones, all the ingredients are there for a lively fusion of Dr Jekyll and Mr Hyde with The Picture of Dorian Gray. But the film is more concerned with much talking and posturing, thinking that sci-fi babble and moral quandaries are going to keep things interesting. We of course want some meat and reasoning for main characters to impact on the plotting, but using up an hour for it, in a film that only runs an hour and twenty minutes, leaves very little room for thrills and drama. It also demands that the finale be explosive, a whirlwind of horror revelations and biting comeuppance, sadly the ending we get is rather a damp squib.
Things aren't helped by the casting of Diffring, who overacts far to often, or that Lee is underwritten and firmly disinterested in making the thin characterisation work. Court looks ravishing and gives the film its best performance, but she is also hindered by a bare bones script from the usually excellent Sangster. The story just plods to its inevitable conclusion, the screenplay never daring to veer away from the safe formula road. While much of the detective work from de Wolff's Inspector LeGris leaves a great deal to be desired. On the plus side it looks real nice, a triumph over low budget restrictions, the minimal sets dressed in period splendour, the colour sizzling and Fisher uses wide shots to make certain scenes that are played out on tiny sets actually look expansive.
Devoid of up-tempo terror and finishing on a whimper, this is very much average Hammer and not easily recommended to the horror faithful. 5/10
- hitchcockthelegend
- 22 ago 2012
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- Presupuesto
- 84.000 GBP (estimación)
- Duración1 hora 23 minutos
- Relación de aspecto
- 1.66 : 1
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By what name was El hombre que podía engañar a la muerte (1959) officially released in India in English?
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