Starring Santo, Lorena Velázquez, Jaime Fernández, Augusto Benedico, María Duval, Javier Loya, Ofelia Montesco
Directed By Alfonso Corona Blake
Santo vs. the Vampire Women holds the distinction of being the Santo film that you may have actually heard of… maybe. This is the one that somehow managed to earn itself theatrical runs outside of Mexico and christened Santo with the much less cooler moniker of Samson here in the states. The film lays fine groundwork for the rest of the series, establishing Santo’s mythos and superhero status rather nicely, but in order to build up anticipation, The Man in the Silver Mask isn’t introduced until halfway through the film! I have to imagine this worked to great effect for Mexican audiences dying to see their hero up on the silver screen, but it probably had the exact opposite effect on foreign audiences unfamiliar with the finer points of lucha libre. They must have asked themselves, Why are there dudes wrestling in the middle of my vampire movie?
The film is shot with such style and is brimming with a creepy atmosphere that harkens back to the glory days when Bela Lugosi and Boris Karloff were creeping around the back lots of Universal, defining the horror film as we know it. Lighting and sets are amazing, rivaling the best work of those aforementioned classics. The black and white cinematography is beautiful, casting lots of deep shadows and setting the mood for some truly spooky imagery. To put it plainly, this is a straight-up great B horror film until Santo shows up on the scene and takes it to that next level of greatness.
The vampires discover that Diana Orlof, daughter of famed Mexican scientist Professor Orlof is their intended target. Now anybody already familiar with the films of Santo knows that in addition to being El mejor luchador del mundo, he is also a brilliant man of science, in league not only with Mexican officials, but also with the greatest thinkers in the country. Professor Orlof is already privy to the vampire plot to kidnap his daughter, having spent many a late hour poring over ancient vampire scrolls. Desperate to save his daughter from the dark rituals, he calls up Santo on the typical Santo video conferencing thing with the twirling antenna and flat-screen TV. Everybody who’s somebody in Mexico has one of these things I guess. Santo, despite his busy schedule of wrestling with aliens, protecting the homeland, and driving sexy ladies all over the countryside in his tiny convertible, agrees to protect Diana at all costs.
The battle in the ring between Santo and the Black Mask impostor is not only the greatest moment of the film, but is one of the defining moments of the Santo filmography. Rarely have I seen a Santo fight explode with such high-octane energy as is displayed here. Black Mask tosses Santo around with flying leg takedowns and devastating karate chops while Santo cranks it up a notch with excruciatingly painful-looking arm locks and back twists. At one point the masked vampire even knocks Santo unconscious! Definitely something you don’t see often in these films. Overwhelmed by the sheer power on display, Santo remarks, “That’s not the Black Mask… he’s using deadly karate blows on me.” Santo responds with karate blows of his own, which sends a rage-fueled Black Mask out of the ring, madly swinging at members of the audience indiscriminately. Just when you think the moment couldn’t contain another ounce of insanity, Santo manages to unmask his adversary, only to reveal… The Wolf Man! The dude then just goes straight-up berserk, karate chopping the shit out of police and anybody else within an arm’s reach before transforming into a bat and flying away… Whew! This scene alone makes up for the somewhat anticlimactic ending that follows shortly after.
Although Santo vs. the Vampire Women is woefully uneven in spots and lacks some of that “who gives a shit” wackiness of the later films, it makes up for it in style and atmosphere. Putting this up against a film like Santo and Blue Demon vs. the Monsters only makes you appreciate just how much of a foundation was laid here, and is a good indication of how far the series actually evolved over the course of his great career.