 EL HOMBRE QUE VINO DE UMMO aka DRACULA VS. FRANKENSTEIN
 
EL HOMBRE QUE VINO DE UMMO aka DRACULA VS. FRANKENSTEIN
Michael Rennie (Dr. Odo Warnoff), Karin Dor (Maleva/Melissa Kerstein), Craig Hill (Inspector Tobermann), Manuel De Blas (Count John Mierhoff), Ferdinando Murolo (Farancksalan's Monster), Gene Reyes (Mummy)
Directed by Tulio Demichelli
The Short Version: This
  ambitious, yet terribly troubled Spain-Germany-Italy co-production is a
  great deal of fun, despite being a jumbled, insanely nonsensical mess.
  Paul Naschy returns as his classic wolfman, the Polish Waldemar  
Daninsky, although he's more of a supporting role this time out. He  
doesn't even utter a line of dialog till nearly 50 minutes into this 83 
 minute movie. Michael Rennie, in his last role, plays an alien; this  
time a low-rent Klaatu bent on taking over the Earth after their own  
planet freezes to death likely because somebody failed to pay the  
heating bill. Apparently, money was in short supply funding this lively,
  if childishly silly monster packed mini-epic. 
 Aliens  led by Michael Rennie from the 
planet Ummo plan to conquer the Earth by  using the many superstitious 
fears of earthlings against them. This  plan involves amassing a motley 
clutch of legendary monsters with plans  of cloning them to use as an 
army to overthrow mankind. They first resurrect a  vampire named Count 
Mierhoff whose remains are on display in a magicians carnival act. Next,
  they bring Waldemar Daninsky back to life after performing an 
operation  on him removing a silver bullet from his chest. Then it's off
 to Egypt for our alien  entrepreneurs to unleash a mummy which is 
revived by a large golden  cross. I'm serious. You can't make this shit 
up.
Aliens  led by Michael Rennie from the 
planet Ummo plan to conquer the Earth by  using the many superstitious 
fears of earthlings against them. This  plan involves amassing a motley 
clutch of legendary monsters with plans  of cloning them to use as an 
army to overthrow mankind. They first resurrect a  vampire named Count 
Mierhoff whose remains are on display in a magicians carnival act. Next,
  they bring Waldemar Daninsky back to life after performing an 
operation  on him removing a silver bullet from his chest. Then it's off
 to Egypt for our alien  entrepreneurs to unleash a mummy which is 
revived by a large golden  cross. I'm serious. You can't make this shit 
up. 
 
   
 Their  final task is to bring to life Dr.
 Farancksalan's Monster. Dr.  Frankenstein apparently threatened to sue 
for the use of his name and  likeness so this Farancksalan fellow took 
his place. Meanwhile,  Inspector Tobermann immediately cries 'monsters are on the loose' and sets out to stop them. The aliens, having apparently seen the 'By Any Other Name' episode
  of the original STAR TREK, discover the capacity for love and jealousy
  within their human shells that brings about their eventual downfall. 
The  film climaxes with Toberman and Daninsky in a handicapped tag team 
 match against the vampire Count John Mierhoff, the Mummy and the  
lumbering Creature.
Their  final task is to bring to life Dr.
 Farancksalan's Monster. Dr.  Frankenstein apparently threatened to sue 
for the use of his name and  likeness so this Farancksalan fellow took 
his place. Meanwhile,  Inspector Tobermann immediately cries 'monsters are on the loose' and sets out to stop them. The aliens, having apparently seen the 'By Any Other Name' episode
  of the original STAR TREK, discover the capacity for love and jealousy
  within their human shells that brings about their eventual downfall. 
The  film climaxes with Toberman and Daninsky in a handicapped tag team 
 match against the vampire Count John Mierhoff, the Mummy and the  
lumbering Creature. 
 This  bizarre, thoroughly bonkers Naschy mish-mash vies with VENGEANCE OF THE ZOMBIES (1972) and the Spanish cut of THE FURY OF THE WOLFMAN
  (1973) as the wackiest Spanish horror flick on the Euro icons resume. 
 It's from the same director as the horrible, if judiciously sadistic  
Eurocrime non-epic RICCO (1973), which should tell you the level  of  
insanity on display here. Absurd plot lines like this one were often  
found in the wilds of Mexi-horror, but Spain seemed to be up to the  
challenge of creating equally fun, if kooky crapola of the highest  
order.
This  bizarre, thoroughly bonkers Naschy mish-mash vies with VENGEANCE OF THE ZOMBIES (1972) and the Spanish cut of THE FURY OF THE WOLFMAN
  (1973) as the wackiest Spanish horror flick on the Euro icons resume. 
 It's from the same director as the horrible, if judiciously sadistic  
Eurocrime non-epic RICCO (1973), which should tell you the level  of  
insanity on display here. Absurd plot lines like this one were often  
found in the wilds of Mexi-horror, but Spain seemed to be up to the  
challenge of creating equally fun, if kooky crapola of the highest  
order.  
 
   
 The  plot here makes very little sense 
and the inexplicable nature of the  narrative leaves little room for 
comprehension, forcing one to either  shut off their brain, or their DVD
 player. This Euro kitchen sink stink  has a little bit of everything 
floating around in its rainbow colored  cesspool. There's an El Cheapo "central control"
  set, dozens of flashing sci-fi lights, a Spanish disco scene, flashy  
colors, an ambitious scope the films $1.95 budget can never realize and a
  cadre of monsters including Naschy as Daninsky, a skinny mummy (the subs refer to it as female?) and a Farancksalan Monster that looks suspiciously like Scott Bakula.
The  plot here makes very little sense 
and the inexplicable nature of the  narrative leaves little room for 
comprehension, forcing one to either  shut off their brain, or their DVD
 player. This Euro kitchen sink stink  has a little bit of everything 
floating around in its rainbow colored  cesspool. There's an El Cheapo "central control"
  set, dozens of flashing sci-fi lights, a Spanish disco scene, flashy  
colors, an ambitious scope the films $1.95 budget can never realize and a
  cadre of monsters including Naschy as Daninsky, a skinny mummy (the subs refer to it as female?) and a Farancksalan Monster that looks suspiciously like Scott Bakula.  
 According  to Naschy's memoirs, this 
movie had a heftier than usual price tag  applied to it. A few directors
 were attached to the project including  Spanish director Hugo 
Fregonese, who had done directing jobs in  Hollywood. He worked on the 
film for a few weeks before walking away  from it enabling Tulio 
Demichelli to take over. American actor, Robert  Taylor was initially 
desired for the role, and reportedly, the actor  personally contacted 
Naschy about doing the picture. In the end, the  role went to Michael 
Rennie who arrived in noticeably ill health.
According  to Naschy's memoirs, this 
movie had a heftier than usual price tag  applied to it. A few directors
 were attached to the project including  Spanish director Hugo 
Fregonese, who had done directing jobs in  Hollywood. He worked on the 
film for a few weeks before walking away  from it enabling Tulio 
Demichelli to take over. American actor, Robert  Taylor was initially 
desired for the role, and reportedly, the actor  personally contacted 
Naschy about doing the picture. In the end, the  role went to Michael 
Rennie who arrived in noticeably ill health. 
Despite being given a larger than usual 
budget, the  several months of trouble the picture faced took its toll 
on the  production till Isasi Isasmendi (presumably the same man responsible for directing SUMMERTIME KILLER in 1972) stepped in and helped out on the film enabling it to be completed.
 ASSIGNMENT TERROR has nary a dull moment and not only is this all mon-star mash assembled with (body) parts of better movies, it also has an exceptional cast in front of the camera, too. Michael Rennie (likely best remembered as Klaatu from the iconic 1951 science fiction classic THE DAY THE EARTH STOOD STILL)
  masquerades as Dr. Warnoff, the head alien sent to Earth to take over 
 by using old classic Universal movie monsters; an ingenious idea for  
planetary conquest if I ever heard one.
ASSIGNMENT TERROR has nary a dull moment and not only is this all mon-star mash assembled with (body) parts of better movies, it also has an exceptional cast in front of the camera, too. Michael Rennie (likely best remembered as Klaatu from the iconic 1951 science fiction classic THE DAY THE EARTH STOOD STILL)
  masquerades as Dr. Warnoff, the head alien sent to Earth to take over 
 by using old classic Universal movie monsters; an ingenious idea for  
planetary conquest if I ever heard one.  
 Apparently, these aliens from the oddly named planet of Ummo (like 'Uno', but with two m's)
  are disembodied spirits who need human bodies to survive. The script  
doesn't really explain what they are, nor does it say how the head alien
  came to find Dr. Warnoff's body. There's also no explanation given as 
 to why this Plan 9 From Outer Space
  requires the mass production of vampires, werewolves and mummies when 
 it's stated these otherworldly beings have more potent means for taking
  over the planet.
Apparently, these aliens from the oddly named planet of Ummo (like 'Uno', but with two m's)
  are disembodied spirits who need human bodies to survive. The script  
doesn't really explain what they are, nor does it say how the head alien
  came to find Dr. Warnoff's body. There's also no explanation given as 
 to why this Plan 9 From Outer Space
  requires the mass production of vampires, werewolves and mummies when 
 it's stated these otherworldly beings have more potent means for taking
  over the planet. 
 
   
 Michael Rennie is the evil Dr. Warnoff, although he looks more a tired Dr. Wornout
  than anything else. Rennie also seems terribly disinterested in this  
movie, particularly in such scenes where he is performing open heart  
surgery on Waldemar Daninsky to remove a fatal silver bullet (actual surgery footage is used here!),
 or  revivifying the silliest looking Frankenstein Monster since the 
slapdash  creation of Hammer's THE EVIL OF FRANKENSTEIN (1964). This was
 the  actors final film before dying in 1971 from Emphysema.
Michael Rennie is the evil Dr. Warnoff, although he looks more a tired Dr. Wornout
  than anything else. Rennie also seems terribly disinterested in this  
movie, particularly in such scenes where he is performing open heart  
surgery on Waldemar Daninsky to remove a fatal silver bullet (actual surgery footage is used here!),
 or  revivifying the silliest looking Frankenstein Monster since the 
slapdash  creation of Hammer's THE EVIL OF FRANKENSTEIN (1964). This was
 the  actors final film before dying in 1971 from Emphysema. 
 
 
 Paul  Naschy has little to do here except
 skulk around in both hairy and  human form. His werewolf scenes are 
energetic to say the least, even if  the make up and fangs aren't up to 
par with other entries. He gets scant  few lines of dialog and doesn't 
even utter anything at all till past  the halfway point. Because of this
 and the additional gaggle of ghouls,  this never feels exclusively like
 a Naschy movie.
Paul  Naschy has little to do here except
 skulk around in both hairy and  human form. His werewolf scenes are 
energetic to say the least, even if  the make up and fangs aren't up to 
par with other entries. He gets scant  few lines of dialog and doesn't 
even utter anything at all till past  the halfway point. Because of this
 and the additional gaggle of ghouls,  this never feels exclusively like
 a Naschy movie.
After  his
 body is operated on, Warnoff orders he be given a serum to keep him  
from changing into a werewolf. Yet that night, he changes anyways and  
escapes, killing a girl and menacing another. Later on we see him being 
 given this serum. Also, a Mr. Sternberg mentions meeting Daninsky, yet 
 we never see this happen. Possibly there were editing mishaps, too? The
 highlight, and likely a pleasurable one  for Naschy, is that he gets to
 tussle with two horror heavyweight icons  during the finale.  
 First  it's a fist flyin' bandage burner 
with the Mummy, who goes out in a  uniquely creative fashion. Naschy 
himself took on a much more vigorous,  and gore happy cloth wrapped 
avenger in THE MUMMY'S REVENGE in 1973.
First  it's a fist flyin' bandage burner 
with the Mummy, who goes out in a  uniquely creative fashion. Naschy 
himself took on a much more vigorous,  and gore happy cloth wrapped 
avenger in THE MUMMY'S REVENGE in 1973.
Then
 it's a slugfest with the lumbering Farancksalan's Monster, a  creature 
who has no difficulty opening doors, using keys, pulling  levers, and 
yet seems to walk around with his eyes closed! Daninsky and  the 
Creature toss each other around paying respectable tribute to 1943s  
FRANKENSTEIN MEETS THE WOLFMAN as they destroy the cardboard control  
room sets as electric sparks enthusiastically explode around them.  
Incidentally, Warnoff states this creature is driven electrically, even 
 though this poor man's Frankenstein's Monster is electrocuted at the  
end! 
 
   
Craig
 Hill, an American actor, took time off in between Italian western roles
 to play the determined cop on the case of both the missing and the 
murdered. He's one of the few civic figures in films that immediately 
jumps to the (correct) conclusion that the crimes are the work of
 monsters. You could say Inspector Tobermann was the prototype for 
KOLCHAK, THE NIGHT STALKER. If you're familiar with his numerous western
 film roles, seeing Hill in a non-sagebrush setting is a welcome change 
of pace.
 The  lovely Karin Dor plays the alien 
Maleva, who has hijacked the corpse of  Melissa Kerstein. Dor was a 
familiar face in Euro horror and also  westerns. She graced the screen 
in such influential western pictures as  the German production TREASURE 
OF SILVER LAKE (1962), a film which begat  a slew of sequels and helped 
usher in the Italian brand of western. Dor  was also a beautiful 
presence in the supreme Gothic German horror film  THE TORTURE CHAMBER OF DR. SADISM (1967) starring Christopher Lee and Lex Barker.
The  lovely Karin Dor plays the alien 
Maleva, who has hijacked the corpse of  Melissa Kerstein. Dor was a 
familiar face in Euro horror and also  westerns. She graced the screen 
in such influential western pictures as  the German production TREASURE 
OF SILVER LAKE (1962), a film which begat  a slew of sequels and helped 
usher in the Italian brand of western. Dor  was also a beautiful 
presence in the supreme Gothic German horror film  THE TORTURE CHAMBER OF DR. SADISM (1967) starring Christopher Lee and Lex Barker. 
 
  The  music score by Franco Solima is 
below par and sometimes sounds like it  belongs in another movie. Much 
like the out of place score for Naschy's  bewildering VENGEANCE OF THE ZOMBIES (1972), the quirky late 60s disco  cues only add to the 
unevenness of the whole enterprise.
The  music score by Franco Solima is 
below par and sometimes sounds like it  belongs in another movie. Much 
like the out of place score for Naschy's  bewildering VENGEANCE OF THE ZOMBIES (1972), the quirky late 60s disco  cues only add to the 
unevenness of the whole enterprise. 
 Far  from a classic, this obscure entry 
in Spanish horror cinema delivers  brain-dead thrills in spades. You'll 
laugh, you'll cry, you'll likely be  reminded of how it was being a kid 
staying up late to watch these kinds  of movies on the late, late show 
long after your parents have gone to  sleep. I wonder if Fred Dekker had
 this movie in mind when doing THE MONSTER SQUAD (1987)? Grab your 
popcorn and coke, sit back and be entertained by this  woefully 
ridiculous, highly entertaining piece of Euro horror goodness.
Far  from a classic, this obscure entry 
in Spanish horror cinema delivers  brain-dead thrills in spades. You'll 
laugh, you'll cry, you'll likely be  reminded of how it was being a kid 
staying up late to watch these kinds  of movies on the late, late show 
long after your parents have gone to  sleep. I wonder if Fred Dekker had
 this movie in mind when doing THE MONSTER SQUAD (1987)? Grab your 
popcorn and coke, sit back and be entertained by this  woefully 
ridiculous, highly entertaining piece of Euro horror goodness.   
This review is representative of the R2 Film Art PAL DVD. 
 
11 comments:
this looks awesome, the plan nine comparison you mention surely god-given. Kids don't need reasons to have all their monsters--vampires, zombies, wolfmen, aliens--in one goofball endeavor. They can't follow half the story line anyway, and just assume adults know what they're doing with all that jazz.
It's too bad now with video and all shows and movies are made that directly talk down to kids and operate solely on their level, rather than being 'adult' films targeted at kids indirectly, like this... too bad I aint got PAL
I'm not even sure kids nowadays, as "sophisticated" as they are now with their cell phones and video game systems would fine much entertainment value in something like this. Big kids like us, though, now that's a different story!
Erich, if you have a region free player, you should be able to play the disc just fine.
Omg, I have to see this.
Just couple of months ago, I've seen the hilarious "Dr. Jekyll vs. The Werewolf" with Naschy as Daninsky, Wolfman and Dr. Jekyll - wonderful, just wonderful :)
Excellent review! You are dead-on regarding the strengths and weaknesses of this flick, and also the glee to be found there. Of course for hardcore Naschyphiles, it's an absolute must-see as Naschy's homage to his inspiration, FRANKENSTEIN MEETS THE WOLFMAN. It's really all about Naschy getting to rise from the dead (a la Lon Chaney in FmWM) and fight the Big Monsters just like he always dreamed, and for me it's an especial joy to get to watch him doing it.
Incidentally, I can solve one mystery for you: Mr. Sternberg is meant to have met Daninksy in the previous Waldemar film, FRANKENSTEIN'S BLOODY TERROR (aka LA MARCA DEL HOMBRE LOBO), making this one of the few (only?) movies in the series to have any continuity with another entry.
@ Harry: If you enjoyed that one, you should probably like this one even more. Very entertaining film! Personally, Naschy's movies he directed himself are superb compared with movies he did for others. Makes me wish he'd of directed more of his pictures. He was truly talented when in complete control.
@ Vicar: Thanks so much, Vicar! Yes, once Daninsky began duking it out with the Creature, it was almost verbatim from the older Universal picture.
And thanks for clarifying the Sternberg bit. I will need to go back and re-watch the MB DVD now!
Venom, is there a region free player you would recommend, ideally one with blu-ray?
Actually, I am not sure about a region free player with Blu ray capabilities that I could recommend, but here's some reasonable region free Blu players at amazon...
http://www.amazon.com/s?ie=UTF8&keywords=region%20free%20blu%20ray%20player&page=1&rh=n%3A172282%2Ck%3Aregion%20free%20blu%20ray%20player
do you know a site that carries this and paul naschy's mummy movie on dvd?
Venom, your review of Assignment Terror was excellent, citing the strengths and absurdities--still as a Euro horror parody,you can't take it seriously at all--it's for laughs! Is it available on DVD??
Thank you, and yes. The DVD specified at the bottom of the review. You can purchase it here. There might be copies at ebay too.
http://www.diabolikdvd.com/category/Horror-[sl]-Thriller/Dracula-jagt-Frankenstein-DVD-(Paul-Naschy-Los-Monstruos-Del-Terror)-(PAL-Region-2).html
What a wonderful review. This flicks's a real head-scratcher, but really rather fascinating in its own way. You captured it very well.
If you're a Karin Dor fan, here's a little more on this really striking actress:
https://bmoviebabes.blogspot.com/2016/03/32-karin-dor.html
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