Satánico pandemonium

Source: Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia.
Satánico pandemonium
Directed byGilberto Martínez Solares
Written byJorge Barragán
Adolfo Martínez Solares
Gilberto Martínez Solares
Produced byJorge Barragán
StarringDelia Magaña
Enrique Rocha
Cecilia Pezet
CinematographyJorge Stahl Jr.
Edited byJosé W. Bustos
Music byGustavo César Carrión
Production
companies
Compañía Cinematográfica de Baja California
Hollywood Films
Promoción Turística Mexicana
Distributed byWea-des Moines Video
Release date
  • 26 June 1975 (1975-06-26) (Mexico)
Running time
87 minutes
CountryMexico
LanguageSpanish

Satánico pandemonium (English: Satanic Pandemonium) is a 1975 Mexican nunsploitation horror film directed by Gilberto Martínez Solares and written by Jorge Barragán, Adolfo Martínez Solares and Gilberto Martínez Solares.[1] It stars Cecilia Pezet, Enrique Rocha and Delia Magaña.[2]

Plot

Sister Maria lives with the convent for her charity works, but in the secret downs of her fantasies, she becomes agonized by visions from another world, a world in which she is permitted to run free. In this world Satan is her lord, and her acts of violence and blasphemy mount. Sister Maria realizes that she is elected by the Devil himself to destroy the convent and lead her sister nuns into hell. Only the Devil can intuit the dark secrets of her tortured mind.

Cast

  • Enrique Rocha as Luzbel / Lucifer
  • Cecilia Pezet as Sister Maria
  • Delia Magaña
  • Clemencia Colin
  • Sandra Torres
  • Adarene San Martin
  • Patricia Alban
  • Yayoi Tokawa
  • Amparo Fustenberg
  • Paula Aack
  • Laura Montalvo
  • Verónica Ávila
  • Leo Villanueva
  • Daniel Albertos
  • Verónica Rivas
  • Valeria Lupercio

Production

Shooting began in the spring of 1974 in the convents at

From Dusk Till Dawn.[5]

Release

It premiered on 26 June 1975 as La sexorcista in the cinemas in Mexico and was released on 24 October 1987 as Satanic Pandemonium: The Sexorcist by Eagle Video on VHS.[6] The DVD was released on 31 May 2005 by Mondo Macabro in the United States.[7]

Soundtrack

The score was composed by Gustavo César Carrión.[8]

Genre

The film apparently is a delirious amalgam of the then popular materials from Satan, witch hunter horror and nunsploitation.[9]

See also

  • Alucarda: a 1977 Mexican horror film also dealing with similar theme

References

External links