While visiting family in Mexico, teenage Alex discovers a young chupacabra hiding in his grandpa's shed. To save the mythical creature, Alex and his cousins must embark on the adventure of a lifetime.
Night of the Bloody Apes (1969) is a horror movie about a mad scientist who performs heart transplants on human-animal hybrids. The film follows a series of gruesome murders and the investigation by a detective. As the killings continue, it becomes clear that the scientist's experiments have unleashed a monster on the city. With graphic violence and exploitation elements, the movie is a classic example of psychotronic and grindhouse cinema.
At the dawn of the Second World War, Nazism was extending its grip over South America. The Golden Angel, a Mexican masked wrestler, was recruited by the Americans in order to flush out the spies of the Third Reich and put a stop to their nefarious schemes. The Golden Angel’s assignments, still classified Top Secret and therefore absent from the history books, even brought him to a pivotal confrontation with Hitler himself. Inspired by the spirit of classic mockumentaries such as Woody Allen’s ZELIG and Peter Jackson’s FORGOTTEN SILVER, the film takes viewers on a unique version of the fight against the Third Reich, joyfully erasing the border between fiction and reality for the viewers who, taken on this unique ride, can’t help but ask: did this really happen?
No More results found.