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VHS
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POSTER
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AKA:
Último deseo, Blind Planet, Planeta ciego
Directed by: Leon Klimovsky
Written by: Gabriel Burgos
Produced by: Jose Luis Renedo and Salvadore
Romero
Cinematography by: Miguel Fernandez Mila
Editing by: Soledad Lopez
Music by: Miguel Asins Arbo
Último deseo, Blind Planet, Planeta ciego Jesus Pena
Cast: Paul Naschy, Alberto De Mendoza, Teresa
Gimpera, Tomas Pico
Year: 1976
Language: Spanish (English Dubbed)
Color: Color
Runtime: 1 h 34 min |
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This Spanish film directed by Leon Klimovsky, was kind of like a
Holy Grail to me. I’d heard about it, seen posters all over Ebay
and read up on what sounded like an excellent story, but there
was no DVD releases or any decent priced VHS for sale. It took
me a few years until I managed to get a hold of it, when I
bought a DVD copy transferred from a VHS for a fiver. It took a
few months to get around to watching it, but when I did it was a
blast. "The People Who Own the Dark" was nothing like I
expected. Is that a good thing or a bad thing? Half-and-half
really.
We meet Paul Naschy ("Inquisition") as Borne (minus joke
shop werewolf hair), shooting the same bird three times whilst
drinking scotch from a table in a field and acting very business
like. We then meet other businessmen and women who are planning
on meeting up at a manor house in the middle of the countryside.
We have doctors, psychiatrists, etc. The reunion goes on and
they all decide to head to the cellar and perform a ritual
whilst wearing assorted rubber masks (!!??!) Suddenly, a low
rumble splits the ceiling and continues getting louder. Heading
back into the house, a pigeon is flying wildly into the wall,
it's eyes totally white, as are the maids -- a similar
appearance to Emily in "The
Beyond." The phones and radios are dead, and
they are isolated.
“The idiots! The fools! Huh Huh!”, exclaims a cast
member when they figure out that they’ve missed a nuclear
explosion. To avoid the oncoming radiation clouds, they plan to
stock up on supplies and hide in the cellar for a month or two.
This means heading to the local village where they discover the
survivors are blind and very desperate for help and are
protective of their food. This problem isn’t helped when one of
the rich lads decides to stab a blind villager who stumbles
around sightlessly with a rifle. Most of the villagers are in
the church bouncing off the walls, all wearing sunglasses or
bandages to save on contact lenses. The same rich lad decides
to open fire on a few, and you know all hell will break loose
soon.
Back at the manor, one doctor cracks and becomes a sort of fat,
bearded, naked gibbering lunatic on all fours. This scene is
incredibly random. Out of nowhere, he scuttles by a doorway
nude. Two younger cast members take their chances by heading to
the village and find out just how mad the blind villagers have
become; they are beaten to death by sticks. Soon the crowds are
surrounding the manor and begin an "Assault
on Precinct 13"
siege, heavily inspired by "Night
of the Living Dead"
-- hands through the door, that sort of thing.
If you can ignore the plot holes and lack of reality, there is
much to enjoy here. Some scenes are quite tense as characters
sneak around rooms filled with the blind. "The People Who Own
the Dark" is bloodless, apart from a brief eye gouging and
one or two bullet shots. Paul Naschy takes a step back and
Alberto De Mendoza takes central place as Professor Fulton.
It’s all rather predictable if you’ve seen endless zombie or
post radiation movies, or even Romero’s "The
Crazies," but it is enjoyable. Be in a
charitable mood.
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