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Amazonia: The Catherine Miles Story

Amazonia: The Catherine Miles Story (1985)

October. 02,1985
|
4.7
|
R
| Adventure Drama Horror

A young woman seeks vengeance and finds love when her parents are killed in the Amazon and she is taken prisoner by an indigenous tribe of headhunters.

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Stevecorp
1985/10/02

Don't listen to the negative reviews

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Baseshment
1985/10/03

I like movies that are aware of what they are selling... without [any] greater aspirations than to make people laugh and that's it.

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Voxitype
1985/10/04

Good films always raise compelling questions, whether the format is fiction or documentary fact.

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Dana
1985/10/05

An old-fashioned movie made with new-fashioned finesse.

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Steve Van Kooten
1985/10/06

Contains nudity, some blood, and a reckless disregard for virginity. A supple young lady spends time with her parents by taking a tour down a South American river; however, a deadly tribe of natives attack and leave her stranded in the jungle. She is then taken in and forced to bear their brutish form of society. - - - As far as cannibal movies go, this one is very polite, unassuming of its expectations, and toned down to the bare minimum of violence. All that being said, these are the problems with this movie because it doesn't concoct a dynamic story to meld around their handful of standout moments (which aren't all that great to begin with). The characters are developed though, even the natives end up looking more dignified than anybody else, and there are some nice twists in the story to make it interesting. It's certainly a mixed bag, but I think I can live without the non-exploitation cannibal flicks.*1/2 out of 4

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Woodyanders
1985/10/07

Sweet, lovely, innocent rich girl Catherine Miles (nicely played by stunningly comely blonde knockout Elvire Audray) celebrates her 18th birthday with her parents in the Amazon jungle. Catherine winds up being abducted by a savage and primitive tribe of head hunters after her parents are brutally murdered. Poor Catherine gets stripped naked, smeared with smelly oil, becomes the love slave of a vile lout who defiles her, tries to escape, and eventually adopts as best she can to her dismal situation to the point where she falls in love with noble warrior Umukai (handsome Will Gonzales). However, Catherine still wants to escape and exact a harsh revenge on the killers of her parents. Director Mario Gariazzo relates the grimly arresting plot in a sturdy and compelling manner. Silvano Ippoliti's stark, no-frills cinematography gives the film an effectively gritty semi-documentary look. Franco Campanino's sweeping majestic score likewise hits the pleasing melodic spot. The acceptable acting, okay dubbing, suitably hideous graphic gore (several ghastly decapitations rate as the definite gruesome highlights), steady pace, breathtaking verdant jungle scenery, surprisingly poignant love story, and the plentiful female nudity (Audrey looks especially delectable sans clothes) are all up to speed as well. One of the better and more satisfying of the many Italian cannibal splatter features made back in the late 70's up until the mid 80's.

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Sic Coyote
1985/10/08

I have just watched this for the first time, I started watching thinking oh no, another Cannibal Holocaust wannabe, with it's VERY similar music and opening titles.Fortunatly the whole central section of the movie is totally different, apart from the obvious facts of being set in the Amazon.It's actually quite a well written (for the genre) tale of a girl who is dragged into the Amazon and lives with a tried there.There is a lot of nudity but for the more part it doesn't feel gratuitous but rather just what you would expect.There is some blood and some sexual situations but mostly not 'too' exploitationary.On the whole this is a film I think I'd like to watch again, although it's not without it's faults which include the dubbing and some VERY gratuitous animal stock footage.There are some interesting twists and turns in the movie too which makes a change, and no HUGE leaps of logic plot-wise. It also makes a far better point about western man being the real cannibals, far better than Cannibal Holocaust.6/10

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Coventry
1985/10/09

This Italian film with once again more alternative titles than actual dialogue is a mid-80's exploitation attempt by enthusiast director Mario Gariazzo, who obviously was deeply impressed by the work of his fellow Italian filmmakers Rugero Deodato and Umberto Lenzi. It's a supposedly true story (yeah…sure) about an 18-year-old girl who visits her parents' plantation in the middle of the Amazon jungle. Shortly after her arrival, her parents are brutally murdered and beheaded during a boat ride. The poor cutie is taken prisoner by a savage and primitive tribe. During two years, she's has to take part in traditional and barbaric rites of this tribe. She's sold to the richest man in town (price = one goat and a chicken), has to work and, eventually, she escapes with the head warrior she has fallen in love with. Now, 'Amazonia' isn't a bad little flick but it tries to be so much bigger than it actually is. The entire production seems to shout out: 'Look, we're as good as Cannibal Holocaust!!!' The opening sequences, in which the beautiful jungle is shown guided by a great score, is an exact copy of Deodato's film and throughout the whole film, the same documentary style is used. The film could have done without these pretentious aspects. At his best, Amazonia is like a fairly reasonable crossover between Cannibal Holocaust and Umberto Lenzi's 'Deep River Savages' (in which an Englishman spends years among a primitive tribe in New-Guinea). It's not nearly as memorable as the majority of Italian sleaze classics and that's merely due to the atrocious acting of Elvire Audrey. There's some great gore and terrific authentic sleaze to enjoy, though.

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