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Rojo sangre

Rojo sangre (2004)

April. 23,2004
|
5.5
| Horror

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Perry Kate
2004/04/23

Very very predictable, including the post credit scene !!!

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Pacionsbo
2004/04/24

Absolutely Fantastic

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Forumrxes
2004/04/25

Yo, there's no way for me to review this film without saying, take your *insert ethnicity + "ass" here* to see this film,like now. You have to see it in order to know what you're really messing with.

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Fatma Suarez
2004/04/26

The movie's neither hopeful in contrived ways, nor hopeless in different contrived ways. Somehow it manages to be wonderful

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Witchfinder General 666
2004/04/27

Rojo Sangre (2004) is a magnificently morbid film as such, and a wonderful tribute to its star, one of the true icons of European Horror/ Exploitation cinema, the glorious Paul Naschy (aka. Jacinto Molina). Personally, I've been a fan of the Spanish Horror deity for years now, and I really don't know what made me wait so long to watch this, more recent Naschy-film. "Rojo Sangre" was written by Naschy himself and directed by Naschy's son Christian Molina, which makes it obvious why this film is such a great tribute to Naschy's career, and, at the same time, such a great film of its own right.Like hardly another film, "Rojo Sangre" allows an aged Naschy to show what a great actor he actually is. Naschy plays Pablo Thevenet, a fallen, formerly successful stage- and screen-actor whose career was destroyed after a personal tragedy, and who now has to struggle through life and apply for jobs in advertising, which he finds humiliating. He then gets an offer he cannot refuse: a bunch of very sinister people are to pay him a large sum of money for impersonating serial killers such as Giles de Rais and Jack the Ripper in front of an exclusive nightclub. Though he hates the idea of being a living statue, Thevenet accepts. His new job, however, also raises murderous desires in Thevenet, particularly against those he makes responsible for his downfall, but also those who deny him the respect he deserves...The role of Pablo Thevenet is perfect for Paul Naschy. The character is (partly) a loving tribute to Naschy's roles from the past, and, at the same time, an incredibly interesting character as such. There is no doubt that this role (and film) was written specifically for Naschy and there is no greater tribute imaginable. Actually, this is probably the best performance by Naschy I've seen, and the proof that he isn't only a cult-icon and Exploitation-multi-talent, but actually a great actor beyond that. As in many of his old roles, Naschy plays a character that is likable, even though demented, and, this film's elaborate script and higher production values allow him to make it a very deep, intriguing character. The film's delightfully morbid storyline is wonderfully photographed in nice Gothic settings, the characters are entirely demented. Bloody, demented, witty, and absolutely wonderful, "Rojo Sangre" is a film that every lover of European Horror and Exploitation cinema should enjoy, and an absolute must-see for my fellow Paul Naschy fans. Not to be missed!

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Michael_Elliott
2004/04/28

Rojo Sangre (2004) *** (out of 4) Spanish horror film written and acted by the legendary Paul Naschy. In the film, which is semi-autobiographical, Naschy plays a horror legend who finds himself becoming a has been due to how the business is ran these days. He gets a break working in a club where he's paid to perform as various real-life serial killers but one day he starts to take the job too serious and begins to murder off the "new and cool" people of television. This film started out so well, unlike any other Naschy film but the director really blew things in the second half. The second half of the film is incredibly bad but I still enjoyed this for the terrific start. The opening hour is a brutal attack on current fame and current Hollywood, which rings all too true. Seeing the legend Naschy having to beg for work hits home quite strongly and Naschy's performance has never been better. His screenplay for this opening stuff dealing with a forgotten great is also the best he's ever done. The second half of the film really falls apart due to the director trying to be too stylish and there's an incredibly stupid twist in the story that doesn't work at all.

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Indra Suresh
2004/04/29

Pretentious. Profoundly ignorant of the Genre. Plain wrong semantics and ghastly performances.One would think, given the scale of this production (several Million Euros) that the Producers would have certain need to perform, that they would make a movie suitable for their peers: The new emerging Cinema Directors, Sadly it is anything but.The Photography is nothing but a cheap lookalike to the amalgamate many other directors have accomplished for this Genre, it fails promptly right after the Initial establishing shot and goes under ever since.The Storytelling is suitable for 1st grade Cinema School students, it never gets off the ground, and you can't but feel sorry for Naschy when you realise the poor Direction this film has.On the VFX lines...let's just say I have seen better work done in After Effects by a freshman in College, Spanish Cinema is going underwater and without an air tank, as my old pappy used to say, it's now dead, dead, dead.

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begoniac-1
2004/04/30

Rojo Sangre is one more of those garbage films that Spain has been pumping out like donuts in the name of the emerging young directors. The birth of a horrible phenomenon that has been a practice in Spain in order to claim a spot in commercial film making.It is all wrong.A film with a huge budget (ab)used to trick the amateur viewer and make him believe the film deserves a chance to be watched. High production values with absolutely no motivation to consolidate them with the story line.Overdone stylistic artifacts.Expensive effects that belong more in a hard rock music video then on the big screen. No character development.Dialogues to make you twist up out of embarrassment. I could go on describing the "horrorific" experience I had watching this pretentious film but I'll leave it to you to take over from here. Please , "young Spanish directors" try to go to film school and above all work before you ask daddy to give you money to make a film.

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