A direct sequel to Santo
vs el Estrangulador: Despite the Strangler's (Roberto Canedo)
death at the end of the earlier film, he comes back to life just like that
after his assistant Tor (Gerardo Zepeda) has stolen his corpse from the
city morgue. And the Strangler of course picks up where he has left off,
killing actresses, while Tor has made a habit out of stealing dead bodies
and turning them into statues. Oh, and I should also mention that these
days, the Strangler is using human skin for his ingenious facial masks. Of
course, both police inspector Villegas (Carlos López Moctezuma) and
crimefighting wrestler Santo are hot on his trail, and the Strangler tries
many a trick on Santo to lure him into one death trap after the next, but
to no avail, seemingly Santo cannot be killed, he even survives being
buried alive. The Strangler is of course very sure of himself, so he
even announces another killing, and during a live show even, a show in
which Santo's ward Milton (Milton Ray) performs. Santo and the inspector
beef up security in the theatre, but somehow they forget that the
Strangler is a master in disguise, so he slips in posing as the stage
director (Julián de Meriche) and tries to crash a chandelier onto the
leading lady, and when that doesn't work, he disguises himself as the
inspector and kidnaps Milton. But of course, Santo is hot on his trail,
and in the end he manages to save Milton while the Strangler and Tor burst
up in flames in their hideout. While Santo
vs el Estrangulador took its pointers mainly from Phantom
of the Opera, El Espectro del Estrangulador mainly uses
two Vincent Price-flick for inspiration, House
of Wax and The Mad Magician.
The result is a not-too-great film based on a very feeble narrative that
is disjointed by many musical numbers and wrestling matches thrown into
the mix for no narrative reason at all. Add to this an array of
one-dimensional characters, potholes and pulp mainstays ... and you might
find yourself liking this film for some weird reason and against better
judgement.
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