Las noches del Hombre Lobo (1968) Poster

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Paul Naschy's second outing as El Hombre Lobo appears to be an urban legend
kevinolzak5 November 2014
1968's "Las Noches del Hombre Lobo" (The Nights of the Werewolf) remained a frustratingly elusive title during Paul Naschy's illustrious lifetime, uncompleted, unreleased, or (most likely) never made, supposedly shot on location in Paris by director Rene Govar (his only credit), who apparently died after completion. Only the second outing for hirsute Waldemar Daninsky, who catapulted Naschy to stardom with "La Marca del Hombre Lobo," and scripted by Naschy under his real name Jacinto Molina, in collaboration with director Govar and C. Bellard (like Govar, no other credits). Of the four actors listed on IMDb (Peter Beaumont, Monique Brainville, Helene Vatelle), only Beba Novak had any other credits, Naschy's own "El Vertigo del Crimen," and Freddie Francis' German comedy "Gebissen Wird nur Nachts" aka "The Vampire Happening." Storywise it's a plot that Naschy would return to quite often, a mad scientist exploiting Wolf Man Waldemar for his own nefarious reasons, popping up in the next several Daninsky titles: "Assignment Terror," in which Michael Rennie's Dr. Odo Warnoff is revealed to be from another planet, "The Fury of the Wolf Man," making the mad scientist a beautiful woman (Perla Cristal), and "Dr. Jekyll and the Werewolf," with Jack Taylor's Jekyll using his Hyde formula on the already cursed Waldemar. Considering that he repeated the same role in a dozen features, "Las Noches del Hombre Lobo" could very well be no great loss but coming so soon in his starring career, we can only speculate at such a late date. The third Daninsky title, "Assignment Terror," threw in every conceivable monster in existence, solidifying Naschy's hold on the crown for King of Spanish horror, but it was the 4th entry, "La Noche de Walpurgis" aka "The Werewolf vs. The Vampire Woman," that became an undisputed international sensation. Today it appears that the final verdict on whether this title was ever made comes up as negative, an urban myth that grew during Naschy's lifetime but proved a falsehood upon further examination.
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