Dr. Jekyll vs. The Werewolf (1972) Poster

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6/10
Entertaining entry in the long series about Waldemar Daninsky , the immortal Wolfman decently performed by Paul Naschy or Jacinto Molina
ma-cortes16 September 2015
"Dr. Jekyll and the Wolfman" deals with Waldermar Daninsky (Paul Naschy) who helped by Justine (Shirley Corrigan) searches for a cure to his full moon craziness by visiting the descendant (Jack Taylor as Henry Jekill supported by his helper Sandra played by Mirta Miller) of the infamous Dr. Jekyll from Robert Louis Stevenson novel . What ensues next is a lover's triangle , and a nasty Mr. Hyde who roams modern London and walks through at night in Soho streets and becomes into a werewolf on the disco floor .

Acceptable Werewolf movie with the unforgettable Waldemar Daninsky-Jacinto Molina , under pseudonym Paul Naschy . Continental Europe's biggest horror star again with his classic character and frightening to viewer . He returns as El Hombre Lobo for the umpteenth time and once again battles enemies . It is a B series entertainment with abundant sensationalistic scenes and a Naif style . The movie has a bit of ridiculous gore with loads of blood similar to tomato and is occasionally an engaging horror movie full of slow-moving fights , attacks , beheading and several other things . Naschy's portrayal of the anguished and sympathetic werewolf Daninsky -here along with a magnificent acting as savage sadistic Mr Hyde- became his signature part and consolidated his enduring cult status as a bona-fide horror icon and he spent more time in make-up . Jacinto Molina Aka Paul Naschy , who recently passed away , was actor , screenwriter and director of various films about the personage based on fictitious character , the Polish count Waldemar Daninsky . Jacinto often cited seeing Frankenstein and the Wolfman (1943) in a theater at age 11 as a seminal inspirational experience , his later movies would be filled with references to it . In 1967 he wrote the script for first film about Waldemar , it was ¨The mark of the Wolfman¨ by Enrique Eguiluz ; he was forced , out of necessity , to play the lead role of tormented werewolf Waldermar Daninsky after Lon Chaney Jr. turned it down . Later on , he reprised this character in over a dozen subsequent followings . As Molina went on the successful ¨Night of Walpurgis¨ by Leon Klimovsky , ¨Fury of the Wolfman¨ , ¨Doctor Jekill and the Wolfman¨ ,¨The return of the Walpurgis¨, ¨Howl of the devil¨, ¨The beast and the magic sword (1982)¨ that was filmed in Japan and finally ¨Licántropo (1998).

A talented athlete , Naschy played soccer for the school team and was a weightlifter who became the lightweight champion of Spain in 1958. Moreover , Paul penned Western pulp novels under the pseudonym Jack Mills and worked as an illustrator who did album cover art for a Spanish record label . Thanks to his muscular build , Naschy was able to break into the motion picture business in the early 1960s as an uncredited extra in such films as ¨El Cid¨, ¨55 days at Pekin¨ and the biblical epic ¨King of Kings¨ (1961) along with a Spaghetti , ¨Day of Anger¨ . Other significant horror figures Paul played were the Mummy , Jack the Ripper , Dracula ; as his performance as the Prince of Darkness in ¨Count Dracula's great love¨ (1973) was one of his personal favorites , the Hunchback , the Frankenstein Monster, the Phantom of the Opera , and even the Devil . Naschy made his directorial debut with Inquisition (1978) . Furthermore , Naschy made some Giallos such as "A Dragonfly for Each Corpse" , "The Killer Is One of Thirteen" and ¨Blue Eyes of the Broken Doll¨. The films , ¨El Caminante¨ and ¨El Aullido del Diablo¨ or "Howl of the Devil"(1987) were two of Paul's most personal projects and finest artistic achievements.

In ¨Doctor Jekill and the Wolfman¨ , Paul Naschy returns as Waldemar for the sixth time , Paul was such a perfectionist that he didn't have a stand-in, even for the lighting , as he did everything himself . Paul was a very serious man , though an introvert , always practicing his lines , his faces , and make-up . In the film appears a numerous secondary cast who starred innumerable films of Spaghetti/Paella Western and horror genres during the 60s and 70 such as Jack Taylor , Mirta Miller , Luis Induni , José Marco , Luis Gaspar and Barta Barri .

Creepy and eerie musical score by Anton Garcia Abril who composed the ¨Templar Zombies¨ saga by Amando De Ossorio . Adequate cinematography by Francisco Fraile shot on location in Soho , Big Ben , Houses of Parliament , Westminster , Piccadilly Circus , Trafalgar Square , London , England , UK and Madrid , Spain . The motion picture was professionally directed by Leon Klimovski . Mr. Klimovsky was a great director and in this movie he'd be shouting on his megaphone all the time . Leon was very close to the actor Jacinto Molina , they had a very strong friendship , and would always be talking business together . The flick will appeal to Paul Naschy fans and terror genre enthusiast . Rating : 6 , passable and amusing .
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6/10
I liked this werewolf movie, but the Mr. Hyde plot was a bit confusing
FieCrier8 January 2005
This is the first Waldemar Daninsky movie I've seen, even though it is (the box says) the fifth in a series (perhaps IMDb's years for the titles are off?). I bought it primarily because I've liked all the other Mondo Macabro DVDs I've bought.

It's also the first Paul Naschy movie I've seen, or at least the first one I've seen while knowing him to be a big Spanish horror star.

A couple return to the husband's homeland so he can visit his parents' graves. Unfortunately, the graveyard they're in was abandoned during World War II, and is neglected, rumored to be haunted, and a place where murderous bandits can be found. It's also located near the Black Castle, where a monster lives. The monster is Daninsky, who turns into a wolf-man when the moon is full. As a wolf-man, he kills people or bites chunks of flesh out of them. As Daninsky, well, he kills people too, but he has more of a choice as to who he attacks: he only goes after bad guys.

Daninsky gets taken to see Dr. Jekyll, the grandson of the infamous one, in England. Dr. Jekyll has a plan to cure Daninsky's lycanthropy, but I confess I did not understand it. It involved turning Daninsky into Mr. Hyde, and then somehow having the Mr. Hyde and Werewolf in Daninsky battle it out. That isn't what seems to happen, so perhaps I'm way off. I thought it peculiar that Daninsky turns into Mr. Hyde - Mr. Hyde had been the evil part of Dr. Jekyll. Daninsky's evil side might have been similar, but identical, and they give him the same name...?

It is fairly entertaining, and I'm curious to see some other Daninsky werewolf movies now (this wasn't one of Nachy's more favorite ones), and perhaps some more of Nachy's other horror movies. The DVD is good, has some nice extras including an interview with Nachy and a text covering the short history of Spanish horror movies, and the DVD will be staying in my collection.

It seems he's played the Waldemar Daninsky werewolf character in about thirteen movies, of which perhaps only four are readily available (through out of print videotapes and cheap poor quality DVDs), and the original is not one of them! It would seem a box set is needed, though I have not heard rumors of one.
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5/10
Dr. Jekyll and the Werewolf
Scarecrow-888 October 2011
Warning: Spoilers
A wealthy businessman and his young, beautiful, trophy wife, who live in England, head into "the old country", where his ancestors once resided in the Carpathian mountains, to visit the past, will meet *unspeakable horrors*. While visiting the cemetery where his parents were buried, Emery encounters ruthless thieves attempting to steal from him, resulting in his stabbing death, Justine tries to flee but is swarmed by the brutes before she is rescued by a mysterious man dressed in black (Paul Naschy). Awakening in her savior's black castle, what will happen to her? If you like dark foreboding ancient castles made out of stone then you are in luck as this movie has a doozy. A good man cursed with lycanthropy, an old "witch" (she is described this way by the café owner prone to "foretell old wivestales"), a hunch-backed leper (yep, a movie like this has to have a hunch-backed freak to assist the scientist), and the old man who spreads spook tales to those who enter his café in the village—the Naschy homages are numerous in "Dr. Jekyll and the Werewolf". Other thieves decide they will head to the black castle to see what goodies might be worth stealing only to encounter Naschy's El Hombre Lobo in the cemetery (they get what they deserve, really—it is a full moon and the howl of the lychanthrope is loud and ominous). The village café owner calls them "demons", followers of the devil, his ravings quite amusing, falling in line with those from past Gothic horror films warning foreigners and the unbelievers of evils that await the unlearned. The film even produces the restless village folk stirred up the vengeful outsider, new to the area, who lost two brothers to the werewolf, with pitchforks and torches in hand, as a group heading to the black castle to rid themselves of the monster lurking in their midst. This results in an underwhelming confrontation between instigator and Waldemar (in human form, no less), before the film's second half transports the plot to London where we meet Dr. Henry Jekyll (the ancestor of the notorious Jekyll who successfully created a serum which created the completely evil side of his personality, Hyde), who operates an asylum, his nurse the conniving Sandra.

Sandra is a rather preposterous villainess, who wants Jekyll to recreate Hyde and use this power for their own personal gain and advantage—this motivation is clearly just an excuse for Naschy to portray Hyde, and run around, albeit too briefly, contemporary London. Jekyll believes his new serum, an altered form correcting the error of his shunned late grandfather, can pit, so to speak, Hyde against the dormant lycanthrope inside, where the evil plaguing Waldemar will be vanquished once and for all, but Sandra cannot stomach the idea of the scientist she bent over backwards for using his creation for good. Sandra is also a jealous bitch upset that Henry still loves Justine and has conducted his experiments just for her benefit.

The problem with the version I watched was that it is the badly cut 73 minute public domain version (which my rating is for); it clearly looks as if it went under the knife of a mad surgeon. I hope to someday see the 96 minute version and better tell what was left out the butchered cut of the film. I really liked the ending which seems to be a homage to "House of Frankenstein" where Lon Chaney Jr. and Elena Verdugo suffer an unfortunate fate out of love thanks to the full moon and the inability to control the beast within—it is heartbreaking, yet romantic, two hands held as the camera backs away showing the tragic result of the werewolf's control over man to the point that he cannot keep from killing the one he loves. With Shirley Corrigan as Justine, Jack Taylor as a wooden Henry Jekyll, and Mirta Miller as the corrupt Sandra.
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Mr Hyde Vs the Werewolf in the Fleshpots of Soho
gavcrimson15 May 2000
Paul Naschy has been playing tortured Polish werewolves since 1967, the high watermark being 1970's Werewolf vs the Vampire Women. Made a year later Doctor Jekyll and the Werewolf, if not exactly in the same league is certainly entertaining. After her fiance is murdered by thuggish villagers Justine is saved from death by loner Waldemar. A man with `an illness' Waldemar is of course the hairy side of the title, although the sadistic local villagers seem more violent and pose more of a threat than the beast he becomes. After every distant relative and friend of his has been decapitated or murdered by these apeish normals Waldemar heads off with Justine to a post- swinging London. There he turns to the grandson of Dr Jekyll who tries to help him out by somewhat illogically turning him into a pasty faced eye ball rolling `new' Mr Hyde. Soon all hell breaks loose thanks to Waldemar's triple personality. Let loose on London there is the kinky Mr Hyde who wields a mean whip, and a werewolf attacking Londoners more than a decade before An American Werewolf in London. Despite the Madrid-ish look to some of the London scenes some parts were indeed shot in `Londris', Blimey! Naschy and director Klimovsky found a good locale in Soho, London's notorious red light district back in the days of outdoor bordellos, the neon windmill of the Windmill theatre and sex -education documentary Love in Our Time playing in theatres. Theres a tale Naschy likes to tell about filming these scenes- while dressed as Mr Hyde some Soho regulars, not realising a film was being shot heckled who they thought to be a madman dressed in Victorian clothes. With the shot ruined `Mr Hyde' promptly chased the pesky raincoat dwellers with his cane. Compared to Werewolf Vs the Vampire Women which was a hit world-wide, Dr Jekyll was only fleetingly released in the US and UK, and today can only be found on tape from American public domain companies, releases drawn from badly transferred and tatty looking prints that can't possibly do this 70mm scope production justice. A real melting pot of a film, eclectic doesn't come close- Justine's fiance is built up as a major heroic character, but in a Psycho fashion is shockingly murdered half an hour in, then we settle down for a traditional werewolf picture, then suddenly this becomes a Mr Hyde picture with swinging Sixties overtones before the furballs and claws are brought back for the discotheque set climax. All this was obviously done to avoid routine (this was Naschy's sixth werewolf film). Unfortunately the same factors that made the Werewolf Vs the Vampire Women and the `groovy' Dracula Vs Frankenstein breath taking, seem plodding and unfocussed in Doctor Jekyll and the Werewolf. However the London scenes, the enraged teddy of a werewolf and Naschy's unusual looking Mr Hyde supply the film with more than its fair share of memorable moments, definitely enough to justify digging this up from the grave marked `Spanish horror cinema RIP', its certainly a better film than its obscure reputation suggests.
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5/10
Hair and Hyde.
BA_Harrison29 May 2016
Newlyweds Imre (José Marco) and Justine (Shirley Corrigan) travel to the Carpathian mountains of Transylvania for their honeymoon, where Imre intends to visit the graves of his murdered parents (the man sure knows how to show his new wife a good time). Ignoring warnings from a superstitious local who tells them that the cemetery is a place of evil, the couple are attacked by a gang of local villains that try to break into their car. Imre is stabbed to death, and Justine narrowly avoids being raped when Waldemar Daninsky (Paul Naschy) leaps to her assistance (crushing one guy's face with a rock in the process).

Waldemar carries Justine to his castle, which is also home to a leprous man who has zero bearing on the plot, and an old lady whom the locals believe is a witch, and who tells Justine of Waldemar's 'illness': whenever the full moon rises, he turns into a werewolf!!! After Waldemar, in hairy form, kills several more villagers, a rabble of pitchfork wielding locals hack off the old woman's head, stick it on a pole, and proceed to storm the castle. Waldemar and Justine sneak out the back door and flee to London, where they enlist the help of Dr. Jekyll (Jack Taylor), whose infamous grandfather's personality-altering serum might be able to release Daninsky from his curse.

The sixth film in Paul Naschy's Waldemar Daninsky series, Dr. Jekyll vs. the Werewolf is just as silly as the title suggests, offering up all manner of Euro-monster-mash madness. Naschy not only sports one of his more impressive looking werewolf make-ups, but also looks sufficiently slimy as Mr. Hyde, whose personality he adopts when injected by Jekyll's serum. The daft plot also includes a treacherous assistant for Jekyll in the form of Sandra (Mirta Miller), sees Hyde enjoying enjoying London's swinging nightlife (which allows for some particularly hilarious gyrating from a podium dancer), and provides several excuses for some cheesy gore.

N.B.: There are three edits of this film doing the rounds. My middling rating of 5/10 is for the heavily edited Spanish version that came as part of my Mill Creek Pure Terror box-set, and which is notably bereft of any gratuitous nudity (what's a Euro-horror without some boobs to go with the blood?). The US edit, however, does feature some nudity in the last half hour, while the fullest cut—the German version—delivers even more bare flesh, with Justine's breasts getting an airing during her attack, and Waldemar's werewolf tearing open his victims' clothes before tearing out their throats, all of which undoubtedly adds to the fun.
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7/10
Three Naschys for the price of one...
poe42622 July 2010
Warning: Spoilers
Even the masterminds at Universal were grasping at straws by the end of their glorious horror cycle; in the end , the Monsters that had done most of the heavy lifting at the studio were reduced to little more than cameos in half-hearted comedies. Paul Naschy, a Universal monster wannabe who made good, not only continued on in the Grand (Guignol) tradition (rather than allow himself or HIS wolfman to be downgraded to a comedic foil), he added his own twist(s) to the myth(s). In FRANKENSTEIN MEETS THE WOLFMAN, Lon Chaney, Jr. seeks the sweet surcease of Death by trying to divest himself of Supernatural Energy by having said energy transferred to Dr. Frankenstein's patchwork pariah. It was an interesting idea, but Naschy goes them one better by having HIS wolfman actually pay a visit to another doctor- Jekyll. His intention is to have the "animal" side of his nature exorcised. Things don't go quite as he'd planned and, before you can say "Howl at the moon," Naschy's transforming into... Mr. Hyde. He does a very good job as Hyde, with a minimum of very effective makeup. DR. JEKYLL MEETS THE WOLFMAN is (by far) the best of the Naschy movies I've seen thus far; too bad Universal didn't tough it out and venture more often into this kind of Dark Terrain. (Benicio Del Toro, are you listening...?)
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5/10
Two monster legends in one nightmare.
mark.waltz4 October 2019
Warning: Spoilers
Surprisingly better than I expected, this has two monsters joined at the fang who suffered each from two faces. It makes sense that at some point, they would meet up, but not at Universal who had already played around with Wolfie but not Jekkie. Paul Naschy plays the werewolf and his human alter ego, with Jack Taylor as Dr. Jekyll turning Naschy also into Mr. Hyde. This has the structure of two different stories connected into one as the first half is set in the countryside and definitely more Gothic.

The second half moves to swinging London where Nashy's cheap looking wolfman mask creates a lot of trouble. His Jekyll is less threatening and actually a rather annoying character, the bubble bursting party dude who brings everybody down just by entering a room. While there are definitely some bloody scenes, much of the horror is simply implied but there are definitely some gruesome deaths. It's much more enjoyable than most of the early 1970s horror schlock, and certainly well thought out as far as plot goes even if the script isn't very strong.
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6/10
A Must for Paul Naschy Fans
Paul Naschy, the werewolf sensation of Spain, gets to strut his stuff and expand as an actor in this Leon Klimovsky film. Sure, we're use to seeing Paul play Waldemar by now but he gets to branch out and show off his acting chops by also playing the sinister Mister Hyde in this film as well.

The lovely Shirley Corrigan travels to Hungary with her husband (Jose Marco) to visit his parent's resting place but when their car is about to get stolen, Jose intervenes and is promptly murdered. Since Shirley Corrigan is all kinds of sexy, the murderers have other plans for her but Paul Naschy intercepts their decadent intentions and saves the blond beauty. Of course, as Waldemar, Naschy changes into a wolfman during a fullmoon and when Shirley spots his transformation she gets a plan.

Shirley takes Paul to London to visit a friend, Dr. Jekyll (Jack Taylor) who is the only man who can help Paul defeat his curse of lycanthropy. Dr. Jekyll has always had a thing for Miss Corrigan which upsets his raven-haired helper, Mirta Miller. When the good doctor spurns Mirta in order to help Paul and Shirley, Mirta kills Dr. Jekyll and plans to use Waldemar as a tool for mayhem. She uses a serum devised by Jekyll to turn Waldemar into Mister Hyde but when the fullmoon is out, Hyde's influence clashes with the lycanthropy and makes Paul Naschy one mean dude.

STORY: $$$ (The story is quite interesting, tackling two legendary horror figures in one setting. As with most of the Waldema films, Paul Naschy gets plenty time to showcase his animal side while countering that with a sensitive, tortured side. Also, the version I watched, from Mill Creek in the PURE TERROR 50 MOVIE PACK, seemed a bit too cut which affected the story. Out of the blue Waldemar's old helper is beheaded without any leadup to the attack. Something was missing there).

ACTING: $$$ (Paul Naschy shines as usual. This may be his best performance since he is able to branch out. I'd even go so far as to say he does an even better job as Mr. Hyde in this film than the werewolf. Shirley Corrigan is exceptional as always and Jack Taylor is terrific in his role as Dr. Jekyll. Mirta Miller is effectively calculating as the doctor's assistant).

NUDITY: None (However, this is the Mill Creek version and they typically get the edited adaptations of Spanish horror films. In the same 50 Movie Pack is a great little film titled HORROR RISES FROM THE TOMB, which I own on VHS, and this film is heavily edited. In the unedited version of HORROR RISES FROM THE TOMB there is an abundant supply of nudity so there is probably some skin in other versions of this film as well. Shirley Corrigan, the female lead, isn't a shy actress. She's done a lot of nudity, including the terrific little gem THE DEVIL'S NIGHTMARE).
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3/10
A Schizophrenic Spanish/Hungarian (of Polish descent) Werewolf in London!
Coventry14 July 2013
This is the fifth or sixth movie in Paul Naschy's "Hombre-Lobo" cycle that I watched and it's undoubtedly the worst so far (although, perhaps a tie with "The Werewolf and the Yeti"). Quite unfortunately, in fact, because I really wanted to reward this installment with a higher rating as it features the downright best and most inventive basic plot idea of them all. The slightly genius gimmick of this episode is that the tormented anti-hero protagonist Waldemar Daninsky receives help from no less than the grandson of the infamous Dr. Jekyll in an attempt to cure him from lycanthropy. What if Waldemar, moments before the rise of the full moon, gets injected with the serum that brings out someone's darker alter ego? Is the werewolf curse stronger than the Mr. Hyde persona? It's definitely an intriguing question and an admirable attempt to crossbreed two legendary monsters of the horror genre, but sadly – and inexplicably – Paul Naschy and veteran director León Klimovsky delivered a nearly unendurable dud of a film. The script, if there even was one, features way too many semi-processed ideas, it's incoherent beyond belief and simply just all over the place! Long before Waldemar Daninsky meets Dr. Jekyll, in the third and final act of the film, the plot already abruptly changed in tone several times and many of the initial lead characters died ingloriously! The story opens in London, where a wealthy businessman and his sexy wife are meeting some guests on the evening before their honeymoon to Hungary. They go because the man was born there, but moved to England when he's parents were brutally butchered. The husband is then suddenly slain in the cemetery by car thieves and the woman narrowly rescued by Waldemar, who takes her back to his castle. She quickly finds out about his werewolf condition, desperately falls head over heels in love with him (they always do … in all the screenplays that he wrote himself, Paul Naschy literally was God's gift to women) and offers to come back to London with her. In between, they also have to face an angry mob with torches and there's also the bizarre and unfinished sub plots about a witch and a guy with a mutilated face who lives in Daninsky's cellar. Never mind about that. Once back in London, there are several more redundant intrigues and senseless sub plots before – finally – Daninsky terrorizes the metropolis as both werewolf and evil Mr. Hyde. In spite of all the content, plot twists and numerous characters, "Dr. Jekyll and the Wolf Man" is an incredibly boring movie! The coherence and editing are abysmal and none of the performances are the least bit convincing. All of the Hombre-Lobo movies look cheap and badly dated, but this entry is presumably the tackiest of them all. The make-up effects are gruesome but amateurish. Naschy's Mr. Hyde look is effectively vile, though, and as usual there's quite a bit of gratuitous sleazy and nudity just for fun's sake. For die-hard exploitation fanatics only, I'd say.
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6/10
Cast out the Werewolf by Naschy-Beelzebub!
Witchfinder-General-6668 February 2011
Warning: Spoilers
As a long-time fan of the Spanish Horror legend Paul Naschy (aka. Jacinto Molina), I am always looking forward to seeing another gem from the man's impressive repertoire. Naschy is probably best known for his role of the Werewolf Waldemar Daninsky, whom he played in 14 films. While the majority of these movies can hardly be described as masterpieces, they all have a very specific, inimitable charm to them that can only be found in Naschy films. "Dr. Jeckyll Y El Hombre Lobo" ("Dr. Jeckyll VS. the Werewolf") of 1972 is one of the most ludicrous of these "Hombre Lobo" film, and simultaneously an incredibly entertaining one. As most of the other Waldemar Daninsky films, this one unites a variety of monsters. Directed by Leon Klimovsky, who is best known for directing the most famous Daninsky-flick, "La Noche De Walpurgis" (aka. "The Werewolf Vs. Vampire Woman") of 1971, this is fantastic entertainment for my fellow fans of the cheesier kind of Eurohorror.

The rich Imre Kosta (José Marco) and his hot young wife Justine (Shirley Costigan) go on their honeymoon to his native Transylvania. When visiting his parents' grave, Imre is murdered by bandits who then attempt to rape Justine. However, she is saved by Waldemar Daninsky (Paul Naschy)... The good-natured Daninsky turns out to be a Werewolf. However, Justine nonetheless falls in love with him. She takes him to her native London, where she plans to cure his lycanthropy with the help of her friend Dr. Jeckyll (Jack Taylor). The Doctor's attempt to cast out the devil by Beelzebub bears its risks, however...

The plot line is incredibly cheesy and often plain ridiculous. However, that only adds to the charm of the film. As the other Daninsky-flicks, this one is full of cheap but very cool gore. By the second half of the film I was somewhat disappointed by the lack of sleaze; however the film suddenly becomes a sleazier when Mr. Hyde shows up and lives out his sadistic sexual perversions. Apart from Naschy, who is awesome as always, the film's cast includes Jack Taylor, who also is one of the best-known actors in Spanish Exploitation cinema. The female cast members are beautiful, especially Shirley Corrigan and Mirta Miller, who plays Jeckyll's sinister female assistant. In spite of its cheesiness, the film has atmosphere. While it is highly doubtable that anybody is going to be scared by this film, it is an incredibly entertaining slice of cheese. Though not one of the most essential Naschy flicks, "Dr. Jeckyll Y El Hombre Lobo" should definitely not be missed by my fellow fans of the man. 6.5/10
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3/10
Disappointing werewolf flick from Paul Naschy
The_Void8 July 2008
Paul Naschy is probably most famous for this set of films, but personally I tend to find them disappointing. As the title suggests, this time Naschy's favourite "Homo Lobo" character is mixed in with Robert Louis Stephenson's classic characters Dr Jekyll and Mr Hyde...the result is rather confusing since Paul Naschy himself plays both characters. I would have to say that this is one of the worst films in Naschy's series (although I have to admit that I haven't seen them all) and the reason for that is really down to the plot. It seems like they couldn't be bothered to do anything really interesting with it, and what we end up with is the two characters in a movie together with a couple of innocents in the middle - it doesn't make for very exciting viewing. Add to that the fact that none of the cast members (including Naschy himself) could really be bothered either. The acting is bad even for a low budget Spanish horror movie and the pace of the film is also very slow and boring, which ensures that the film is in no way an exciting viewing. There's not even anything resembling a decent horror atmosphere to make up for it. The film fails to create any interest at all for most of the duration and by the time it got to the end, I wasn't really bothered what might happen. Overall, this is not a film worth seeing and I don't recommend it.
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8/10
Different enough to be worth a watch
Leofwine_draca5 July 2016
Warning: Spoilers
After the spellbinding success of his werewolf/vampire pairing WEREWOLF SHADOW a couple of years previously, Paul Naschy decided to team his lovelorn lycanthrope Waldemar Daninsky with the infamous character created by Robert Louis Stevenson, Doctor Jekyll, and his alter ego Mr Hyde. The resulting production is an episodic thrill-ride which, whilst not always successful, manages to be exciting, romantic, gothic, and suspenseful at various stages in the narration.

Essentially this is a film of two halves. The first is a straightforward werewolf epic, packed with spooky graveyards, a deformed leper, and lots of human skulls rattling around. The Jekyll experiment doesn't even happen until an hour into the movie, although at least it's not at the very end like the yeti in THE WEREWOLF AND THE YETI. Despite a low budget, the film has authentic production values and the location shooting in London adds to the dated realism of the piece. Director Leon Klimovsky was a sure hand with such fare and injects plenty of spooky atmosphere into the film, especially in the early scenes which very nearly rival those in WEREWOLF SHADOW.

Naschy is excellent, as always, in the leading part, whether it be Daninsky the werewolf or as Hyde. Actually, I preferred him as Hyde, as some simple but effective makeup and long hair really makes him look like a sadistic brute - a case of less is more. Naschy is supported by the reliable Jack Taylor (THE FEMALE VAMPIRE), who couldn't be more at home than playing Dr. Jekyll, and the usual round of seedy/sleazy/violent characters fill out the rest of the cast to good effect. Particularly good is Shirley Corrigan (CRIMES OF THE BLACK CAT), memorable when sadistically whipped by a gloating Naschy. Exploitation doesn't get any better than this, folks.

The various action sequences of Daninsky running amok in a modern-day London are well-handled and fun and the pay-off suitably dramatic, if a little rushed. Worth mentioning are the transformation scenes, stylishly handled on a low budget and pretty original, including an excellent lift sequence. Not one of his all-time best movies, nonetheless this is still a classic Naschy production.
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6/10
DR. JEKYLL VERSUS THE WEREWOLF (Leon Klimovsky, 1972) **1/2
Bunuel197623 January 2010
The fifth entry in the Waldemar Daninsky series is actually the eleventh Paul Naschy movie I have watched; for the record, I have four more titles featuring the Euro-Cult icon lined-up for this Halloween challenge. This is one of his better vehicles that I have come across, though still essentially flawed; in it he plays no less than three roles (though all inhabit the same body) i.e. Daninsky, his werewolf alter-ego and, in a bizarre turn-of-events, R.L. Stevenson's famous evil 'creation' Mr. Hyde! The copy I watched – culled from Mondo Macabro's R2 DVD – presents the film in its clothed variant prepared for Spanish consumption; still, the level of violence is considerable, with the werewolf seen munching on torn flesh and similarly gory effects. Jess Franco regular Jack Taylor appears as Dr. Jekyll and rather than have him turn into the primitive Hyde, he injects Daninsky with his grandfather's notorious serum in an attempt to cure his lycanthropy! The film is colorful and generally fun (clichés and all) but director Klimovsky does not quite take full advantage of the possibilities set out by the premise at hand: for one thing, his Hyde (amusingly bringing to mind John Belushi!) is nowhere near the monster he is depicted in most other versions of the tale, while a transformation from man to wolf inside a London discotheque (the setting for the film's latter half is present-day i.e. 1970s London) is completely thrown away as he not only fails to attack anyone but is himself almost trampled in the commotion that ensues! The plot also involves a couple of good-looking girls: a blonde, with whom both Naschy and Taylor are in love (though she opts to marry a third – and much older – man), as well as a brunette, who is Dr. Jekyll's vindictive and deranged assistant.
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5/10
NASCHY FOREVER!
BandSAboutMovies29 August 2020
Warning: Spoilers
We're six movies into the story of El Hombre Lobo, Waldemar Daninsky. This time, after battling aliens and yetis and vampires, he is searching for a cure. That cure brings him to the grandson of Dr. Jekyll, played by Jack Taylor, whose career has taken him from the Mexican Nostradamus movies to Jess Franco sleaze to The Ghost Galleon to Edge of the Axe, Pieces and more.

The plans in Naschy films are always wild. This one involves him drinking one of Jekyll's formulas in the hope that the Hyde side of his persona is less dangerous than the wolf. Nope. It just makes him even more dangerous.

This was directed by León Klimovsky, who also made The Vampires Night Orgy, A Dragonfly for Each Corpse, The Dracula Saga and The People Who Own the Dark.

If you're looking for a movie where men become wolves in elevators while women watch on in terror or turn furry on the dance floor, this movie will scratch that itch. Seriously, Naschy deserves to be better remembered than he is. I adore everything he ever made.
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Perhaps the Best in the Series
Michael_Elliott20 October 2013
Dr. Jekyll vs. the Werewolf (1972)

*** 1/2 (out of 4)

Waldemar Daninsky (Paul Naschy) falls in love with the beautiful Justine (Shirley Corrigan) who convinces him to travel to London to see if Dr. Jekyll (Jack Taylor) can cure his curse of turning into a werewolf. Once in London Jekyll's evil assistant injects Daninsky to where he turns into Mr. Hyde. I've now seen three different versions of this film. The Spanish "clothed" version was a highly entertaining gem. The American "nude" version brought a little added sleaze and T&A to the film. Now, the third version from Germany was just recently found and is making its way through various fan boards and it features extended nudity, which just takes this film to a whole new level and actually makes it even better. Even though this print is in Spanish without any subtitles, I've never enjoyed this film more and I think the added dirty bits really makes this one of the sleazier Spanish films from this era.

With this Germany version, the film just contains a very perverted and sinister feel to it that's not in any other version. It really does take the material and gives it a much darker approach, which is very much a positive and especially when we've already gotten some excellent atmosphere from director Leon Klimovsky. Another great benefit is that Naschy is at the top of his game here. No matter which version you watch, the werewolf here is without question one of the best looking in the series and it also features some of the most graphic violence. There's plenty of blood flowing around for fans of that type of thing. The actor also does a marvelous job in the role of Hyde and this is especially more true when you see the darker, more perverted version. Corrigan makes for one of the more memorable leading ladies in the series and it's great fun getting someone like Taylor on board.

The film also benefits from some very effective scenes. One includes the scene where the woman is attacked by three hoods. Another includes her looking down from her window at her new love who is in his werewolf form. Then, of course, there's the werewolf hitting the streets of London. Seeing Naschy running around the swinging style of London in the 1970s is just a wonderful sight. DR. JEKYLL AND THE WEREWOLF is a "fun" Gothic film even if you watch the non-nude version. You watch the American version and it's just as much fun with the added nudity. However, to get the full impact one really needs to find the German cut as all the added stuff just makes it so much more fun.
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2/10
An absolute waste of time
bensonmum228 September 2005
Warning: Spoilers
A couple honeymooning in Transylvania is attacked by a ruthless group of killers. With the husband dead, the new bride, Justine (Shirley Corrigan), finds safety in the home of her rescuer, Waldemar (Paul Naschy). But Justin learns of Waldemar's "illness" that causes him to turn into a werewolf when the moon is full. Justine is certain that her friend in London, Dr. Jekyll (Jack Taylor), may be able to help Waldemar. Will Dr. Jekyll's cure work? Or will more people die at the hands of the werewolf?

What Works:

  • Nothing. I can't think of anything in Dr. Jekyll vs. the Werewolf worth recommending. It's really quite bad. I haven't rated it a 1/10 because, in comparison, it's not as wretched as most of the movies I've rated at the very bottom.


What Doesn't Work:

  • Paul Naschy. I realize that Naschy made a boatload of werewolf movies and is generally considered a cult icon. Why? I don't know. I've never understood the appeal of Naschy or his brand of werewolf. Naschy is one of the more unappealing "stars" of horror. He is terrible at playing the sympathetic figure, which I think is necessary for the character of the tormented werewolf. Also, Naschy is just too small to effectively play the role. His midget werewolf just doesn't work for me.


  • The Acting. None of the acting, including Naschy, is very good. The worst is Corrigan as the stranded bride, Justine. She only appears capable of two emotions: fear, which she is terrible at playing and always ends in screaming, and sadness, which is equally annoying and always ends in crying. What range!


  • The Lack of Anything Found in a Good Horror Movie. The things I look for in a horror movie include atmosphere, suspense, tension, and plot. You can forget about atmosphere, suspense, and tension. All the horror elements in Dr. Jekyll vs. the Werewolf are treated like everyday, common occurrences and nothing to be afraid of. In fact, the group who kills the husband is more menacing than the werewolf. As for plot, the movie does have one, but it makes so little sense and is filled with the most ridiculous sounding science that it's impossible to take seriously.


In the end, I found Dr. Jekyll vs. the Werewolf to be a complete waste of time. I don't remember enjoying a single frame. And it's not cheesy enough to be bad in that "so bad it's good" sort of way. I really do try to enjoy Naschy's films. I'll keep trying, but for now, I'm not impressed.
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6/10
Mental as usual
Bezenby30 October 2017
I think this is the fifth Paul Naschy werewolf film, but who knows. This one starts out with an English fellow heading out for Transylvania to visit his parent's graves, with his cute wife in tow, only for the both of them to discover a horribly burned man lurking about the place. This film details the seventies approach to disability when the wife starts screaming bloody murder and the English guy throws a brick at the guy.

At a local bar, the barman describes the entire area as being full of thieves and cutthroats and says maybe it's a bad idea to go to the old creepy cemetery that's next to the old creepy castle that the local monster lives in, but off they go anyway, which results in three local brothers robbing their car, killing the English guy, and trying to rape the Justine, his wife. I say try because Paul Naschy turns up and brutally murders two of the brothers (one by dropping a huge rock on the guy's face!).

Paul of course is a werewolf with a witch sidekick and when this robber guy starts going on about revenge and involving the locals it doesn't turn out right for anyone, as more villagers end up dead, the rest get out the pitchforks and torches, and Paul has to high tail it to England so the plot can get even more stupid. I also noted that for some reason one villager had a gigantic pitchfork that was much larger than the others. Must have been compensating for something.

Now Justine has quickly got over her husband being murdered and is in love with Paul, so she goes to Dr Jekyll to get him cured. In a plot move that makes virtually no sense whatsoever, Jekyll proposes that they inject Paul with some injection that will make Mister Hyde manifest in Paul (?) so that they can then isolate the evil in him and kill him. So not only has Paul got to put up with the werewolf stuff, now he's turned into a sex-crazed hedonist too!

This might have actually worked out if Dr Jekyll didn't have a jealous female sidekick who wasn't happy with Jekyll trying to help out an unrequited love. Next thing you know Hyde is out rampaging around London, but then again you only get to see that if you have the uncut version as it involves ravaging hookers and whipping Justine.

Best thing about this film (apart from the crazy storyline) was that any time you started to think it would get boring - it didn't! I thought things would slow down a lot once Paul got to London for his cure, but then, in the lift on the way up to his appointment, the lift broke down and trapped him with a nurse until the moon rose, causing a werewolf rampage! I love these films!

It doesn't skimp on the gore and the only thing missing from the Mill Creek version is the nudity*, which you're not going to miss anyway if you watching an endless list of these films. Naschy's Mr Hyde was funny too, including the way he just exits the film without any fuss.

*I'm talking crap - it's also missing the opening credits.
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4/10
A big let down.
jacobjohntaylor128 April 2015
For a movie about Dr Jekyll and a were wolf I expected it to be a lot better. This is not a very well acted movie. Nor is it very well written. They could have lest let one character live. But no there had to have there tragic end. It was not very scary. It was a sequel to Dr Jekyll and Mr Hyde. It was a big let down. Don't get me wrong. If I had not seen this movie and some one told me it was no good. I would to trust them. And if you do not trust me o.k. But be warned I liked Dracula Vs Frankenstein. I liked Freddy vs Jason. I liked King Kong vs Godzilla. I can't wait for Batman vs Superman come out I think that will be great. I am open minded about these kind of mixed movie things. So consider your self warned.
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6/10
"I need pleasure... women... lots of women... different women!"
classicsoncall8 April 2020
Warning: Spoilers
I really need to get on this Paul Naschy bandwagon. Apparently he's done a series of pictures as the character Waldemar Daninsky, but this is the only one I've come across. I don't know if anyone else sees the resemblance, but to me he looks a little bit like a young John Belushi, without the facial hair of course. Naschy moves right in when the husband of the Justine character (Shirley Corrigan) is killed by a trio of thugs while visiting his parents' graves in Transylvania. Justine apparently didn't get all worked up about her husband being murdered, something that I can't figure out in stories like this, but of course you have to move on.

Naschy's great as the werewolf here, making no bones about his moonlit night transformations. Seeking a cure, his character and Justine travel to London to search out Dr. Jekyll (Jack Taylor), who may have the answer for Waldemar's hairy persona. Dr. Jekyll had a pretty elaborate lab set up, I have to admit. All those gadgets and gizmos looked pretty scientific. Too bad he had such a jealous assistant (Mirta MIller), who's idea of stabbing her boss in the back took on literal meaning. Not to be outdone, Waldemar gains the upper hand on Sandra, and she winds up impaled on a set of spikes.

I got the biggest kick out of the London disco scene, and couldn't help gaping in awe at all those dance floor participants. The club dancer put together a whirlwind of exaggerated body contortions, but there was one gal on the dance floor that outdid even her. Having cleared the night club following one of his werewolf turns, Waldemar stalks Justine to the attic of an old building, where he manages to finally put the bite on her. Clutching a revolver, Justine shoots the wolf man in the back a couple of times with no visible signs of bullet entry and no blood. However the story does have a happy ending, as the stricken Waldemar and Justine die hand in hand, a romantic finale if I ever saw one.
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4/10
A movie that's less than the sum of its parts
lemon_magic8 January 2013
Warning: Spoilers
I'm always up for a Paul Naschy film - he seemed to be the hardest working 3rd rate horror film lead of his era. I remember him playing 3 different characters in one of his earlier films, and here he has a go at playing both the Wolf Man AND Mr. Hyde.

Unfortunately, having hit upon the (admittedly derivative) idea of having two famous horror icons appear in the same film, neither the director, the screen writer, or Naschy himself seem to be able to do anything interesting with it, at least in the public domain version I saw. The werewolf rampages are strictly by the numbers, and all Hyde ever does is leer(OK,at one point he pushes a cripple into a river).

There's a weird side plot involving Dr.Jekyll's grandson and his girlfriend, who up and murders Jekyll at a crucial moment because she wants to use the "limitless power" of Jekyll's modified serum for evil instead of good (or is it because 'the deepest love can turn into the deepest hate'??) Apparently she didn't think things through, because all that gets her is impalement on some handy garden implements when she tries to boss Hyde around. (OK, that's TWO evil things Hyde does in the movie.) Anyway, every character here is dumber than a bag of hammers, and not one line of dialog rings true. This may be the fault of the dub, and I'm willing to concede that the original in Spanish might be somewhat better, but I have to judge what I'm watching, not some version of the film that might exist elsewhere. There's a numbing sameness and lack of dynamic range to the scenes, although nothing here is obviously crummy and incompetent and unpolished the way the worst Jesse Franco films can be.

Still, it's been amusing watching Naschy turn killer hair, a lantern jaw, huge black eyes, and a grand total of three expressions into what appeared to be a pretty ambitious film career. Barring catastrophe, I'll continue to take the time to watch any of his films I come across.
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7/10
Dr. Jekyll vs. the Werewolf (Cheezy Flicks)
trimbolicelia17 April 2021
Warning: Spoilers
OK Spanish-made (English-dubbed) horror film starring Paul Naschy (Jacinto Molino) as the werewolf Waldemar Daninsky. This time he saves a wealthy woman whose husband has just been murdered by robbers while on holiday in a most depressing looking place in Transylvania. The woman and Daninsky fall in love and she takes him back to England so her good friend Dr. Jekyll (a descendant of the original) can attempt to cure him of his hairy problem. The doc figures he can inject Daninsky with the Mr. Hyde formula and change him to Mr. Hyde, so the brute can fight off the werewolf curse and doc can inject the antidote, therefore solving both problems. His nurse is jealous of his friendship with the rich woman and throws a monkey wrench into the whole works. At 88 minutes it is pretty complete but Cheezy Flicks runs true to form and the quality of the DVD is only adequate. The film needs re-mastering. The cover art is good. Hopefully someday a pristine, complete version will be released.
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8/10
The epitome of Spanish horror and the madness of Paul Naschy
naschy-163-37649725 April 2020
Let's face it. Horror fans either appreciate Paul Naschy's art or they just comment on the bad dubbing and complain about the pacing. Naschy's films beat with the heart of the Universal horrors that he was weaned upon and that inspired him to write his first screenplay for Mark of the Wolfman (Frankenstein's Bloody Terror in the US). Saddled with budgetary restrictions, political upheaval in Spain and sometimes turbulent relationships with directors, Naschy's best films are a journey to a different time and cinema ethos, conferring a powerful sense of place and atmosphere to stories rich with horror and pathos. This film plays in two parts, the first half focusing on Naschy's reclusive lycanthrope Waldemar Daninsky and the development of his love interest, the second half detailing Dr Jekyll's attempts to have Waldemar's transformation to Mr Hyde overtake his even more intense animal instincts. The scenes of Naschy as Mr Hyde prowling through Soho's seedy district while he offs strippers and prostitutes are among some of the more unsavory ever filmed, to the extent of him drooling and panting while he chokes one of them with their own stocking. Many today will find the somewhat graphic scenes of torture, including Dr Jekyll's jealous assistant garroting Naschy's naked lover, to be excessive in a very different way than the onslaught of graphic special effects offered up by today's horror cinema. The film's conclusion proves that Naschy is a romantic at heart, as in nearly all of his horror films he is misunderstood and the finale is frequently more tragic than frightening. Of course, the film has much better impact in its original language with subtitles, as the American version is awkwardly dubbed conferring an amateurish feel which is not part of the original production. To my knowledge, there is no licensed release of this film available domestically, so cropped and poorly dubbed copies will have to suffice.
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7/10
Paul Naschy portrays an especially feral-looking, golden-eyed Hyde!
Weirdling_Wolf2 June 2021
While it is fair to say that Dr. Jekyll Vs. The Werewolf' isn't the most successful collaboration between writer Naschy & film-maker Klimovsky its central premise, while spectacularly lurid, is a good one, and the venerable Naschy applies his singular vigour to the dual roles of his iconic Waldemar Daninski and by portraying an especially feral-looking, golden-eyed Hyde!

Both the script's lack of invention and the bizarre anachronistic quality to 'Dr. Jekyll Vs. The Werewolf' hinder it from being a Gothic schlock classic. While wealthy hard-headed Hungarian businessman Imrie Kosta(Jose Marco)and his bombshell wife Justine (Shirley Corrigan) visit his parents final remains in an especially spooky, dilapidated cemetery situated no less spookily very close to the greatly feared Castle home to anguished, romantically-inlined Lycanthrope, the tight roll-neck sporting Waldemar Daninsky, and in the grisly gnashing of his brawny bicuspids the action returns to swinging London where urbane Dr. Jekyll (Jack Taylor) heir to his infamous ancestors malevolent serum stoically attempts to cure the beleaguered Waldemar but inadvertently encouraging a diabolical metaphysical battle of primordial wills between Daninski's relentless Lycanthropic tendencies and the indomitable will of the preternaturally evil Mr. Hyde!

While Naschy once again delivers another hair-raisingly haunted performance as the diabolically-inclined Daninsky, it is his howlingly hideous transfiguration into the hateful Hyde that engenders the greatest frisson of fear in Klimovsky's uneven monster mash up, but for all its absurdity it remains a fitfully fun movie with another credible, blissfully boisterous werewolf workout for the hirsute Naschy and once again ace composer Antón García Abril creates a marvellously moody score.
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I need pleasure... women... lots of women... different women!
lastliberal8 November 2010
The sixth of the 13 Waldemar Daninsky / Wolfman films by Paul Naschy. In this film he plays three roles. He is also Mr. Hyde.

In this tale, the Count saves Justine (Shirley Corrigan) from the clutches of three slobbering rapists who have just murdered her husband. He consoles the grieving widow, and they spirit off to London just ahead of an angry mob of villagers. They seek out Dr. Jekyll (Jack Taylor) to cure his lycanthropy.

Unfortunately, a nurse (Marisol Delgado) and a streetwalker (María Luisa Tovar) are ravaged by the werewolf before the formula can be perfected.

Things take a nasty turn and the Count is turned into Mr. Hyde. He is even more evil than the werewolf.

The story ends as all werewolf movies do, leaving you to wonder how he will return seven more times.
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10/10
No One Does Mashups Like Naschy
accattone7420 July 2015
Warning: Spoilers
What's your Jekyll doing in my Wolfman? Hey! Get your Wolfman out of my Jekyll! Naschy found a way to bring these classic characters together for a film that's a hoot from start to finish. After saving a woman from being raped, Daninsky travels with her back to London, where she hopes to cure him of his lobo-curse via her connection to the grandson of Dr. Jekyll. Unfortunately (but fortunately for us), not everything goes as planned with the cure, and Waldemar is now additionally burdened with a split personality, giving him a final MPD count of 3. The added persona's traits are that of a sadistic beast, though unlike the curse of the werewolf, Waldemar's Mr. Hyde has the sexual appetite of a Spring Break Co-Ed on amphetamines. Being both Hyde and the werewolf pretty much doubles the violence in this film, and the gore is fantastic. Naschy is having a glorious time playing the three roles, and that fact alone is enough to make this film fabulous. Mirta Miller, veteran of several Naschy films, is just marvelous here as a beautifully (and beautiful) sinister nurse.
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