PHENOMENALITY: *marvelous*
MYTHICITY: *poor*
FRYEAN MYTHOS: *adventure*
FRYEAN MYTHOS: *adventure*
CAMPBELLIAN FUNCTION: *metaphysical* AZTEC REVENGE, though plagued by the same low budget and amateur actors as ACADEMY OF DOOM, is an improvement over the entry from seven years previous. Though the fights are nothing special, at least they look to have been professionally blocked out. Yet REVENGE seems to have been the last moviemaking hurrah for writer-producer Jeffrey Uhlmann, not to mention his last acting credit. Amusingly, Uhlmann played all the nasty nemeses in this series: the evil mummy in the 2007 movie, the evil mastermind of the 2008 follow-up, and the evil decapitated head of an Aztec chieftain here. According to IMDB, REVENGE is almost the last credit for Mil Mascaras, though I can't tell whether he decisively retired from wrestling or from filmmaking. Perhaps scripter Uhlmann intuited that REVENGE might be his last shot at capturing the cheese-appeal of the luchador-movies. Not only does the main menace of the film suggest the Aztec menace of the 1963 Mex-horror film THE LIVING HEAD, the Aztec Chief (never called anything else) possesses, like his 1963 kinsman, the power to manipulate others mentally. After the decapitated do-badder is unearthed in an archeological dig, he takes control of a couple of college students to serve him. Then he branches out, forcing athletes to dress up like ninjas and to attack wrestlers-- reason being, the Chief wants to transplant his head onto the healthy body of a champion fighter. This academic angle is of course the way Uhlmann once more worked things out so that the majority of the movie's scenes take place on a campus, whether it's the same one utilized in ACADEMY or not. Further, throughout the movie Mil Mascaras' confidantes on campus are a security guard (the worst actor, btw), a professor known only as The Professor, and a doctor known as Ruth. No, not that one, although this middle-aged, somewhat frumpy woman supplies Mil with his only romantic interest in the film, as she comes on to him in one scene. Mil doesn't take her up on her offer, but maybe he thinks about it. And maybe that's why the Chief, with a college full of hot girls, chooses Ruth to be his Aztec queen-- just to twist his enemy's tail, as it were.
Speaking of pulchritude, ACADEMY barely rated in that category, since almost all the female characters there went around clad in heavy masks and wrestling-gear. Hardly in line with Mexican movies of the era being emulated, since the babe-factor usually dominated, sometimes pairing aging wrestlers with very young heroines. But Uhlmann throws in a pleasingly gratuitous scene in which the Chief takes control of a whole sorority, boosts their strength somewhat (says the script), and has these nightgowned beauties try to overpower Mil, who's too gallant to hit back. At the very end, when the Chief can't take possession of Mil's body, he fits his head atop a ramshackle robot form that MUST be a callback to THE ROBOT VS. THE AZTEC MUMMY. Yet the greatest suspense in the movie takes place not when Mil Mascaras is in physical danger, but when he's accused of participating in a kidnapping, and the suspicious cops inform the hero that he's under arrest and will have to take off his mask for their records. The goodguy wrestler escapes this fate, just as the real performer was never unmasked in the ring. But it's the sort of suspense I've rarely seen even in the "real" luchador movies.
Speaking of pulchritude, ACADEMY barely rated in that category, since almost all the female characters there went around clad in heavy masks and wrestling-gear. Hardly in line with Mexican movies of the era being emulated, since the babe-factor usually dominated, sometimes pairing aging wrestlers with very young heroines. But Uhlmann throws in a pleasingly gratuitous scene in which the Chief takes control of a whole sorority, boosts their strength somewhat (says the script), and has these nightgowned beauties try to overpower Mil, who's too gallant to hit back. At the very end, when the Chief can't take possession of Mil's body, he fits his head atop a ramshackle robot form that MUST be a callback to THE ROBOT VS. THE AZTEC MUMMY. Yet the greatest suspense in the movie takes place not when Mil Mascaras is in physical danger, but when he's accused of participating in a kidnapping, and the suspicious cops inform the hero that he's under arrest and will have to take off his mask for their records. The goodguy wrestler escapes this fate, just as the real performer was never unmasked in the ring. But it's the sort of suspense I've rarely seen even in the "real" luchador movies.