La Venganza de los Monsters (1981) Online
The owner of a wax museum has an exhibit dedicated to the Munsters. When he uses robots that look like Herman and Granpa to pull a jewelry heist, everyone thinks that the real Herman and Grandpa did it. They must prove their innocence and uncover the real thieves.
Cast overview, first billed only: | |||
Fred Gwynne | - | Herman Munster | |
Al Lewis | - | Grandpa Dracula | |
Yvonne De Carlo | - | Lily Munster (as Yvonne DeCarlo) | |
K.C. Martel | - | Eddie Munster | |
Jo McDonnell | - | Marilyn Munster | |
Bob Hastings | - | Phantom of the Opera | |
Peter Fox | - | Glen Boyle | |
Herb Voland | - | Police Chief Harry Boyle (as Herbert Voland) | |
Charles Macaulay | - | Police Commissioner | |
Colby Chester | - | Michael | |
Joseph Ruskin | - | Paulo | |
Sid Caesar | - | Dr. Dustin Diablo | |
Howard Morris | - | Igor | |
Ezra Stone | - | Dr. Lichtlighter | |
Michael McManus | - | Ralph |
Fred Gwynne insisted that original make-up artists Karl Silvera and Abe Haberman, who were both still working in the business, be brought aboard to make sure the vintage Munsters look was retained.
CBS was so nervous that this NBC made-for-television film would be a smash success that they scheduled a telecast of MGM's El mago de Oz (1939) opposite it. The new "Munster" film did not live up to expectations and was quickly forgotten.
Shots featuring the exterior of the Munster's home are footage from La herencia de los Munster (1966). Notice, the words 'England Or Bust' visible on the side of the Munster's Koach.
Bob Hastings, who provided the voice of the Raven in the original series (alternating with Mel Blanc) portrays Uncle Phantom of the Opera. Ezra Stone, who directed many of the original La familia Monster (1964) series, appears as Dr. Lightlighter.
When NBC approached Fred Gwynne to reprise his role as Herman Munster after fifteen years, he was initially uninterested. However, his second wife, Deb Gwynne, suggested that he accept the role and just ask the network for a large paycheck. Fred thought NBC would refuse, but they surprisingly agreed, and thus he accepted the role.
Vic Mizzy was asked to compose the music for La familia Monster (1964) after he'd begun work on La familia Addams (1964), so he declined, perceiving it as a conflict of interest. In a 2004 interview with The Archive of American Television, Mizzy said he agreed to score this film because "the guys who wrote it liked me, so I did it." He went on to call his work on the movie "a throwaway, strictly a fee."
There are multiple references to the Chaneys in this made-for-TV movie:
- Quasimodo is among the figures in the wax museum, a role played by Lon Chaney in El jorobado de Notre Dame (1923)
- Cousin Phantom is a humorous reference to the titular character in El fantasma de la ópera (1925), also played by Chaney
- The Wolf Man is among the figures in the wax museum, a role played by Chaney's son, Lon Chaney Jr., in multiple classic Universal horror films starting with El hombre lobo (1941)
This television movie is the final film directed by Don Weis. He continued to direct many television episodes of various television series throughout his career. He died on July 26, 2000 (age 78).
Writers Arthur Alsberg & Don Nelson also wrote The ABC Saturday Superstar Movie: The Mini-Munsters (1973), an animated Munsters film which aired almost a decade earlier.
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