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La Venganza de los Monsters (1981) Online

La Venganza de los Monsters (1981) Online
Original Title :
The Munstersu0027 Revenge
Genre :
Movie / Comedy / Crime / Family / Fantasy / Horror / Sci-Fi
Year :
1981
Directror :
Don Weis
Cast :
Fred Gwynne,Yvonne De Carlo,Al Lewis
Writer :
Norm Liebmann,Ed Haas
Type :
Movie
Time :
1h 36min
Rating :
6.2/10
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 Fred Gwynne - Herman Munster
Al Lewis Al Lewis - Grandpa Dracula
Yvonne De Carlo Yvonne De Carlo - Lily Munster (as Yvonne DeCarlo)
K.C. Martel K.C. Martel - Eddie Munster
Jo McDonnell Jo McDonnell - Marilyn Munster
Bob Hastings Bob Hastings - Phantom of the Opera
Peter Fox Peter Fox - Glen Boyle
Herb Voland Herb Voland - Police Chief Harry Boyle (as Herbert Voland)
Charles Macaulay Charles Macaulay - Police Commissioner
Colby Chester Colby Chester - Michael
Joseph Ruskin Joseph Ruskin - Paulo
Sid Caesar Sid Caesar - Dr. Dustin Diablo
Howard Morris Howard Morris - Igor
Ezra Stone Ezra Stone - Dr. Lichtlighter
Michael McManus 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.


User reviews

Usic

Usic

They've goofed it again. Even though Fred Gwynne detested what his old Herman Munster role did to the rest of his career, he agreed to reprise this wonderful character for an astronomical sum of money. Much to his surprise, the producers were willing to pay it - though as it turned out, Gwynne got the better half of the bargain. As a huge fan of the original MUNSTERS television show I can tell you this one hurts. That is, it's painfully unfunny to watch. I suppose it's better than no reunion at all, but what a shame it turned out so underwhelming.

For starters, the script is downright awful: A mad doctor (Sid Caesar - I'll deal with him later) has an army of monster robots, two of which resemble Herman and Grandpa (Al Lewis, also reprising his part). Sending these automatons out on random crime sprees, it isn't very long before they're mistaken for the real Herman and Grandpa Munster -- and our arrested heroes have to spend the rest of the movie convincing everyone that they're innocent, while trying to foil the doctor's plans.

Fred Gwynne and Al Lewis get the most screen time, which is a small solace, as their old jams together are the only thing worth staying tuned for. What very little satisfaction is squeezed from this revival is due to them. Just the same, they're visibly older and slower, and just don't seem to be as vital as they were on the show. This is certainly understandable, but what's not acceptable is that the jokes are terrible, and the glaring silence where a laugh track ought to be only alerts us to that fact. This brings me back to Sid Caesar, who is more annoying than funny, and adds absolutely nothing to the proceedings as "Dr. Diablo".

Yvonne De Carlo returns as Lily, but she's very under-used and that's probably all for the best. Since this was now the 1980's, the next mistake was in casting some new, "hip" modern-sounding actors to portray little Eddie and a new Marilyn. It would have been much more conceivable to cast the original Butch Patrick and Pat Priest as the now-older versions of their sixties characters. The modern music is also not very nostalgic for fans of the old show, and gets in the way. The feeling one gets from this lost opportunity is that those involved just missed the whole point of what made the original series so delightful to those of us who grew up loving it. Darn, Darn, Darn! ** out of ****
Der Bat

Der Bat

This movie is ridiculous! That's exactly what I like about this piece of "Guilty Pleasure". It is easy to condemn this movie for not including Pat Priest and Butch Patrick, the original Marilyn and Eddie. But look at the year and do the math. Pat Priest and Butch Patrick had long outgrown their parts! Time does that to young stars. Yvonne De Carlo, who re-prised her role as Lili, was pushing the Big 6-0 (even though she still looked good and was still the perfect "Lili").

It's a shame that Yvonne De Carlo wasn't given a larger part. Still, it was good to see Fred Gwynne and Al Lewis in the roles that made them so famous! During the 2 seasons that THE MUNSTERS was on prime time, it was the Gwynne/Lewis chemistry that made the series such a success. The rest of the cast were supporting cast members, not to say that they weren't needed. They were! The TV series wouldn't had survived as long as it did without them. Given the choice between Butch Patrick or Happy Derman (the original "Eddie"), the choice was too easy. Yvonne De Carlo was also the better choice over Joan Marshall.

Though this movie doesn't measure up to the original TV series, it still measures up nicely and is one of the better "reunuin" TV specials that plagued the boob-tube during the late 1970s/early 1980s.

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fetish

fetish

Following the success of the (awful) Gilligan's Island TV movie reruns, a number of TV movies were made in the 1980's reuniting casts from classic shows. Most of these movies completely missed the boat as far as recapturing the humor that made the shows so special. THE MUNSTERS REVENGE is among the most disappointing because it goes for a Laurel and Hardy-type comedy style that really wasn't in the original series. Yvonne De Carlo, a wonderful comedienne and essential to the series, is completely wasted - she has less time here in this 90 minute movie than she did in any single 30 minute episode. And since the roles of "Eddie" and "Marilyn" in this movie are nothing more than cameos, what was the point of making them younger and recasting them? With very little rewriting, they could have used Butch Patrick and Pat Priest. Although seeing some of the Munsters spooky relatives was a nice touch, I didn't enjoy Sid Caesar as the hammy mad scientist mainly because there's too much of him and not enough of the underused Munsters (ironically that very year, 1981, Caesar's old partner in comedy, Imogene Coca, was also inappropriately cast in a major part in a TV movie reunion RETURN OF THE BEVERLY HILLBILLIES). Another strange inexplicable bit at the beginning of the film has the Munster family represented as wax figures at a local horror wax museum. Why would they be in there when they are supposed to be a "typical" (if strange) American family, not famous monsters? This was the last Munsters project featuring the original cast in their roles, there was an awful revival of the series in the late 1980's with a completely new cast and a 1990's TV movie which featured DeCarlo, Lewis, Priest, and Patrick in cameo roles as a family dining.
Jan

Jan

A sad, sad sight indeed is The Munster's Revenge. The Munsters are brought back one last time(Fred Gywnne received a huge paycheck to come back to the role of Herman Munster)in this made-for-TV movie about a pair of wax replicas of Grandpa and Herman that are robots "terrorizing" the city as preparation for a robbery of a mummy's stash at an exhibit. With the police on their heels, the two elderly television icons try to find out who is actually behind the crimes in order to clear their names. We get to see them dress in drag as waitresses(a minor highpoint in the film), grandpa turns into a bat with attached wire a couple times(one time even flying to Transylvania with Herman somehow invoking his frequent flyer miles I guess), and a most annoying relative "the Phantom" constantly sings and breaks glass ad nausium! What is most sad is hard to pinpoint: is it that Gywnne(especially) and Al Lewis look so haggard in every scene and so indifferent to the material. Is it the hokey costumes of the robots that have that school production values look about them. Maybe it is the ridiculous script. Sid Caesar's crazy, mostly unfunny antics. Or perhaps it is seeing something which brought me joy and fond memories as a child being treated to a super K-Mart fashion makeover. At any even, the result is decidedly disappointing and silly even for Munster standards. As for the rest of the cast, Yvonne De Carlo is adequate in a most vacuous role(though showing more cleavage than usual for a woman of her years and experience). K. C. Martell makes an ever-so-not affable Eddie Munster. Jo McDonell is an attractive Marilyn. Bob Hastings as the aforementioned Phantom looks and acts and speaks in the most absurd manner. The film has a real cheap feel about it even for a made-for-TV movie.
xander

xander

What this film needs is a laugh track, but even with that we've got a missed opportunity on our hands. Still in all, it's a treat to see the family reunited (especially considering how much Fred Gwynne despised his role). It's still nice to see Herman and grandpa getting into those same old jams, but what's with that Eddie? Should have had Butch Patrick return as the now-grown son.
Fhois

Fhois

96 minutes of this is cruel..and I love the old Munster's. Yes, the plot is thing; yes the lines are trite; but whoever was at the helm of this was not a fan. There is so much 'intrigue' (and I use that word with great pause) that I wonder if it's an old Starsky & Hutch episode. I lost count of the number of times I noticed that makeup had missed a spot near the collar. Refusing to acknowledge that any time had passed since the mid-60's (ludicrous) the producers simply replace Marilyn & Eddie with younger actors. Why not let them grow and age? The addition of an Addam's Family style reunion does not add to the flavor of the Halloween Party.

Grandpa & Herman fly to Transylvania and back in a few hours (preposterous.) Sid Ceaser is the most, yes the most unbelievable character (I am including the bad robots) since he babbles an unwild combination of gibberish & yiddish but claims to be an ancient Arabic ruler. And yes, it looks like the laugh track is missing. In fact, there are several spots where there is dead air, as if the laugh track was to be inserted later. The actors seem to wait on the faux audience. It's not laughable; it's sad. Oh, and the best part! Yvonne DeCarlo has a line that just goes to show you how out of touch the writers and producers were. Marilyn says something like: "Where could Uncle Herman and Grandpa be? They could have been in an accident. They could have been hit by a car...or a train!" Lily says responds with something like: "You're Uncle Herman will be here if he has to drag himself off the train track." What's amazing about this is: Yvonne DeCarlo's husband was a stuntman in the early 60's and lost a leg and was nearly killed in a train stunt. He never recovered and this financially devastated her family. (check out Biography's fantastic review of her life and career) This line could have been easily changed to be more sensitive to her.

If you are a real fan of the Munster's then you'll have to RENT this mess. It illustrates how some things are better left alone. Even with the (nearly) original cast, this is almost as bad as the attempted remake of the show a few years ago.
Global Progression

Global Progression

The Munsters Revenge was a nice return for the original family. I'm not a big fan of TV reunion movies in general but The Munsters Revenge was great.

Herman and Grandpa were back accused of a crime they didn't commit. They had to prove their innocence and there were some nice scenes along the way particularly when Herman and Grandpa were in the police station.

Oh yes, and there's a few villains in the film as well which adds to the enjoyment. This film did have similarities to Carry On Screaming from 1966 and it was just as amusing.

Now when is someone going to release this onto DVD?
Tat

Tat

I wrote this review 16 years ago as a freshman in high school, so please forgive me. I just re- found it while looking at my profile for the first time in years, but I thought I'd leave it up for fun. I still find the movie mildly amusing, but I wouldn't suggest it to anyone but dedicated fans of the Munsters (and even they might not like it).

-------- Original review: This movie has one of the cheesiest plots I have seen. For me, that's what makes it so awesome! Fred Gwynne and Al Lewis are very good at what they achieved in the original Munsters series. While there was less slapstick, they still worked wonderfully together "comedically." I wish Yvonne De Carlo, as Lily, would have had more plot involvement. She showed that she could do comedy in the original series, but it was mostly wasted in this movie. This movie also stars the great Sid Caesar, but sadly he doesn't have any interaction with Gwynne and Lewis. I think some better work could have come out of that.
Vojar

Vojar

Fred Gwynne, Al Lewis, Sid Caesar, and Yvonne De Carlo star in this funny, funny movie. The late Fred Gwynne is truly wonderful as Herman Munster who lives with Grandpa Munster (Al Lewis), wife Lily (Yvonne De Carlo), and his son and daughter. Sid Caesar is hilarious as the owner of a wax museum that has a whole section dedicated to the Munster family. When the wax figures of Herman and Grandpa begin to terrorize the town everyone blames the two. The two now have to clear their names before it's too late. You'll laugh out loud just like I did.
Cildorais

Cildorais

I'm a big fan of Classic TV. The majority of modern television shows is nothing compared to the timeless quality of Classic Television like "Bewitched," "Gilligan's Island," "Hogan's Heroes" or "The Munsters," so when I was a kid and first watched "The Munster's Revenge," one of the first of several television reunion movies from the Eighties, I was more than overjoyed and exceptionally impressed, but just a bit upset that neither Butch Patrick or Pat Priest (or even Beverly Owen – the original hotter more exemplary Marilyn) would be allowed to return. Childhood tends to mask quite a bit, and with adulthood, I can see the stuff my teenage past self failed to recognize. For one, the plot is horrible. The writers obviously have never seen the series. What made "The Munsters" so remarkable wasn't that it was a family of monsters; it was the fact that it was a family of monsters living like a regular family and dealing with ordinary problems like paying the bills, problems in school and the local crime rate. What affected the Munsters in their later movies was that they started having strange and bizarre adventures, and that's just what the movie suffers from. The plot about robotic wax figures terrorizing town is a very weak concept, and what makes it that much more weak is that the characters are weak shadows of themselves. Fred Gwynne, Al Lewis and Yvonne DeCarlo can wear the costumes again, but the spirit is gone. They just don't have the energy they used to in the original series plus their characters are a bit askew. Since when did Grandpa yodel to turn into a bat, and since when did the police much less the public accept the Munsters existence? One of the biggest recurring gags in the series was that everyone, police and gangster alike, winced or freaked out at the sight of Herman, but here, not so much. Even more odd, Eddie has aged a few years and looks nothing like he once did, and the actress playing Marilyn, as attractive as she is, looks as if she has gotten younger! Even worse, "Uncle Phantom Of The Opera" (played by Bob Hastings – the same actor who joined Mel Blanc in voicing the Raven) definitely belongs in the category of the Lazy Hollywood Writers Category; even the Wolfman and the Creature from the Black Lagoon were named Cousin Lester and Uncle Gilbert in the series! Over all, the movie is a nice look back, but the movie has too few laughs, and the best scenes (Howard Morris AKA Ernest T. Bass as Igor back in Transylvania is a cast coup!) are too few and far apart. The movie really drags on the scenes involving the police and Sid Caesar's criminal plot away from the house. The best thing that should have been done would have been taking several of the original scripts and putting them together as a movie. Simply put, "The Munster's Revenge" is proof you can't go home again.
Jeyn

Jeyn

The second and final "The Munsters" reunion film alas isn't half as solid and funny as the very enjoyable "Munster, Go Home!". While the plot has potential -- evil criminal mastermind Dr. Diablo (a frantically mugging Sid Caesar) creates robot lookalikes of Herman and Grandpa in order to pull off an elaborate heist -- the execution of said plot unfortunately leaves a good deal to be desired. Don Weis' flat direction crucially fails to capture the sweet charm and zany energy of the TV show. Instead the movie just plods along while the humor tends to feel both tired and forced. Harry L. Wolf's pedestrian cinematography, Vic Mizzy's mechanically bouncy score, and the shoddy make-up and (not so) special effects are also pretty blah and unremarkable. However, the cast do their best with the mediocre material: Fred Gwynne as lovably bumbling oaf Herman and Al Lewis as cranky old Grandpa play off each other well, Yvonne De Carlo is fine as usual, but isn't given much to do as Lily, Jo McDonnell makes for a cute and appealing Marilyn, Peter Fox contributes a likable performance as nice guy detective Glen, and Bob Hastings is a total robust hoot as a jolly opera-singing Phantom of the Opera. While not a complete disaster, this picture nonetheless lacks the essential spark to be anything more than a merely okay diversion.