The Mistresses of Dr. Jekyll (1964) Poster

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6/10
One of the Best Movies by Jess Franco
claudio_carvalho12 July 2014
The teenager Melissa (Agnès Spaak) travels from her small town in Austria with the Spanish Juan Manuel (José Rubio), who flirts with her, to the creepy castle of her uncle Dr. Conrad Jekyll (Marcelo Arroita- Jáuregui) in Holfen to spend Christmas with him and her aunt Inglud (Luisa Sala). Melissa's father Andros (Hugh White) has mysteriously died at the house of his brother Conrad sometime ago. Now she has just reached majority and Conrad intends to transfer the inheritance to her. Melissa is received by the servant Ciceron (Manuel Guitián) and she meets the strange Inglud. Then she meets Conrad in his laboratory, where he secretly carries out a sinister experiment. Melissa wants to get information about the death of her father but she is ignored by Conrad and Inglud. In the past, Andros and Inglud had a love affair and Conrad surprised them and killed Andros. Now, Conrad has turned Andros into a killer zombie controlled by ultrasonic radio wave and uses him to kill women with easy life. Inspector Klein (Pastor Serrador) is investigating the murders but has no clue. Will Melissa find the truth about her father?

"El secreto del Dr. Orloff" is one of the best movies by Jess Franco in the earlier stage of his uneven filmography. The story is simple but makes sense; the acting is not bad but unfortunately Marcelo Arroita- Jáuregui is weak for a villain; and the black and white cinematography and the camera angles are top-notch. The music score by Daniel White is perfect for the atmosphere of this film. My vote is six.

Title (Brazil): "As Amantes do Dr. Jekyll" ("The Mistresses of the Dr. Jejyll")
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6/10
Now, THIS is the Franco we admire!
Coventry1 May 2006
It's sometimes hard to keep your faith in Jess Franco when you've seen so much of his by-the-numbers horror and sleaze crap like I have... This notorious Spanish director made over 180 films in approximately 40 years. That's an average of more than four films each year, so it shouldn't be a surprise that really a lot of his movies are carelessly filmed and poorly edited routine jobs. However, his older films (let's say, everything released before 1972) are definite cinema classics and particularly the black & white Gothic horror try-outs of the early 60's are highly listed among my personal favorites. "Dr. Jekyll's Mistresses" is some sort of sequel to Franco's biggest success "The Awful Dr. Orloff", even though it mainly introduces new characters and an entirely different storyline. The uncanny castle setting was maintained, however, and so were the sinister atmosphere and inventive camera angles. Beautiful young orphan Melissa spends Christmas with her drunk aunt and scientist uncle up in their old, ramshackle castle. The uncle, Dr. Conrad Jekyll, can't dedicate much time to her as he inherited the secret formula of his tutor Dr. Orloff, which causes the dead to walk again and their actions can by controlled by ultrasonic noises. Jekyll resurrects his own dead brother (whom he killed for having an affair with his wife) and uses him to strangle random strip-bar dancers and prostitutes. Deceased Andros slowly begins to develop his own will again when he finds out that his poor and defenseless daughter stays at the castle. The script leaves too many questions unanswered (does Jekyll has anything against strippers or are they just test cases for his experiments?) but it's more coherent than most of Franco's other movies and there's a constant tension surrounding the film. Many sequences are stunningly beautiful and almost poetic, like when the "zombie" visits his own final resting place at the graveyard or when he pays nightly visits to his daughter's bedroom to look at her. The sound effects during the murder sequences are quite disturbing and the acting performances are overall very adequate. Even the dialogues are professionally written and that truly proves that "Dr. Jekyll's Mistresses" is one of Jess Franco's absolute finest achievements. Recommended!
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5/10
An above average thriller that suffers from Franco's work ethic melancholy
fertilecelluloid4 December 2005
Warning: Spoilers
"Dr. Orloff's Monster" is an interesting curio, a sequel, in name only, to "The Awful Dr. Orloff", my favourite Franco pic. Only once in this version is the name "Orloff" mentioned. The Howard Verson role here, another disgraced surgeon, is played by Marcelo Arroita-Jáuregui and his name is Dr. Jekyll. His "Morpho" equivalent, however, called "Andros" (Hugh Blanco), is a central character. Like Morpho, the blind manservant in "Awful", Andros kills for Jekyll and harbors a grudge or two.

The story is straightforward. Jekyll's niece Melissa (Agnes Spaak) travels to Austria to visit her uncle at his brooding castle. She finds an unhappy household (shades of "A Virgin Among The Living Dead") and a hostile reception from Jekyll who is all work and no play. But being a curious lass, Melissa takes time to explore the castle at night and meets up with Andros, who turns out to be her missing, deceased father, a tragic figure who lives in a state of walking death and is controlled by low level sonics.

Not as technically polished or atmospheric as "The Awful Dr. Orloff", it is still miles beyond most of the crap Franco churned out. Marcelo Arroita-Jáuregui, as Jekyll, is not a very charismatic male lead, and reminded me of a poor man's Sebastian Cabot (from TV's "Ghost Story"). Spaak as Melissa is very pretty and sexy and Blanco manages to elicit our sympathy for his shambling dead man.

Stylistically, the film is uneven, and the pacing is funereal at times, evidence of Franco's work ethic melancholy. The director's trademark jazz clubs, saucy strippers and camera zooming are in surplus here, as is his penchant for lurid close-ups of deformed faces (something that must be admired). I like the film, but it lacks energy and suffers from cloudy motivation and one-dimensional characterization.

Still worth seeing, though.
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Dr. Orloff's Monster
Michael_Elliott25 March 2008
Dr. Orloff's Monster (1964)

** (out of 4)

Jess Franco's sequel to The Awful Dr. Orloff is more of a remake than anything else. I watched the French version under the title The Mistress of Dr. Jekyll and this version features more nudity than the versions released in Spain and America. In the film. Dr. Fisherman (Marcelo Arroita Jauregui) kills his brother (Hugo Blanco) when he learns that he is having an affair with his wife. The doctor eventually brings his brother back as a zombie like creature to kill various women for him. I've never really been a fan of Franco's earlier period of Gothic horror films but you can certainly see that he has talent with these films. While I prefer his 70s work he does give this film a lot of style, which is something missing from those later films. The performance Blanco is pretty good but Jauregui comes off very boring and certainly can't fill the shoes of Howard Vernon from the previous film. The film is beautiful to look at and features a very nice score from Daniel White but in the end the film left me looking at my watch too much. The movie's pace is quite slow and all the stuff dealing with the police comes off boring. You can spot Franco during one scene. The DVD features some of the alternate scenes from the American and Spanish version of the film. I think I prefer the French scenes with the nudity as it makes the film stand out from countless other Gothic films of this period.
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4/10
Typically disjointed Franco effort
Leofwine_draca5 July 2016
Warning: Spoilers
Franco's cheap follow-up to THE AWFUL DR ORLOFF is a sequel in name only. A character named Dr Orloff does indeed appear, but only briefly at the beginning of the film, and from then on we spend time in the company of ANOTHER mad scientist, this time a guy named Fisherman. Even though he isn't a fisherman. It's that kind of film, and to make things even more confusing he seems to have been renamed Dr. Jekyll for some reason! This is fairly ludicrous, as he doesn't change into a monster or anything, instead he controls a "monster" in the same fashion as Dr. Orloff in the first film. Except that this time he's gone technological...

Confused by this? Just try watching the film, which is one of the most disjointed and confused messes that I've ever seen, all thanks to the inimitable (thank god!) and tireless work of director Jess Franco. Here, Franco's taste for the zoom lens starts to show itself with endless zooooms into the mouth of a telephone, eyes, and anything else that comes to mind. This film unsuccessfully tries to replicate the original by throwing in many similar elements, like a controlled murderer, a string of nightclub singers being murdered, and plenty of stalking down long lonely streets at night. Sadly all of these things aren't as fresh or exciting this time around, and due to the poor direction (compared to this, the original looks like a masterpiece!) this movie is a pretty difficult one to watch.

Plenty of it doesn't make sense, and the fact that it was made quickly and on the cheap is clear, with scant regard for reason or logic. "Jekyll" uses his dead brother to go on a killing spree and strangle a number of women - for what reason? (other than it makes for good exploitation, of course). He doesn't seem to get any satisfaction from it as he stays sitting in his car while this happens! The victims are all at the same nightclub, but otherwise they're unconnected. Perhaps he just enjoys the thought of pretty women getting murdered. You may think that he's doing this to get back at his adulteress wife, but as she is still alive and well at home, unharmed (but on the bottle), it seems to make little sense to the common viewer. Maybe something's lost in the dubbing, I don't know.

The acting is pretty bad, varying between wooden and extremely wooden. Arriota-Jauregui is no Howard Vernon, and his bearded scientist comes across as a bit of a bore rather than a frightener. Meanwhile, Agnas Spaak - the film's young lead - fails to display any conviction in her actions or line-reading, and is also very boring. Thankfully there is a silver-tongued guy around called Juan Manuel who is very amusing in a distinctly Spanish way, and a weirdo inspector who spends more time eyeing up the legs of the witnesses than investigating the case! The biggest disappointment is with Hugo Blanco as the film's "monster", Andros. Whereas Orloff's assistant in the first film was pretty creepy, especially with his bulging eyes, Andros is just a normal-looking guy with dry skin. Or scaled skin. The black and white nature of the film makes it hard to distinguish. Thus, Blanco is forced to act using his eyes only, no easy task, and his performance is more often than not unintentionally amusing rather than frightening. Sadly this means that there is no real horror in the movie. The actresses playing the female victims of Andros are also all unusually muted, and don't even scream when attacked - instead, they submit meekly to their attacker as he proceeds to strangle them!

The biggest problem with this movie, for me, is the pacing. For the first half, nay two-thirds, nothing much really happens to further the plot, and things got pretty boring at times. There's a lot of action towards the end which makes things more exciting, and cool scenes where people shoot at Andros only for the bullets to have no effect. You can guess what happens but it's interesting and watchable here nonetheless. One other thing I liked was the plot device of having the dead controlled by radio waves - not very realistic perhaps, but so ingenious that Franco later reused it for his film ATTACK OF THE ROBOTS. DR ORLOFF'S MONSTER is a disappointing Euro-horror which I would recommend only to die-hard fans who have some idea of what they're letting themselves in for. Everyone else, beware!
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7/10
When Franco still cared
goblinhairedguy29 November 2004
If you've suffered through some of the hack work Jess Franco cranked out in the last two decades, you may find it difficult to believe that he once took some pride in his craft and evinced a certain mastery of cinematic technique, as well as a modicum of discipline. "Dr Orloff's Monster" is a case in point. Despite the title, it bears no direct relation to the creepy and perverse opus, "The Awful Dr Orloff", which put the director on the map back in the early 60s. However, it shares the same doom-laden aura -- with the expected (but always riveting) kinky asides -- that so resemble that earlier picture as well as the German Edgar Wallace 'krimi' series which was reaching its peak at the same time.

The picture is rife with carefully-executed camera angles and atmospherics, something that would become anathema to Franco's slash-and-burn methods of the 80s. The best scenes are reminiscent of (dare I say) Lewton and Franju. It builds up a strong pathos for the title character, thanks to a subtle, wordless portrayal that evokes Cesar in 'Cabinet of Dr Caligari' and Christiane in 'Eyes without a Face' (such homages were a Franco specialty). There is a particularly poignant sequence in which the zombie stumbles about near his own tombstone in a bleak, wintry cemetery. No matter what depths Franco's movies plunged to, they always offered a few wonderfully oddball cabaret scenes in smoky jazz or rock bars, and this is no exception. One singer performs a wacky, rhythmic Latin ditty that must have sparked the imagination of the members of the retro band 'Les Rita Mitsouko'. (These cabaret scenes were a welcome staple of the Euro-thriller genre of the 60s, also perking up the krimi series, several of the campier works of the Italian Gothic revival, and especially the outlaw melodramas of Jose Benazeraf.)

There are already foreshadowings of the director's latter-day carelessness -- a few too many zooms, cutting from the middle of one scene to another, and a general neglect of motivation. And, of course, he'd end up doing the revenge plot to death. But overall, this one (along with the much more perverse 'Sadistic Baron von Klaus') comes highly recommended for Franco skeptics and genre fans alike. Surprisingly, this film was immediately followed by his magnum opus, the delirious 'Succubus' (aka 'Necronomicon'), which in its pseudo-sophisticated Radley-Metzger-like style is miles removed from the Gothic horror of his early work.
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5/10
"He watched us like a green eyed cat"
hwg1957-102-26570410 September 2021
Warning: Spoilers
Nothing to do with Dr. Jekyll (or even Mr. Hyde) but a variation on the Dr Orloff universe (with a nod to Dr. Caligari) this is a good looking film, lensed in atmospheric black and white but mainly unsurprising and unexciting. I liked Luisa Sala as the aging wife Ingrid and Pastor Serrador as the mannered police inspector Klein but otherwise the cast was ordinary. The main problem is that there seemed no reason for the series of killings made by the sound controlled (!) Andros. A tolerable movie, and prolific director Jess Franco did make worse films. Much worse.
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6/10
DR. ORLOFF'S MONSTER (Jesus Franco, 1964) **1/2
Bunuel19767 May 2011
The second "Orloff" movie is apparently unrelated to the first (a re-acquaintance with which will follow): in fact, this name is omnipresent throughout Franco's filmography; anyway, it is more or less on the same level of THE SADISTIC BARON VON KLAUS (1962) – even if I watched ORLOFF in English rather than French (or, for that matter, the original Spanish language). Again, Franco shows to be fairly adept with genre conventions and even manages to blend them relatively easily with a modern-day setting – still, he cannot help being himself and resist incorporating nightclub performances (in fact, this rather lazily makes the artistes themselves the victims so that we get a song every 20 minutes or so!) and, inevitably, erotic overtones.

Incidentally, Howard Vernon (the actor most associated with the Orloff role) is sorely missed here – the character himself is only of secondary importance and appears very briefly – but the memorable Morpho figure, a disfigured zombie-like creature obeying its master's will (not unlike Cesare from the German Expressionist landmark THE CABINET OF DR. CALIGARI {1920}), is now assumed by Andros. The latter – played by Hugo Blanco, the villainous latest member of the Von Klaus family and whose brooding good looks suit his mute stalker here – is perversely turned into a monster (hence the title, though the print actually bears the absurd moniker DR. JEKYLL'S MISTRESSES - which would, in any case, have better suited Walerian Borowczyk's masterful 1981 film, DOCTEUR JEKYLL ET LES FEMMES!) by his own scientist brother (Vernon's bearded, rather gruff replacement and saddled with the peculiar surname of Fisherman) when he catches him in bed with his own wife (she, of course, also pays for her infidelity by being driven to the bottle).

However, the plot this time around is decidedly contrived: we never learn why Andros (who sleeps upright in a class cage, as Cesare himself did albeit in a wooden-box) is sent on a murderous rampage – after being revived, and subsequently controlled, by sound-waves – every once in a while (most effectively when he nonchalantly moves through a crowded nightspot following yet another attack). The "Digitally Obsessed" website review suggests the reason for the various killings is because Fisherman wanted to get even with his spouse…but this is hardly EYES WIDE SHUT (1999), is it?! Similarly, the heroine – the monster's daughter, whom she believed was dead and buried (at one point, he even visits his own grave!) – turns up to stay with the central family only so that we get the obligatory damsel-in-distress and add an admittedly refreshing touch of pathos to Andros' condition; Agnes Spaak, sister of the more famous Catherine(!), appears in this part. On the other hand, the girl's bland male counterpart is extremely annoying, and the presence of the Police basically only serves to keep the audience abreast of the villains' eventual apprehension.
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5/10
Dr. Orloff's Monster!
BandSAboutMovies13 February 2022
Warning: Spoilers
Jess Franco had enough money for film stock and some of the cast, the rest of this movie was made thanks to the kindness of others. And this time, the shadoe of Dr. Orloff has been cast on Doctor Conrad Jekyll, one of his students, who has been senyt the secrets of using ultrasound to animate his robotic creation, which is really his brother Andros who he murdered after discovering that he was cucking him with his wife. So what does he do? Uses the robot creature to hunt down his ex-lovers and strangle them.

Yes, it's dream-logic or more to the point, Franco logic.

An example: the robot knows who to kill based on the necklaces that Dr. Jekyll gives to these nightclub women. Inside is a radio transmitter giving orders to kill, baby, kill.

Also known as The Mistresses of Dr. Jekyll, The Secret of Dr. Orloff and Dr. Orloff's Monster Brides, this only hints at the nighclub scenes of later Franco, as well as the jazz music moments which threaten to obscure the story and take over the film.

Also, a Christmas movie.
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7/10
Franco Meets Blanco Again
ferbs5410 February 2011
Warning: Spoilers
Although the 1964 Jess Franco offering "Dr. Orloff's Monster" is commonly thought of as a sequel to his classic film "The Awful Dr. Orloff," released two years earlier, it strikes this viewer as more of a remake than a continuation. Howard Vernon does not appear in "DOM" as Orloff, nor does his human-robot brother, Morpho. In the second film, Dr. Conrad Jekyll (the brother of Henry, perhaps?) learns how to turn his dead brother, Andros (who he had murdered for philandering with his wife, just as Orloff had done), into a human robot. He gleans this invaluable info from a dying scientist who looks a bit like Howard Vernon and who the viewer infers must be Orloff himself. Jekyll (played by Marcelo Arroita-Jauregui, an actor who makes his character as difficult to like as his own name is to pronounce!) then uses his brother-robot to do his dirty work; namely, slaying various women about town. In a scenario strikingly similar to the setup in the following year's Cybernauts episode of "The Avengers," he gives these women a necklace containing an ultrasonic device that Andros homes in on. ("The Avengers" substituted a pen.) But trouble looms for the bad doctor when his pretty niece, appealingly played by Agnes Spaak, drops by with her new beau for a Xmas visit.... Though plotwise very similar to the first Orloff outing, this "sequel" also has much in common with another Franco film that I recently saw, 1962's "The Sadistic Baron von Klaus." Both films take place in the fictitious Austrian town of Holfen, feature surprisingly imaginative direction by Franco as well as stunning B&W cinematography, center on the police investigation of the various homicides, showcase some truly outre music from Daniel White, utilize the same bizarre-looking castle, and, of course, star Hugo Blanco in the titular role. "DOM" ups the ante a bit by throwing in a few more musical numbers and more topless scenes, and also treats the viewer to such striking sequences as Jekyll's visit to an opium den and Andros' visit to the local cemetery. The picture as a whole looks terrific, is well acted and makes perfect sense, ultimately; what a difference between these early to mid-'60s Franco films and the rest of his humongous oeuvre (around 190 films, as of this date!)! Hard to believe that this artful piece of horror was done by the same man who later gave us "The Devil Came From Akasava"....
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8/10
Nice gothic horror movie with early touches of Jesus Franco's style
tim_age14 April 2003
Although made on a shoestring budget and as a sequel to The Awfull Dr. Orloff, this is a very enjoyable flick and a fine example of early Southern European horror. It's actually better than it's predecessor.

The plot is not real important (it contains a zombie-like creature, a castle and a mad scientist). What makes this movie is the mood, the often beautiful camera-angles, the art direction and the hints of later Franco movies.

For example, there's several scenes with women performing, often in erotic scenes, with men watching - which is exactly the kind of voyeuristic cinema Franco would turn to in later years (Vampyros Lesbos, Demoniac).

There's - of course - quite some nudity, which must have been considered quite risque in 1964. And there's a small cameo for the director himself, as a pianist who seems to be blind.....

Also of interest is the use of electronic devices used to make the zombie a murderous weapon, they give a strange effect to the movie and reminded me of early 50's sci-fi B-movies.

All in all, recommended for Franco fans and b/w horrormovie fans. If you've never seen a Franco I suggest starting with Vampyros Lesbos or Female Vampire.
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7/10
Atmospheric and Enjoyably Macabre Early Franco
Witchfinder-General-66624 February 2010
Warning: Spoilers
The incredibly prolific Spanish Exploitation deity Jess Franco made his greatest films in the early days of his impressive career, and the series of 'Dr. Orloff' films are arguably his most essential creation. My choice for Franco's most brilliant achievements are the 1962 original "Gritos En La Noche" ("The Awful Dr. Orloff") and the 1966 second sequel, "Miss Muerte" ("The Diabolical Dr. Z."). While this first 'Orloff' sequel, "El Segreto Del Dr. Orloff" (aka. "The Secret of Dr. Orloff" / "Dr. Orloff's Monster" / "Dr. Jeckyll's Mistresses") of 1964 isn't nearly as good as the two aforementioned films it is yet another wonderfully atmospheric and macabre mad-science-themed Gothic gem, that no Franco fan could possibly afford to miss. Sadly, this film doesn't star Franco's Nr. 1 leading man Howard Vernon, but the full-bearded Marcelo Arroita-Jáuregui, who also had a role in "Miss Muerte", also does fine in the role of the mad scientist Dr. Conrad Fisherman (credited as Dr. Conrad Jeckyll on IMDb).

***SPOILERS!*** "El Segreto Del Dr. Orloff" is set in my home country Austria. The beautiful orphaned girl Melissa (Agnès Spaak) is visiting her scientist uncle Dr. Conrad Jeckyll (Marcelo Arroita-Jáuregui) and his drunk wife Ingrid (Luisa Sala) in their eerie castle over the Christmas holidays. Along with his mentor Dr. Orloff, Dr. Fisherman has been developing a manner of how to control the minds of animals and human beings with the help of sound. What young Melissa does not know, is that her mad uncle keeps her late father (whom he once murdered for having an affair with his, then beautiful, wife) as a zombie slave. Using the mind-control methods developed by Dr. Orloff and himself, the mad scientist forces his late brother to strangle a bunch of strippers, prostitutes and other sexy women... Luckily for Melissa, she isn't quite alone in this dangerous situation since a lovesick fellow student, the Spaniard Juan Manuel (Pepe Rubio), has followed the young beauty to the small village...

The eerie castle setting and Franco's wonderfully atmospheric black and white cinematography give "The Secret of Dr. Orloff" a wonderfully uncanny mood. The film is creepy and macabre, and, as the other 'Orloff' films it is a milestone in European Exploitation/Sleaze-Horror. Many of the sexy female cast members get topless and even naked, which was definitely not the standard in the first half of the 60s. As the other "Orloff" films, the film also includes some sadistic perversions, which, again wasn't quite the standard (though it began to be around the time). As fun this film is to watch, one has to say that it isn't entirely flawless. "The Secret of Dr. Orloff" often doesn't make sense. Unlike "The Awful Dr. Orloff" and "The Diabolical Dr. Z", for example, this film doesn't give us a reason why its villain commits his evil deeds. For one reason or another, Dr. Fisherman uses his zombie slave brother to kill seductive beauties. But for what reason? It cannot be for scientific reasons, because they don't keep the bodies. And if it was out of sadistic perversions, wouldn't he want to be present during the killings? These inconsistencies are in no way lessening the fun, however. "El Segreto Del Dr. Orloff" isn't Jess Franco's best film, but it is a nice example for the atmospheric films from his golden age. Recommended to my fellow fans of Eurohorror and Jess Franco in particular.
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7/10
Moody and atmospheric Spanish/French terror movie by Stajanovist filmmaker Jess Frank
ma-cortes15 June 2022
Nice Franco film revolving around a nutty doctor , Orloff , aka Jekyll , who sends his disfigured monster to attack beautiful women from nightclubs . It begins with the gorgeous teen Melissa (Agnès Spaak) travels from Austria and meets the Spanish Juan Manuel (Pepe Rubio) , who flirts with her , and going to the mysterious house of her uncle Dr. Conrad Jekyll (Marcelo Arroita-Jáuregui) in Holfen to spend Christmas with him , while he intends to transfer the inheritance to her . There Melissa meets the burnt-out and bittered aunt Inglud (Luisa Sala) who has dark secrets , too . Meantime, a police inspector (Pastor Serrador) and underlings (José Truchado, Ramón Lillo) to discover the real culprit , by investigating the complex cases about killed women and going after some suspicious people . Thanks to the help his girlfriend , the young Juan Manuel ((José Rubio or Pepe Rubio) finds out the prime suspect , who results to be Dr. Conrad Jekyll (Marcelo Arroita-Jáuregui) or Dr. Orloff , assisted by a horrific servant (Hugo Blanco who has a decent make-up) to execute his murderous schemes .

Austerily wonderful horror film about an ordinary Franco plot , as a mad scientist creates an ominous monster , being currently helped by the creepy servant , a deformed and hideous monstrosity . It contains thrills , chills , haunting poetic fantasy and deemed to be one of the first movies of the ¨Spanish Fantaterror¨ . In this enjoyable tale titled ¨The Orloff's secret¨ as well as the former eerie flick ¨The awful Dr Orloff¨, Franco established his uniquely poetic and visually striking style , though imitating to classy "Eyes Without A Face" (1960) , the masterpiece directed by George Franju , while in ¨The Awful Dr. Orlof¨(1962) by Franco himself , Orloff removes the faces of gorgeous girls and attempts to graft them onto the ruined head of his disfiguring daughter . This decent Spanish/French co-production is generally characterized by unforgettable images that owed a great deal to early cinema in general and German Expressionism in particular and turns out to be a symbolic attack on the ethics of science . Although the film passed European censors upon its original release in 1964 , the disturbing attacks and erotic scenes still caused controversy , existing a double version , both , a light Spanish and another hard French one . Nice acting by sympathetic and wonderful Agnès Spaak ; excellent and eerie Hugo Blanco as Andros a monster turned into a killer zombie controlled by ultrasonic radio wave , fine Marcelo Arroita-Jáuregui as a brilliant and demented researcher/scientific/surgeon haunted by past tragedy and likeable Pepe Rubio as the brave boyfriend . And a lot of familar Spanish faces giving attractive support cast , such as : Perla Cristal , Pastor Serrador , José Truchado , Ramon Lillo, Marta Reves , Manuel Guitián , Maribel Hidalgo , Julio Infiesta , Rafael Hernández . And brief appearance , as usual , by Jesus Franco or Jess Frank as a pianist at a bar .

Tenth film of the prolific writer/producer/director Jesús Franco , considered to be one of the best films in his first period . Well produced but in short budget by Leo Films , Nueva Films S. A. (Spain) and the French company run by Daniel and Marious Lesoeur : Eurocine . Stunningly filmed in black and white by cameraman Alfonso Nieva , using continuous lights , shades and expressionist darkness . Shot on location in San Martín de Valdeiglesias, Castillo de la Coracera , Madrid, Spain , posing as the fictitious French town of Hartog . This vintage terror motion picture , a classic in some circles , was well directed by Jesús Franco who never considered the film to be a horror story, but instead felt it was tale of "anguish" . Franco is really influenced by ¨Eyes without a face¨, B-movies about Detectives or Noir Films , German expressionism from Cabinet Dr Caligari , and the Universal Terror . Initial releases of the film were met with negative reactions from film critics , while the general critical reaction had been poor , however , today being considered to be a pretty good fim.

The Orloff character as a mad doctor who tries to use skin of murdered women to repair his beloved daughter's fire-scarred face and whose role subsequently to show up in various flicks starring a long saga , using the same shots in more than one film ; some of his actors relate how they they were hired for one film and later saw their name in two or more different one . Orloff is often assisted by Morpho , Andros-lookalike, who delights in killing his victims and sadistic practices . Orloff was habitually played by Howard Vernon who initiated in ¨Gritos en la Noche (1962) , the best of all them , also titled "The Awful Dr. Orlof" . It's followed by El Secreto del Dr. Orloff (1964) aka "The Mistresses of Dr. Jekyll" - USA . It's gone on by " Orloff y el hombre invisible (1970) aka "Dr. Orloff's Invisible Monster" , ¨Ojos siniestros de Doctor Orloff¨(1973) . Furthermore , El enigma Del Ataúd (1969) aka "Only a Coffin" and El Siniestro doctor Orloff (1984) aka "The Sinister Dr. Orloff . Finally in ¨Faceless¨ or Depredadores de Noche¨(1987) Orloff appears as a secondary role also performed by Howard Vernon.
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6/10
Some Strange Franco
gavin69425 April 2013
A mad scientist creates a hideous monster to carry out his murderous plans.

I watched this on Netflix streaming, so I have to say I do not think they had the best copy possible. At times it seemed like a poor digital transfer from an old source. This did not really hurt the movie, but I just want to say if you want to see this film in its best light, you may want to look elsewhere. (Though, for all I know, no good copy exists.)

How this film ties together Orlof, Jekyll, an robots is a bit confusing, not helped in the least by the translation issue. I watched it as "Monster of Dr. Orlof", which seems to suggest a far different film than "The Mistresses of Dr. Jekyll", and yet they are one and the same.
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A pretty good example of Franco's early work
Mikel314 April 2013
Warning: Spoilers
Last night we watched 'The Mistresses of Dr. Jekyll'. It's a 1964 Jesus Franco film with his usual offbeat scenes and characters that I like. At least I'll say I liked them from this earlier point in his long career. One of his later films I recently viewed 'Killer Barbys' from 1996 was barely watchable. I tend to agree with those who say his early work was his best. Mr. Franco died very recently so my wife and I, watched this film in his memory.

One thing about the story struck me right off, there is no well known Dr. Jekyll to be found anywhere in this story. At least not the infamous Dr. Jekyll and Mr. Hyde we expect from the title. There is a Dr. with that same last name and no relation it seems. I have a feeling this last name was added later to help promote the movie as something it is not. I'm even doubtful there was more than one mistress in the story for this Dr. The title implies he had many. There is an alternate title 'Dr. Orloff's Monster' that's at least less misleading even if Dr. Orloff is only in a couple of very short scenes. Jekyll created the monster using Orloff's idea. I assume this is the same Orloff from Franco's other films. Orloff appeared to be on his deathbed at the beginning of the story telling his sonic sound secrets to Dr. Jekyll. Much later in the story we see Orloff looking healthy again; evidently he had a miraculous recovery off camera. Personally I think a more fitting title for this would have been 'The Zombie's Daughter'. Yeah, I guess that doesn't hold the titillation factor the "mistresses" title has. Hey, if Dracula and Frankenstein can have films about their "daughters" why not a zombie (wink)? But enough already about the title used. The plot is a bit slow moving and contains numerous excuses to show seductive women performing in night clubs. I expect that from Franco he does seem to appreciate the beauty of women. This was supposedly filmed in Spanish, if it was the dubbing to English was well done. The strange thing is it looked like the actors mouths were in time with the dubbed English words they were saying. I thought they had spoken the dialog in English and maybe it was later dubbed in Spanish for that market, just a thought, I have no facts on it. The zombie in the story is animated by some nonsense about using ultrahigh frequency sounds. I had to laugh at how they explained this like it made perfect sense. I also wondered why he wasn't being followed about by packs of dogs also hearing the sound. The victims are given a necklace that somehow attracts the monster. This is also explained by the police like it made perfect sense. The best part of the film was the zombie character; he was a cross between a slightly melting wax figure face and the mesmerized man in the silent 'The Cabinet of Dr. Caligari'. He has similar unblinking wide open eyes. The plot as I understood it involves a Dr. Conrad Jekyll who catches his supposedly beautiful young wife in bed with his better looking brother. His brother had been visiting and was seduced by Jekyll's wife. He kills his brother and makes it look like a failed operation he performed. He lets his own wife live after witnessing the murder, over the twenty or so years that follow she becomes a drunkard. We never learn why she hasn't told the police. Many years after the murder is when the film takes place. There is a brief flashback to what happened earlier. Dr. Jekyll now has a mistress on the side. Why he decides to use his zombie like creation for killing her and other night club performing women is beyond me. Oh, did I mention the zombie is the body of his dead brother? He somehow still looks relatively good considering how long he's been dead; he even walks through night clubs freely. At one point the Dr.'s college student niece comes to visit him. This is the daughter of the brother he killed 18 or 20 years earlier. She never knew her father since he died when she was young. She sees a photo of dear old dad for the first time. A photo her aunt still keeps of her lost lover. I guess her mom didn't keep any photos of him. After a few days the alcoholic aunt finally tells the niece the story of what really happened to her dad and of their brief passionate affair. The Zombie dad will not harm his daughter and even saves her life. Beats me how he recognizes this grown woman is his little daughter from years earlier. I won't spoil how it all ends except to say it's appropriate.

The film did hold our interest and was pretty much what I expected. I enjoyed it for what it was. I like the offbeat nature of Spanish and Italian made horror films. Early in his career Franco make some decent ones. I'll remember him for those.
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6/10
Monochrome Jess Franco creep fest ...
parry_na8 June 2017
Prolific director Jess Franco follows up his previous very successful Orloff films with this stylish black and white chiller. As is often the case with Franco, this production has been distributed around the world under several titles. Some refer to the title character as Orloff, and some as Jekyll. But who cares when we're having this much fun? The weakest link is the main man himself - whatever his name is! With Howard Vernon unavailable, Marcelo Arroita-Jáuregui steps in; he's avuncular, cuddly and friendly-faced, the polar opposite of Vernon.

Everything else is much as it often is in monochrome Jess Franco films. Stylish, arty, stark, polished, creepy and ever so slightly dull. The magnificent monster is far too handsome to warrant all the shrieking that greets his every appearance. Hugo Blancoplays zombie henchman Andros very well, and he's aided by sinister lighting and spooky music, but really, his 'hideousness' amounts to nothing more to bad acne.

This is an enjoyable ride, though, and a million miles away from the gleeful bargain-basement fetish-romps that Franco would soon be producing. Some seeds of his future obsessions are sown here, in what would become familiar character names (Andros, Melissa for example) and a lengthy exotic jazzy cabaret sequence.

Perhaps not quite up there with the earlier 'The Awful Doctor Orlof', this is nonetheless unsettling, riotous early picture from the notorious Uncle Jess.
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8/10
Another superior fright feature by Jess Franco
Woodyanders1 July 2009
Warning: Spoilers
Mysterious and reclusive evil scientist Dr. Conrad Fisherman (a solid turn by Marcelo Arroita-Jauregui) resurrects his slain brother Andros (well played by Hugo Blanco) as a lethal automaton so he can kill hookers and strippers. Fisherman's feisty niece Melissa (an endearingly spunky portrayal by the adorable Agnes Spaak) finds herself in considerable jeopardy when she visits Fisherman during the Christmas holiday. Writer/director Jess Franco effectively builds an intriguingly eerie mood, offers plenty of elegant visuals courtesy of Alfonso Nieva's crisp black and white cinematography, maintains a steady pace throughout, stages the murder set pieces with real style and panache, and even tosses in a generous sprinkling of tasty female nudity. Since this a Franco flick, we also get a few groovy nightclub scenes: One memorably sultry scene boasts a sizzling striptease by a hot blonde while another sequence features a lovely brunette belting out a snazzy jazz song (Franco has a nifty cameo as a pianist in one of these scenes!). Daniel White provides a neatly varied shivery and/or jaunty score. The dark themes of adultery and voyeurism give this picture an extra luridly compelling edge. Fisherman's moldy old castle rates as a perfectly creepy location. Moreover, Andros makes for a genuinely pitiable, if grotesque monster; the scenes between Andros and his daughter Melissa are surprisingly tender and touching. A worthy item.
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6/10
Gadzooks!
BA_Harrison12 October 2020
Jess Franco's The Mistresses of Dr. Jeckyll is a sequel of sorts to his 1962 horror The Awful Dr. Orlof, although the character of Orlof only appears in the opening scene, in which he reveals to his associate, Dr. Conrad Fisherman (Marcelo Arroita-Jáuregui), his secret theory about reanimating a corpse. Unless I missed something, there is no-one called Dr. Jeckyll in the film (perhaps Fisherman was called Jeckyll in the original language version; the copy I saw was dubbed).

When Fisherman learns that his wife Ingrid (Luisa Sala) has slept with his brother Andros (Hugo Blanco), the doctor slays his sibling by stabbing him with a scalpel, bringing him back from the dead as a robotic slave who can be controlled by ultrasonic transmissions. Conrad proceeds to punish wayward women by sending Andros out to kill, finding victims in the jazz clubs and bars of Holfen. Meanwhile, Conrad's niece Melissa (Agnès Spaak) arrives at Conrad's castle to take control of her inheritance, unaware that her dead father wanders the corridors at night.

Although not nearly as good as The Awful Dr. Orlof, this is still one of Franco's more coherent and therefore more enjoyable films, made before the effects of the psychedelic '60s took hold and he started to churn out incomprehensible garbage like Succubus and Nightmares Come At Night. The plot mightn't be the most inspired - it's formulaic 'tragic monster' fare - but Franco creates lots of contemporary gothic atmosphere, delivers some nice black and white imagery, and gives us a couple of cool jazzy musical numbers to boot.

5.5/10, rounded up to 6 for IMDb.
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6/10
An atmospherically composed mad scientist thriller from Jess Franco. Worth a look for fans of Spanish horror and Jess Franco
monell57911 September 2017
Warning: Spoilers
DR. ORLOFF'S MONSTER (Jess Franco, 1964) Redemption Films Blu-ray On screen title: LES MAITRESSES DU DR. JEKYLL/1964/B&W/84m/1920X1080p (1.66.1)

I noticed some details in this HD upgrade I hadn't noticed over the course of many viewings, in particular the rough textured, cracked, dry skin of Andros mentioned by Tim Lucas in the very informative commentary. The exotic-erotic dance performances in the special features folder are full strength Euro-trashy, more Eurocine than Jess Franco. It fails the Howard Hawks test of a good film--three good scenes, no bad scenes (some might term the Eurocine inserts as mediocre)-- but it's very much worth seeing as a progress report. The main problem I have with the film itself is the beefy Spanish actor who plays Dr. Fisherman/Jekyll, he's just a very bland performer and adds an unwelcome note of unintentional absurdity which breaks the somber mood. A horror film is as good as its villain and this has one of Franco's most uninteresting villains.

The Blu-ray presents a rather rough looking, incomplete print, with noticeable scratches and marks throughout, but the enhanced detail, commentary, corrected framing and additional footage make it a worthwhile purchase. Print/transfer/video & audio: C+, Bonus material: C+; Film: B minus. The fact that it is missing an erotic insert in which the director appears as a piano player and, along with a bathing female companion, is attacked by the monster, is the big minus and collectors may want to hold onto the IMAGE DVD release of this title which does contain that footage.*

Directed by Jess Franco (Jess Franck) Produced by Marius Lesoeru (Eurocine, Paris; Spain) Cast: Agnes Spaak, Marcelo Arriota- Jauregui, Hugo Blanco, Pastor Serrador, Perla Cristal, Pepe Rubio, Magda Moldonado, Miguel Madrid France/Spain 1964 B&W 84 Min. 1920x1080p (1.66:1) A French soundtrack with optional English subtitles English language soundtrack Audio Commentary by Tim Lucas Eleven minutes of alternate, erotic footage. French, Italian theatrical trailers

There is an alternate scene, included in the French version featuring a different actress as the first victim of Andros, who is also portrayed by a body double. This scene is not in EL SECRETO DEL DOCTOR ORLOFF, the Spanish version, where the fully clothed victim is strangled as she sits at a bar in a jazz club and it is not present in the English language export version, DR. ORLOFFS MONSTER, which was distributed as a television version and released on VHS by Something Weird Video. Obviously, this was inserted at the behest of French co-producer Eurocine and likely filmed by Jess Franco himself. An example of spicing up a film for a specific market. Image may contain: one or more people and indoor

* It should be noted that there are at least four separate versions of this title, including the Spanish language EL SECRETO DEL DR. ORLOFF which contains footage exclusive to this edit, including an alternate opening credits sequence, with Spanish titles, under which Dr. Fisherman is shown entering and walking through the house of Dr. Orloff as he prepares for their meeting. This footage is not in any other released version. DOCTOR ORLOFF'S MONSTER, the US television cut, opens with a still shot of a footbridge outside of the Orloff mansion over which the credits role (Directed by "John Frank"). It also does not include two "nudie-roughie" style murder sequences added for the French release.

The French version just presents the opening credits in French over a graphic background. There are two inserted scenes, shot later by Franco at the request of Eurocine, which feature alternate murder footage not seen in the Spanish or US versions. One of these additional sequences is not included on the Blu-ray, either as part of the film or in the eleven minutes of alternate, more sexually explicit, footage.

Some versions, including the one broadcast in Australia by SBS and the IMAGE DVD, have another complete murder sequence where Jess Franco appears playing a piano just before Andros (an obvious double) conducts another home-invasion murder of a woman taking a bath. Why this isn't included on the Blu-ray is anyone's guess, but it may not have been provided by the right's holder. It may be a technical issue. This insert was obviously filmed by Franco since he appears in the scene, he also appears as a different nightclub piano player in another unrelated scene.

This HD release is also more accurately framed at 1.66:1 than the IMAGE DVD, which appears to be window-boxed, losing image on all four sides. Reviewed by Robert Monell, 2018
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8/10
A Franco movie not to be missed
markwood27226 July 2017
Saw via DVD 7/23/17. One of Franco's best works, in a class with the best of Mario Bava or Dario Argento. The film is his distinctly personal take on the myth of the animated (or re-animated) as homunculus (cf. Caligari, Golem, Frankenstein). The movie achieves strong pathos when the young heiress encounters the monster, a Freudian moment combining the beauty of Agnes Spaak with the terror of a vintage Lon Chaney reveal. The cinematic technique is assured, with especially masterful use of lighting and camera angles. The black and white photography is as visually striking as Franco's Eastmancolor "Vampyros Lesbos" (1971). Anticipates Lynch while looking back at Franju's "Eyes Without A Face"(1959) with maybe some Antonioni thrown in here and there – who knows? As in the other Franco movies I've enjoyed, great soundtrack and music, with the master himself in a keyboard cameo in a jazz dive. Essential film for Francophiles, but maybe also a good starter work for viewers simply wanting a break from Bunuel (yes, they met, according to this website).
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8/10
Sexy and sinister.
Hey_Sweden17 November 2020
Iconoclastic filmmaker Jess Franco followed up his breakthrough Gothic horror film "The Awful Dr. Orlof" with this similarly effective black & white thriller. The stand-in for Dr. Orlof this time is a scientist named Conrad Jekyll (Marcelo Arroita-Jauregui), who presides over a castle in the country. Conrads' teenaged niece Melissa (the sexy Agnes Spaak) comes to visit to claim her inheritance after the death of her father, whom Melissa never met. Meanwhile, Conrad is sending his "robot" creation Andros (Hugo Blanco) out to murder female entertainers, for his own evil reasons.

Franco melds "mad scientist" and Gothic themes with youthful romance, some poignant drama, irreverent humour, and smokey jazz clubs for this typically interesting work. Viewers who may regard Franco as a sleazy hack need only see efforts like this to see that he was no one-trick pony. The atmosphere is solid, and the performances are efficient without being too flashy. Spaak is appealing as the young lead, and also doing an engaging job is the films' MVP, Luisa Sala as Conrads' wife Inglud. She delivers a haunted performance as a forlorn woman who doesn't exactly have a loving relationship with her husband. Pepe Rubio is a hoot as Juan Manuel, an outgoing Spanish cabbie who aggressively tries to work his charms on Melissa. Pastor Serrador is likewise highly amusing as a police inspector with a dry wit (and a bad cold).

"Dr. Orloff's Monster" (just one of the films' titles) may be a little light on sci-fi and horror elements for some tastes, but fans of Franco's racier pictures will pleasantly note that he has the camera linger quite lustily on the physical assets on some of the female cast members. Among the noteworthy aspects here are the cinematography (by Alfonso Nieva) and the music (by Fernando Garcia Morcillo and Daniel White).

In the end, "Dr. Orloff's Monster" is memorable for having a sad & tragic feel to the story, with the viewer taking pity on this killer Andros, a victim himself of another persons' machinations.

Franco himself has a small role as a piano player.

Eight out of 10.
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Death By Remote Control...
azathothpwiggins26 April 2022
In THE MISTRESSES OF DR. JEKYLL (aka: DR. ORLOFF'S MONSTER), the demented title character kills, then turns his cheating wife's lover into a remote control zombie robot. He then sends his new zombot out to slaughter various ladies of the night.

Enter the Doctor's niece, who arrives for a visit. Unbeknownst to her, it's her dad that's now a reanimated murderer!

Director Jesus Franco has really made a great horror film here. It's dark and bizarre, and the method used to facilitate the killings is ingenious! There's a macabre atmosphere and many genuinely creepy moments. The finale is also quite satisfying...
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