Las ratas no duermen de noche (1976) Poster

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5/10
The Naschy with the Severed Head
Coventry27 December 2008
I remember stumbling upon this film a couple of years ago on a cheap looking DVD edition under the appealing title "The Man with the Severed Head", but without any type of additional info like cast members, year of release or plot synopsis. Since I couldn't trace the film around here on this website, or any other website for that matter, I didn't want to risk a blind purchase. Now I found this film with the exact same cover image, released under the acclaimed "Euroshock Collection" label and with the box proudly exclaiming Paul Naschy's name as the lead star, so this time there weren't any more excuses not to watch it! I consider myself to be a big fan of Paul Naschy, in spite of his gigantic ego and his often terribly inept and gratuitously sleazy Spanish film productions. In case you are just even slightly familiar with Naschy's usual repertoire, you will notice straight away that "Crimson" is an extremely atypical film for him. Naschy literally loves himself and he's always profiled as a powerful, strong and womanizing type of anti-hero. Here in this film "Naschy" hardly has anything to do or say, as his character lies half-dead in bed most of the time because most of his brains were blown out by the police during a failed jewelery theft. I honestly wonder why Naschy even accepted this type of inferior role in a movie he didn't even co-wrote or directed himself.

"Crimson" isn't necessarily a bad film, but horror and Euro-sleaze fans should definitely beware as there are hardly any gore elements and absolutely no nudity. Yeah, I have no idea what that's all about neither. This was mid 70's and European exploitation production, right? Instead of all this, writer/director Juan Fortuny attempts to come up with an ambitious and extremely convoluted mixture of heist movie, revenge thriller and mad scientist shlock. Following the heist gone wrong mentioned here above, Jack Surnett's gang members don't want their leader to die and force a drunken doctor to come up with a solution. He brings the whole posse to a secluded place in the countryside, where a brilliant scientist and his wife are on the verge of accomplishing a breakthrough in their brain transplant experiments. As the involuntary brain donor, the gangsters select Surnett's arch enemy – a guy named "The Sadist" and acting like one too – and hope that a happy ending will ensue. Needless to say the operation doesn't go as planned and Surnett doesn't wake up as the man he once was. "Crimson" is an odd and difficult to categorize exploitation effort. It's reasonably fast-paced and mildly compelling, but still there's a lot of redundant footage and unnecessary dull sub plots (like the love history between the scientist and his wife, the distrust and hostility between the gang members mutually, etc…). The absence of actual horror aspect and bloody killing sequences is a huge disappointment, especially since the DVD cover showcases some promisingly bloody tableaux. The delirious jazzy soundtrack is great and some of the supportive cast members deliver splendid performances, like The Sadist and the double-crossing dude with the sleazy mustache. Worth a look if you're into curious and offbeat European exploitation cinema, but nothing really special.
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5/10
What will become of me now?
lastliberal13 February 2010
I am a Paul Naschy fan and he is always worth watching.

No, this will not garner any awards, but I bet it is on Quentin Tarantino's shelf. A perfect combination of crime and horror and a bit of Frankenstein thrown in, this is the perfect film to sit around and get drunk to with a group of friends.

Silvia Solar, Euro-trash veteran, and remembered for her role in at least one video nasty, is the wife of a mad scientist (Ricardo Palmerola), called upon to save Naschy, who was injured in a botched robbery.

They have to find a brain for a transplant. These hardened killers don't want to cut the head off the person they found, so they put him on train tracks to let the train do it. LOL Gilda Arancio (Zombie Lake) plays Naschy's girl, and plays a crucial part in getting the head they need, as she used to be the girlfriend of The Sadist (Roberto Mauri), the man who's brain they took.

Things don't turn out as planned - do they ever? The Sadist brain turns Naschy into a madman.

Just pure fun.
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5/10
Weird Spanish Take on a Popular Classic Horror Formula; Regrettably Little Screen-time for Paul Naschy
I have been a great fan of the late Spanish Horror/Exploitation legend Paul Naschy for a long time now. While not all of his films can be described as great (though some can), they are entirely entertaining. Juan Fortuny's "Las Ratas No Duermen De Noche" aka. "Crimson, the Color of Blood" (I bought it under the title "The Man With The Severed Head") of 1976 is doubtlessly one of the cheesier and more confused flicks in Naschy's wide repertoire, and yet it is an amusing little film that my fellow fans of the man might enjoy.

During a heist, a gangster (Naschy) is shot in the head. In order to safe the man's life, the members of his gang force an obsessed doctor to perform an operation which requires parts of another human being's brain. Not so cleverly, they choose to take the brain of their biggest rival, a criminal aptly named 'The Sadist'...

The film, which starts like a heist-flick, is, more or less, a Spanish 70s take on a concept popular in the classic Horror era. Films such as Karl Freund's fantastic "Mad Love" of 1935 (starring Peter Lorre) or "Black Friday" of 1940 (starring Boris Karloff and Bela Lugosi) had topics about body parts being replaced with those of brutal criminals, which inevitably lead to fatal results. Unfortunately, "Crimson" is an overall rather messy, yet very predictable film that features no surprises and a regrettably short screen-time for its star Paul Naschy. The film still guarantees a fun time, however. There are some moments of gore as well as some sleaze and female nudity (depending on which version you see). Naschy is cool as always, though his screen time is limited. One should try and get hold of the Spanish version, since the English dubbing is one of the most horrendous I have ever heard (which, then again, contributes to the 'camp' factor of the film). Overall, "Las Ratas No Duermen De Noche" is cheesy fun that is mildly recommended to my fellow Naschy-fans.
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Lobes of Fun
sinistre111124 March 2005
This is the finest bizarro Euro-exploitation piece that I have seen in a long time.

Certainly, Quentin Tarantino is a fan of this wild 1973 Franco-Spanish co-production starring horror legend Paul Naschy. Few films can successfully combine a botched jewel heist, a brain transplant and a mysterious character known only as "The Sadist." Naschy's role, though pivotal, is actually minimal, with few lines and only a few key scenes. The real story is played out by a gang of motley character types, of which the females are especially malicious and memorable.

Crimson has the right combination of impossibly contrived storyline and dazzling color visuals that one looks for in this kind of movie.

The Image Entertainment DVD (for sale on Amazon, though not linked to this page) is a sharp widescreen print, with a few nifty extras, including the alternate "erotic scenes" (not featuring Naschy, but the switch over to the bad body double is hilarious!).

Highly recommended
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5/10
Short-budget Spain/France co-production about an astonishing brain surgery.
ma-cortes14 December 2023
¨Las ratas no duermen de noche¨ is starred by Spanish legend Paul Naschy. A group of thieves, led by Jack Surnett (Paul Naschy) and his henchmen Henry (Olivier Mathot), Karl (Victor Israel) and Paul (Yul Sanders), are pursued by the police after a failed attempt. Of stealing a safe with jewelry. While fleeing, Surnett is shot in the head. To try to prevent his certain death, his criminal cronies take him to the drunken doctor Dr. Ritter (Carlos Otero), who owes the gang favors. Unable to help him due to the severity of the injury, he turns to a scientist friend, Professor Teets (Richard Palmer), who works on scientific research on brain transplants, with the help of his wife Ana (Sylvia Solar). But the experiment making Surnett even more dangerous and murderous than before. To carry out the strange transplant surgery, the criminals, with the help of Surnett's girlfriend, Ingrid (Gilda Anderson), decide to pursue a rival enemy known as "El Sádico" (Roberto Mauri), to eliminate him and use his brain. However, they will have to face the vengeful fury of the rival gang formed, among others, by second-in-command Willy and the sadist's girlfriend, Barbara (Evelyne Scott). The transplanted mobster boss begins to experience side effects with mental instability, now becoming even more violent, dangerous and unpredictable.

Typical crime thriller with suspense, intrigue, red herrings, shootouts and in which a delinquent is undergone a weird surgical operation. This is more of a thriller than your typical Paul Naschy horror film. It's a routine movie basically about two gangs at war and the leader of one of them who suffers a brain transplant with fatal consequences. Crimson - The Color of Terror is a police thriller with a dispute between rival gangs of criminals with a basic idea of horror and messy science fiction only as a backdrop, through the element of the "mad scientist" and the brain transplant experiences for the supposed good of humanity. A mad doctor performs a head transplant on an injured criminal, but the already fearsome aggressor Surnett, after being transplanted with the enemy's brain. It has little violence and no blood , which does not justify the choice of the title, which emphasizes the color of blood, and the deaths occur almost exclusively in shootouts. The atmosphere of horror is discreet and limited to the moments in the scientist's strange laboratory and Surnett's transformation into an even more ruthless killer. There is an unnecessary scene, which contributes nothing to the story, with a dance number by a woman and two men in a nightclub, which seems more like a way to complete the film's footage. As a trivia, the film's story is similar to and was certainly inspired by "Black Friday" (1940), a black-and-white "Universal" production starring horror icons Boris Karloff and Bela Lugosi. Here Paul Naschy has little presence, appearing on the scene only at first in the failed robbery attempt, and then is undergone a surgery resulting in a huge psychopathic behavior provoked by the influence of the brain of his enemy. There'are some attractives faces in the cast, most of them regulars in the 60s, 70s, 80s co-productiones (Terror, Spaghetti, Euro-spy, softcore), such as : Silvia Solar, Olivier Mathot, Evelyne Scott, Víctor Israel, Cesar Ojinága, Carlos Otero, actor/director Robert Mauri and Ricardo Palmerola who he played for director Fortuny: Palmer ha muerto, Las aventuras de Taxi Key, El pobrecito Draculin.

This mediocre flick results to be a low budget co-production between Merqueriz (Juan Fortuny's production company) and Eurociné of Marius Lesoeur. Among the different alternative titles, it is known in Spain as ¨Las ratas no duermen de noche¨and other titles: Le viol et l'enfer des X (France) L'homme à la tête coupée (France) Crimson, the Color of Blood (World-wide, English title) The Man with the Severed Head (Canada, English title) Crimson (United States), "Rats don't sleep at night" (international title). The motion picture was regularly directed by Spanish filmmaker Juan Fortuny . This Catalonia director was an artisan who wrote/produced/directed some so-so films. He directed and photographed various movies in all kinds of genres , some of them co-producing with other countries as France and Panama , such as : El pobrecito Draculín , Marchands de femmes , Huyendo de sí mismo, Palmer ha muerto , Las aventuras de Taxi Key , Delincuentes , La melodía misteriosa, El rey de la carretera , Huyendo de sí mismo , Unas páginas en negro , Legión de héroes . Rating: 4.5/10 . Only for the satisfaction of collectors and connoisseurs of European fantasy cinema. Very mediocre.
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6/10
Weird mix of a crime flick and Frankenstein-style horror
The_Void14 February 2008
What we have here is an example of what happens when a crime film meets horror - it's a bungled heist, and the result is not jail time or dead gang members, but a transplanted head! Yep, that's the premise of Juan Fortuny's weird little horror film that features the talents of the ever-popular Paul Naschy as the lucky recipient of a radical new operation. Obviously the major inspiration for this film is Mary Shelly's all-time classic horror story 'Frankenstein' as we've got a mad scientist, a 'monster' and some new medical breakthrough. The main story focuses on the fortune of Jack Surnett, played by Paul Naschy. He and his gang decide to pull a jewel heist, but when one of them cocks up, the alarms start ringing and the cops turn up. This is bad news for Jack as he gets shot in the head and it looks like his time may be up. However, his gang aren't ready to just sit back and watch him die so they take him to their own doctor and soon it transpires that the only way to save him is a brain transplant, and the only brain available used to belong to "The Sadist"...

It's probably obvious from the plot summary, but Crimson really is a bizarre film. Quite how anyone thought these elements could come together well is beyond me, but actually the result isn't as bad as thought it might be; although it's not really as fun either. It's clear that this film was never really meant to be taken seriously and it's a good job it doesn't take itself seriously. The best thing about most of Paul Naschy's films is Paul Naschy, although that's not really the case here as he spends most of the film lying in bed. However, when he finally does get up the film really takes a turn for the better as we get to watch Naschy with a bandage round his head running all over the countryside getting up to no good. The film isn't especially gory, but there's a fair bit of that cheap looking bright crimson blood to keep horror fans happy. It's clear that the film is never really going to go anywhere, and it really doesn't...but I only saw this for a fun time and it just about delivers that much. I wont call this brilliant or a must see, but its decent stuff and I can recommend it.
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8/10
Robbers and mad scientists in this vivid Spanish chiller thriller
Leofwine_draca20 May 2016
Warning: Spoilers
Despite its obscure status, CRIMSON is actually a fairly tight little crime thriller with touches of science fiction (the brain-transferral plot harks back to '40s B-movies) and horror to make it watchable for the genre fan, and a gem of a film in my opinion. There's plenty of interest going on in this movie and the machinations of a small, but well-drawn cast mainly located in one location make for a pretty gripping movie. It's also a rather sleazy one, especially with one leading character's reputation for being a sexual pervert.

Sadly the British release has been cut by 13 seconds which I can only assume may be scenes of open brain surgery or alternatively some of the sexual moments - and rumours also abound of a "harder" version of the film existing somewhere in France. Thankfully these cuts don't affect what is a suspenseful little movie, one of those films where every character is on the verge of having a nervous breakdown, and you can feel the violence simmering and ready to erupt at any moment. That's what gives CRIMSON its own hard edge.

The film puts us right into the middle of the action as Spanish genre icon Paul Naschy attempts to break into a safe. Unfortunately, his fellow accomplice, Karl, is a bit of a goon and decides to take a pearl necklace for himself. Uh-oh, the necklace was a decoy and the alarms go off, forcing the gang to escape by car. Along the way, Naschy is somehow shot in the head, the bullet lodging into his brain. The commanding Henry - a tough but honourable gangster - takes over and immediately enlists the help of Doctor Ritter, a washed-up alcoholic who in turn takes the gang to the country retreat owned by an eminent Professor and his family. After blackmailing the Professor and his wife (in a twist somewhat reminiscent of FRANKENSTEIN AND THE MONSTER FROM HELL, the Professor's hands have been destroyed, so his wife must perform all the surgery herself under his instruction), a fresh brain is needed for a brain transplant, and a rival gangster - known only as "The Sadist" - is decided up as being the ideal, if unwilling, donor.

What follows is a blackly comic scene of Karl and a fellow thug laying the deceased Sadist's body on a train track and waiting for a train to come past, which it does, and watching as the severed head bounces down a dirt bank towards them - there's something you don't see every day. After a tense brain transplant, which is totally successful, Henry - the eminent joker - sends the Sadist's head to his girlfriend, wrapped in wrapping paper. From then on, the Sadist's men, demanding revenge, surround the house in which the gang are hiding and the body count gradually rises until just about the entire cast has been decimated by the end of the movie!

The film's main strength is in its well-drawn characters, most of them acting believably which gives a high level of realism. Paul Naschy (or Jacinto Molina, whichever you prefer) is as great as ever as the recipient of the Sadist's brain, with a fairly static first half - he spends most of it in bed or on an operating table - leading to a dramatic conclusion, Once again he has a distinct, bandage-wrapped appearance which makes him look like one of Hammer's Frankenstein creatures. The supporting cast are all pretty good too, with glamour from Silvia Solar and Gilda Arancio as the women involved, and especially Carlos Otero as the sympathetic drunken doctor who gets caught up in the crimes. However, acting honours must go to Olivier Mathot (THE DEVIL'S KISS), who is frankly excellent as the gang leader, creating a truly ruthless and tough bad guy you wouldn't want to mess with.

Despite a minor amount of blood and violence, CRIMSON isn't really a horror film, although it was advertised that way. Instead it's an extremely tense hostage drama with a volatile atmosphere and good camera-work done on a low budget - the scene in which Karl finds his friend hanging in the air is superbly shot and done in a really creepy fashion. With a budget this low, the editing is pretty poor and the dubbing unbelievable, but these are minor niggles for the genre fan - I'm just glad it made its way into the English-speaking world, unlike a number of Naschy's other minor thrillers and non-horror productions. This is thrilling, sometimes sleazy, grimly comic stuff and recommended to all.
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6/10
Brain Trust
ferbs548 March 2012
Warning: Spoilers
Fans of actor/screenwriter/director Paul Naschy who rent out the 1973 film "Crimson" hoping to get a good solid dose of "the Boris Karloff of Spain" may be a tad disappointed at how things turn out. By necessity, Naschy's role in this picture is severely limited, he doesn't make much of an appearance until the film is 2/3 done, and even in the final 1/3, his thesping abilities are only minimally utilized. In this French/Spanish coproduction, Naschy plays a jewel thief named Surnett, who flees from the police, along with his gang, after a botched robbery attempt near the French city of Nancy. Surnett is shot in the head two minutes after the film begins, and spends the next hour of the picture in a virtual coma, while his gang scrambles to find a doctor to help him. Ultimately, it is decided that Surnett needs nothing less than a brain transplant (!); any volunteers to be the donor? Fortunately, the (literal) head of the rival gang, a very disagreeable sort who sports the nickname Sadist, has the same blood type as Surnett, so he is killed off by Surnett's gang, and his head lopped off by the simple expedient of placing his body on a railroad track and allowing a passing train to do the dirty work. Thus, with a team of doctors forced into compliance and a matching brain for their leader at hand, Surnett's gang feels that everything is in order. But things don't go QUITE according to plan, and escalating violence leads to a rapidly rising rate of attrition, in this wacky yet highly entertaining fun house of a movie....

Basically a gangster picture tricked out with Frankensteinian elements,"Crimson" presented two outstanding problems for this viewer; one of the problems crops up before Surnett's operation and the other after. The first is that, despite the doctors' claim that the dying gangster needs a brain transplant, once that operation begins, it is discovered that the bullet did NOT, after all, pierce Surnett's gray matter. So why proceed with the transplant?!?! But my larger problem has to do with the fact that everyone seems stunned and amazed that Surnett seems different after his procedure. Well, what would they expect? The man has just had a different brain--the brain of a criminal madman--inserted in his noggin! How could he NOT be any different?!?! Perhaps I should add here that I am also a bit mystified as to this film's title. If "Crimson" refers to the color of blood...well, the film is not that gory at all, and the many killings highlighted are virtually bloodless affairs. Indeed, the only blood we ever see is some smeared red stuff on the face of a beat-up doctor; hardly enough to justify such a sanguine title. Still, quibbles aside, "Crimson," cheaply made and shlockily cobbled together as it is, remains a fun, fast-moving experience. The Image DVD that I recently watched features, as an "extra," some soft-core sex scenes that were only included in the French version of the film. I for one am happy to have NOT seen the film with these many extra scenes, as they would only have served to slow things down; the film's brisk pace is one of its chief assets (despite a few instances of padding, via musical numbers and dancing girls in a cabaret). The film is decently acted by its game cast, features a score by Daniel White (IF that is his real name; all the principals' names seem to have been Anglicized in the credits, for reasons that I will never understand; Naschy's name, for example, appears as "Paul Nash") that will skip around in YOUR brain for days, and showcases some interesting directorial choices by Juan Fortuny (here listed, of course, as "John Fortuny"). The film grows wilder and loopier as it proceeds, to the point where hardly any of the characters remain standing by the film's conclusion; a truly flabbergasting experience, although surely more of a gangster film, as I mentioned earlier, than a horror outing. Still, it is a shame that the opportunity to explore the emotional and philosophical ramifications of having a new brain put in one's body has been squandered here. In addition to seeing Surnett turn into a raving sex fiend, it might have been interesting to allow Naschy's character to tell us what's going on inside that new head of his. What's going on inside his old body is pretty obvious!
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Black Friday Euro Style
Michael_Elliott25 October 2013
Crimson (1973)

** (out of 4)

Paul Naschy would often borrow elements from the Universal monster movies and he does so again, although with this film it borrows from BLACK Friday. In the movie Naschy plays a gangster who is shot in the head during a heist. His crew manages to find a doctor that could save his life but he's going to need to brain from another human. The crew decide to get the brain of a rival gangster known as The Sadist and while this transplant saves their bosses life, it also causes him to be even more dangerous to those around him. CRIMSON is also known as several other titles including THE MAN WITH THE SEVERED HEAD as well as THE RATS COME OUT AT NIGHT. Those expecting a straight horror film are going to be disappointed as will those coming into the picture expecting to see a lot of Naschy. The Euro legend gets top billing but sadly he appears in very little of the actual picture and it almost seems like his scenes weren't a part of the original screenplay and were just added to try and cash-in on his appeal at the time. CRIMSON isn't a bad movie but it is a rather needless one that doesn't add up to much in the end. I think the biggest problem is the screenplay that just doesn't know what it wants to do. The Euro-Crime genre is certainly on full display here but all of the elements are rather weak here. The stuff dealing with the gangsters really isn't interesting and you certainly never fear these guys. The horror elements are also incredibly weak because very little is done with them. Naschy has a bandage on his head, screams about his brain not working right and every once in a while he briefly acts out. He certainly doesn't get much to work with performance wise and that's true for the rest of the cast. To be fair, the English dubbing certainly doesn't help because it makes all of these tough gangsters sound like school girls. When the film was released in France it contained some more graphic sex scenes but this wasn't the version I watched but I'm going to guess that these scenes certainly livened up the picture a bit, which is something it certainly needed.
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6/10
Paul Naschy undergoes experimental brain surgery and becomes The Sadist!
Stevieboy66612 December 2022
A robbery goes wrong and one of the gang, Jack (Paul Naschy), is shot in the head by the police but is taken to a doctor for some experimental brain surgery, this involves obtaining the fresh brain of a rival criminal known as The Sadist. Jack inherits his sadistic ways. French/Spanish crime thriller/horror, shot in France, it also packs in plenty of sex and nudity. Spanish barrel chested horror legend Naschy is billed under the name Paul Nash but that won't fool any fan of Euro-horror! I watched the English language version and the dubbing is hilariously bad, plus it has some very poor continuity and editing, for example a police car pulls up, the cops all jump out and open fire. Then seconds later the we see it repeated. What's more a man is shot multiple times yet not a single bullet hole can be seen! As for the sex we get this at 7, 34, 74 and 89 minutes. As is usual for the time the women get completely naked but the men (with one exception) keeps their clothes on, one man says "Don't be deceived by appearance and certainly not by women", pretty much sums up the sexism of the time. For fans of trashy Euro movies this is an enjoyable film that is in all honesty rather bad.
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9/10
A bizarrely rewardingly wrong-headed Gothic-exotic horror extravaganza!!
Weirdling_Wolf27 May 2021
Juan Fortuny's bizarre 'Crimson' also has the heady and more dramatically unambiguous title of 'The Man with Severed Head'. Granted, this lurid Euro-cult extravaganza isn't the finest example of Spain's premier spine-chiller's work, it is,arguably, one of his most entertaining misfires! An enjoyably crimson-soaked, headlong descent into the murky criminal milieu of a heinously bungled jewellery heist, and the bloody feud between two hard-nosed headcases. Fortuny zealously appropriates all the seamier excesses of Grindhouse sleaze and hard-boiled Euro-crime with a refreshing lack of subtlety. This delightfully bonkers, wig-splittingly silly B-Movie far from seamlessly blends the more aggressively trashy tropes of Al Adamson, Ted V. Mikels and Umberto Lenzi's Poliziotteschi scumminess into a grossly uneven but rewardingly wrong-headed Gothic-exotic horror! The gruesome machinations of these duplicitous, death-dealing dunderheads not infrequently reaches a fever pitch of bemusing absurdity!

It is perhaps a 'no-brainer' to suggest that Naschy's 'Crimson' lacks any credible literary smarts, and that any semblance of cinematic credibility has been ruthlessly lobotomized by the director's haphazard Mise-en-scène! Happily, there is a wickedly warped B-Movie mania throught that remains weirdly contagious! This trashy Euro-shocker's more refined qualities reside in, Paul Naschy's brooding presence, Naschy's signature dark charisma somewhat muted by having his noble noggin swaddled in a nappy for much of the film's running time! No objective appraisal of Fortuny's mentally masticated, ghoulishly groovy grindhouse gem would be complete without praising the frightfully funky burlesque grooves of frequent Jess Franco collaborator, Daniel White. Crimson roils excitingly with White's perspicacious psychedelic crime-funk that stridently slams some righteous spunk in Fortuny's skunky celluloid junk!
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6/10
Heads up!
Hey_Sweden2 March 2024
Euro-cult icon Paul Naschy plays Jack Surnett, leader of a criminal gang. After a botched heist, the gang heads for the hills, and Surnett is seriously wounded by police during the getaway. Only a brain transplant can save Surnett now, and, as fate would have it, there is a professor (Ricardo Palmerola) out there specializing in that sort of thing. Surnetts' gang goes out and steals a donor brain, from none other than Surnetts' biggest rival, a goon dubbed The Sadist (Roberto Mauri). Naturally, as Surnett revives, he comes under the influence of The Sadists' brain, becoming even more depraved & violent.

This sounded like it had the makings of a solid exploitation-crime flick (with a touch of horror), but alas it's all rather flat and unexciting. Director Juan Fortuny relates the story at a snails' pace, with too many unnecessary detours. Worst of all, this is a Paul Naschy film in which Naschy BARELY APPEARS, at least until the final 20 or so minutes as Surnett begins to unravel.

There is *some* decent gore, and there are certainly *some* amusing moments (such as two henchmen, Paul (Claude Boisson) and Karl (Victor Israel) getting squeamish in regards to severing The Sadists' head. So they wait for a train to do the job for them!

The cast is good, although the English dubbing is pretty cheesy as it is for so many of these types of movies. Carlos Otero is especially effective as the pathetic Doc Ritter, while Israel, sporting glasses and a bushy mustache, amuses as the weaselly Karl.

This likely won't appeal to Naschy fans across the board, although I *will* say that, yes, it is indeed an atypical effort for the Spanish genre star. People bemoaning the dearth of sex & nudity should be aware that there IS an alternate cut running about 10 minutes longer that has more of what they want.

Six out of 10.
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10/10
70's Trash Entertainment. Enjoyable if not taken too seriously. Naschy.
Bababooe14 May 2019
Warning: Spoilers
Film starts with Naschy and his criminal gang trying to open a jewelry safe, they shut the electricity off thinking the alarm is shut down, Karl playing the part of dumbarse grabs a fake pearl neckless triggering the alarm. They take off, cop car chase, Naschy is shot in the head. Henry, the #2, sends Karl to get their go to doctor, Doc Ritter, a drunkard. Doc proposes they take Naschy to a professor friend who may be able to save his life.

The professor's hands have been mangled, but his hot wife can do the surgery. The gang kidnaps the professor's daughter to blackmailing them into saving Naschy. They conclude that Naschy will need a partial brain replacement, and Doc choses Naschy's nemesis "The Sadist". Karl and Paul, the other gang member, are sent to kill The Sadist and bring back his head. We then see The Sadist, an unsavory fellow, in his club, with a wild dance number, a poker game where he falsely accuses the other players of cheating and robs and then threatens to kill them. Karl and Paul use Naschy's girlfriend, Ingrid, who happened to be with The Sadist before, to lure and seduce The Sadist, and Paul kills him. Now these knuckleheads try to cut The Sadist's head off but they lose the knife. Their next brilliant idea is to place the body on railroad tracks and it works, as soon as the train passes the head rolls down the hill into their hands.

The professor and his wife perform the operation on Naschy and it's a success. The Doc goes home. Henry brings back the professor's daughter. Henry then sends the Sadist's head to Barbara, The Sadist's girlfriend and the real brains behind their gang. Barbara and gang go to see the Doc and beat the crap out of him, then they get Ingrid. The Doc spills the beans, and then he is dumped off at the professor's house, I guess as a message for the gang to turn over Naschy.

What a mess. This whole thing is the Doc's fault. All he had to do is tell Henry that Naschy can't be helped. But he escalates this by implicating his professor friend and his family, then he suggests they get Naschy's nemesis's brain. What a downward spiral. So, the Doc dies. Naschy wakes up with a massive headache and feels different and sleazy.

Paul on guard duty is killed by The Sadist's gang and is hung. Barbara goes into the professor's house and Nachy rapes, kills and stuffs her into a closet. Later he tries to rape a newspaper girl. Henry and Karl find and bury Paul. They find Naschy and bring him back to the house. The professor's wife wants to kill Naschy because he's a monster. The professor forbids this in the name of science. Henry has had enough and now after all the trouble he's caused decides to take off, along with Karl. The Sadist's gang gun down Henry. Karl guns down two of the Sadist's gang. Karl then gets killed. Naschy attacks the professor's wife, she stabs him with a syringe, he cracks his head through glass, picks up a gun and heads outside to be killed by the police alerted to the house by the newspaper girl's attack.

What a glorious mess this film is. This film came to me in a 50 movie set, Mad Scientists. French language, English Subtitles. Some nudity and violence. But it looks like it was cut and not in the best shape. The story was convoluted but intelligent. The acting was great. Mostly serious throughout. There's a great scene when Naschy is first recovering and he's making out with Ingrid where we see his arm stressing to strangle her, the music intensifies, and then Ingrid escapes, very well done. The other thing I found interesting is how the Doc got himself and his friends in such mounting trouble. Endangering everyone from the professor's family, then to the entire household including Naschy's gang. At the end we know the professor and his family and servant are ok. No idea what happened to Ingrid. There was only one member of The Sadist's gang left alive. He must have taken off before the cops showed up.

All in all, this was a very entertaining movie. Approached as a comedy, there's fun to be had. 7 stars, 10 stars for balance.
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"What Have You Done To My Brain?!"...
azathothpwiggins14 October 2021
After being shot in the head by police, a criminal (Paul Naschy) winds up in the hands of a mad doctor experimenting with transplants.

Oh no!

The drunken doctor's hands have been damaged, leaving the surgery to his wife! Through a chain of absurd events, the brain transplant is completed. This leads to the inevitable, blood-soaked finale.

CRIMSON, THE COLOR OF BLOOD is a fantastically cheeezy mix of horror and crime drama. Lovers of mad science, gore, and / or Paul Naschy should be in ecstasy over this movie!...
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