El Charro de las Calaveras (1965) Poster

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2/10
Ed Wood's Mexican Brother
EdgarST13 March 2014
As soon as I finished watching the cult film "El Charro de las Calaveras" (made by Abel Salazar's brother Alfredo, who instantly became the "Mexican Ed Wood" with this, his first film as director), I wondered if they were trying to make a serial. Since the Charro alternately meets a werewolf, a vampire and a headless horseman that kill people around a few communities of the Mexican countryside, I wanted to know if each segment that conforms the motion picture had been exhibited separately, as the so-called "episodios" that I watched every Saturday in my childhood.

"El Charro..." was made with zero budget, in unflattering locations and with paper maché masks that must have been rejected from the festivities of the Day of the Dead. It seems that its naïveté and clumsy execution have made its many admirers nostalgic of that "homemade", artisan cinema of the past. In truth this is understandable, in front of so much cinematic garbage filled with CGIs, and lacking soul and verve. But nothing excuses Alfredo Salazar's extreme carelessness: almost 80% of the action takes place during the night, but he could not care less, everything is done in broad daylight, even when the moon is full...

One cannot help getting mad or laughing when the bat-faced vampire says something like, "¡Sunrise! The sun is bad for me," and runs away under a bright sun that projects his long shadow on the ground. But what stroke me is the lack of information from the Mexican film industry or local film critics, about the genesis of this... monstrosity and its avatars. Obviously there were changes, because after the Charro "fights" the werewolf he is fatter when he meets the vampire, the skulls in his costume change places in each segment, as also does his mask, and the boy Perico that he adopted in the first segment, disappears in the second and is replaced by another one called Juanito, etc.

Salazar was behind a few important horror movies made in México: the trilogy of the Aztec Mummy (which is the same film X 3, with a few additional scenes, saved by its original idea of a mummy out of the Teotihuacán pyramids, and I admit that thing scared the hell out of me when I saw it at 6 years old); a few films with El Santo, an icon of Mexican people's culture; and especially "La bruja", a moving science-fiction melodrama with elements of terror that deserve attention. "El Charro de las Calaveras" was released on DVD, in a copy with good quality; it is a welcome addition to any collection of Mexican horror cinema, and a good choice to watch with friends in a night of spirits, smokes and other spices.
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2/10
The Rider of the Skulls
Uriah4311 November 2018
This film begins with a masked caballero named "El Charro de las Calaveras" (Dagoberto Rodriguez) riding into a small village which has a cemetary that is unkempt and littered with skulls. Not long after that he comes across the body of a man who was recently murdered. Since it is getting dark he decides to stop at a nearby hacienda where he is invited to stay the night. While there he is told that a monster of some sort has killed a number of people and scared everybody away. And then that very night a werewolf enters that same house and almost kills one of the occupants. Now rather than reveal any more I will just say that this movie appeared to be three seperate made-for-television episodes cobbled together to feature a Mexican version of the Lone Ranger fighting against a werewolf, a vampire and then a headless horseman respectfully. Definitely an interesting combination. Unfortunately, the overall quality suffered from an obvious low budget as the action sequences, special effects, script and acting were all bad. Really bad. That being said-and even though I found it somewhat compelling in its own unique way-I honestly cannot rate this film any higher than I have.
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10/10
South-of-the-border insanity!
melvelvit-110 October 2011
Warning: Spoilers
The Rider of the Skulls, a masked (by a black handkerchief with eye-holes in it) Zorro-esque avenger, rides into town just in time to see a villager get his face torn off by a werewolf and he boards with the family of a boy being terrorized by the monster who's identity hits close to home. After solving the mystery and putting the creature to rest with the help of a cackling witch who can raise the dead to provide a clue or two, Rider takes the kid and his comic, cowardly servant along on further adventures which include dispatching a bat-headed vampire and dueling to the death with a headless horseman looking for his lost cabeza. After righting these wrongs, our fearless hero and his ragtag band of rescuees (including the senorita who inherited said talking head in a box) ride off into the sunset in search of more evil to vanquish -something the Rider vowed to do after bandidos murdered his parents. Jaw-dropping Mexican madness (there's even a theme song) and all the better in black and white -great fun!
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