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La casa de las mujeres perdidas

  • 1983
  • 1h 30m
IMDb RATING
4.7/10
320
YOUR RATING
Carmen Carrión and Antonio Mayans in La casa de las mujeres perdidas (1983)
Psychological DramaTragedyDrama

Desdemona is a pensive young nymphomaniac whose life on a remote island with her father, stepmother and mentally-challenged sister seethes with violence and incest. The drama will explode wi... Read allDesdemona is a pensive young nymphomaniac whose life on a remote island with her father, stepmother and mentally-challenged sister seethes with violence and incest. The drama will explode with the arrival of a young and attractive hunter.Desdemona is a pensive young nymphomaniac whose life on a remote island with her father, stepmother and mentally-challenged sister seethes with violence and incest. The drama will explode with the arrival of a young and attractive hunter.

  • Director
    • Jesús Franco
  • Writer
    • Jesús Franco
  • Stars
    • Lina Romay
    • Antonio Mayans
    • Carmen Carrión
  • See production info at IMDbPro
  • IMDb RATING
    4.7/10
    320
    YOUR RATING
    • Director
      • Jesús Franco
    • Writer
      • Jesús Franco
    • Stars
      • Lina Romay
      • Antonio Mayans
      • Carmen Carrión
    • 5User reviews
    • 8Critic reviews
  • See production info at IMDbPro
  • See production info at IMDbPro
  • Photos6

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    Top cast5

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    Lina Romay
    Lina Romay
    • Desdémona
    • (as Candy Coster)
    Antonio Mayans
    Antonio Mayans
    • Mario Pontecorvo
    Carmen Carrión
    Carmen Carrión
    • Dulcinea
    Hemy Basalo
    • Paulova
    • (as Susana Kerr)
    Tony Skios
    • Tony Curtis
    • Director
      • Jesús Franco
    • Writer
      • Jesús Franco
    • All cast & crew
    • Production, box office & more at IMDbPro

    User reviews5

    4.7320
    1
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    9
    10

    Featured reviews

    5parry_na

    Kitchen sink drama, put through the Jess Franco blender!

    At this stage in his career, the one thing you can be fairly sure about is that there is far too much sex in the films of prolific Spanish director Jess Franco. This fact alone negates much of his work, and the early 1980s are a prime example of this. I am pretty sure that even the most ardent fan of the intimate finds this endless succession of sex acts gruelling. If it's pornography you're after, why complicate it with an ongoing story-line - and vice versa?

    Yet, this is the world of Franco, and it was a finely carved out, well-oiled machine by this stage. His films were becoming more difficult to distribute and so I can only guess the sex was there to spice things up - and with his long-time muse Lina Romay on board, it certainly does that. It's everywhere! True, this story features the most disturbingly dysfunctional family you're likely to see this side of a Texas chainsaw, but more depth given to the characters would have been a good thing.

    That's my negativity done with. This is one of Franco's weirder efforts, and it is clear he and his regular cast and crew were doing exactly as they wished by this stage. Actor Antonio Mayans' luck seems to have run out here. Usually, the opening credits have barely finished rolling before he is cavorting intimately with the female star of the show - often Romay. Here, the pendulum has swung too far in the opposite direction, so to speak. He plays, very effectively, Mario, who is a failed actor, and shies away from his promiscuous daughter Desdemona (Romay, billed here as Candy Coster), even though she openly flirts with and desires him. His unfulfilled wife Dulcinea (Carmen Carrión) is disappointed in him because the rumours of his perverse and nefarious activities turn out *not* to be true - so she seemingly has issues of her own (to distance her from her unsavoury relationship with Desdemona, Franco has ensured Dulcinea is her step-mother - as if the lack of any physical relationship makes her actions less unpalatable). Then we have Paulova (Asunción Calero), the mentally challenged sister, who also gets her own lessons in self-pleasure to idle away the hours. They all live in a modern-looking home on an island paradise they have clearly become bored with. Solitary, their food is shipped in from elsewhere.

    Such an isolated family life could be fascinating. A similarly perverse and outcast (step) father-and-daughter relationship was explored far more interestingly in Franco's 'Eugenie' ten years earlier. But here, the director is not so keen simply to imply what is going on, he prefers to lay it on with a trowel. Several trowels.

    When it works, it works very well. It's a punishing story. Evil Dulcinea finds a happiness she doesn't deserve, whilst everybody else (apart possibly from Paulova) is resigned to one form of misery or another.

    The whole thing is filmed in such a way that every blemish or shadow on the actors' skin is laid bare, much like the actors themselves much of the time. Every slight bruise and pimple adds a very visual extra dimension of un-sophistication to a film that straddles many tones at once. But then, with 80's Jess Franco, that is a common issue. The truth is, the director seems to know exactly what sort of film he is delivering. My score is 5 out of 10.
    4okpilak

    Not your usual family

    Right off, there are some non-nude scenes in this movie. From them alone, one could make a very short subject. The father, who considers himself a great actor, is self-exiled to this island, where he lives with his wife, and two daughters, Desdemona and Paulova. Paulova is mentally challenged, and lives a child-like existence. Desdemona, on the other hand, is, shall one say, very sexually frustrated. Of course his wife is also, as it seems he cannot perform. So a lot of sexual frustrations are shown on the screen. He self exiled to this island, due to having done an unpardonable sin, from which he feels the need to be as far from the police as possible. And to this island comes a man, Tony Curtis, who says he is a hunter/poacher. It is predictable as to what happens. The movie is soft core in a boring way.
    5oraklon

    Family drama, Franco style

    One of the most obscure Franco's i've had the privilege to see. Or rather see the first hour of because after that the frame just freezes on my (very murky) copy, leaving the confused viewer to wonder what the hell happened. OK, I admit it, I didn't understand a thing but it seems to be some kind of perverse, kinky, black comedy/ironic family-drama/soft porno? Only in the mind of Jess Franco... A family is living together on an isolated island and the family idyll is sometimes disrupted by PC stuff like the daughter masturbating in front of her father (i'd say a good third of the film consists of Lina jacking off), the mother forcing her children to take part in S/M games or Lina giving her retarded sister a handjob. "We're a happy family, we're a happy family hey mum and daddy", as the Ramones song goes. There's a lot of lot of seemingly misplaced, mindless chattering (which I didn't understand of course) during all the weird and sick stuff going-ons, so I would guess the film is wittier and more intelligent than first seems (much like The Inconfessionable Orgies of Emmanuelle I guess, in which the dry, sarcastic tone got lost completely in the language barrier until the subtitled DVD release revealed a much better film than thought at first). But all in all it's safe to say that this no budget wonder is for francophiliacs only. I don't know whether I should consult a film buff or a psychiatrist, but why the hell did this film somehow remind me of a perverted Douglas Sirk?
    1Leofwine_draca

    Franco's nadir

    THE HOUSE OF LOST WOMEN has to be one of Jess Franco's worst-ever movies, an entirely plotless affair seemingly designed to show off acres and acres of bare flesh, typically from his ageing real-life wife Lina Romay. At least half of the running time seems occupied with mindless scenes of pleasuring set on beds or couches. The plot, what little exists of it, is a sleazy and unwholesome exploration of taboo between the members of a small family on a remote island, but the acting is barely noticeable. The scenes involving the mentally challenged younger sister are among the most exploitative and repellent I've seen.

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    Storyline

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    Did you know

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    • Trivia
      This film was 1 of 13 films Uncle Jess made in 1982.
    • Connections
      References The Barbarian (1933)
    • Soundtracks
      Sonata invernal
      Composed by Jesús Franco and Rebeca White

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    FAQ12

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    Details

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    • Release date
      • June 30, 1983 (Spain)
    • Country of origin
      • Spain
    • Language
      • Spanish
    • Also known as
      • The House of Lost Women
    • Filming locations
      • Almería, Andalucía, Spain
    • Production company
      • Golden Films Internacional S.A.
    • See more company credits at IMDbPro

    Tech specs

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    • Runtime
      1 hour 30 minutes
    • Sound mix
      • Mono
    • Aspect ratio
      • 2.35 : 1

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