Two screwballs get mixed up with monsters, mad scientists and vampires.Two screwballs get mixed up with monsters, mad scientists and vampires.Two screwballs get mixed up with monsters, mad scientists and vampires.
Martha Elena Cervantes
- Socorro
- (as Martha Elena Cervántes)
José Jasso
- Paco
- (as José 'Ojón' Jasso)
Joaquín García Vargas
- Detective Hercules Borolas
- (as Joaquín García 'Borolas')
Alberto Villanueva
- Frankenstein
- (as Alberto 'Chiquilín' Villanueva)
Ana María Aguirre
- Secretaria
- (uncredited)
Leonor Gómez
- Mujer con pesera
- (uncredited)
Vicente Lara
- Novio de secretaria
- (uncredited)
Elvira Lodi
- Mujer asaltada
- (uncredited)
Francisco Meneses
- Invitado fiesta
- (uncredited)
José Pardavé
- Hombre en telefono
- (uncredited)
Ángela Rodríguez
- Invitada fiesta disfraz
- (uncredited)
- Director
- Writer
- All cast & crew
- Production, box office & more at IMDbPro
Storyline
Did you know
- TriviaThe English dubbed version of this film is believed lost.
- ConnectionsRemake of Bud Abbott and Lou Costello Meet Frankenstein (1948)
Featured review
I stumbled across this thing while channel surfing; it appeared on a station called "Latele Novele." I know almost no Spanish, but I guessed I could follow along anyway.
In the opening scene, two nitwits are delivering crates to a warehouse. One of the crates contains the Frankenstein monster, and other a vampire ... hey, wait a minute - this is a Mexican ripoff of "Abbott and Costello Meet Frankenstein."
Oh, did this mucho stinko. The two clowns, Agapito and Paco, meet up with a guy who happens to turn into a wolf - if you can call that shag rug on the guy's kisser fur. The Frankenstein monster looks like Peter Boyle, so maybe the producer could have sued Mel Brooks. The vampire (he is never referred to as "Dracula") looks like an emaciated version of George Nader. The women are just average looking; for a Mexican film, I expected some great cleavage, at bare minimum.
The film is not funny, not scary, and not designed for anyone with an IQ above uno. There was exactly one funny line, when the vampire takes a sip of something and spits it out. I could swear the translation of what he muttered was "hey, this blood is domestic."
Apparently there is an English subtitled version of this, but no one knows where it is. Or maybe they do know where it is, and it is in quarantine.
In the opening scene, two nitwits are delivering crates to a warehouse. One of the crates contains the Frankenstein monster, and other a vampire ... hey, wait a minute - this is a Mexican ripoff of "Abbott and Costello Meet Frankenstein."
Oh, did this mucho stinko. The two clowns, Agapito and Paco, meet up with a guy who happens to turn into a wolf - if you can call that shag rug on the guy's kisser fur. The Frankenstein monster looks like Peter Boyle, so maybe the producer could have sued Mel Brooks. The vampire (he is never referred to as "Dracula") looks like an emaciated version of George Nader. The women are just average looking; for a Mexican film, I expected some great cleavage, at bare minimum.
The film is not funny, not scary, and not designed for anyone with an IQ above uno. There was exactly one funny line, when the vampire takes a sip of something and spits it out. I could swear the translation of what he muttered was "hey, this blood is domestic."
Apparently there is an English subtitled version of this, but no one knows where it is. Or maybe they do know where it is, and it is in quarantine.
Details
- Release date
- Country of origin
- Language
- Also known as
- Frankestein, el vampiro y compañía
- Filming locations
- Production companies
- See more company credits at IMDbPro
- Runtime1 hour 16 minutes
- Color
- Aspect ratio
- 1.37 : 1
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Top Gap
By what name was Frankestein el vampiro y compañía (1962) officially released in Canada in English?
Answer