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Mondo Cannibale

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Mondo Cannibale
Original release poster
Directed byJesús Franco
Written byJesús Franco
Produced by
  • Daniel Lesoeur
  • Marius Lesoeur
  • Franco Prosperi
Starring
Cinematography
  • Luis Colombo
  • Juan Soler
Edited by
  • Roland Grillon
  • Antonio Hermand
Music byRoberto Pregadio
Production
companies
  • Eurociné
  • Eurofilms
Distributed byAtlas Films SPRL-PVBA
Release date
  • 15 September 1980 (1980-09-15) (Italy)
Running time
90 minutes
Countries
  • Spain
  • Italy
Languages
  • Italian
  • English

Mondo Cannibale (English: Cannibal World; also known as The Cannibals or simply Cannibals –, Die Blonde Göttin, White Cannibal Queen, A Woman for the Cannibals and Barbarian Goddess) is a 1980 Spanish-Italian cannibal exploitation film directed by Jesús Franco and stars Al Cliver and a then-17 year old Sabrina Siani. It is one of two cannibal films directed by Franco starring Cliver, the other being Devil Hunter.

Franco's original shooting title was Rio Salvaje, but it was changed to Mondo Cannibale before its release. While not prosecuted for obscenity, the film was seized and confiscated in the UK under Section 3 of the Obscene Publications Act 1959 during the video nasty panic.

Premise

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Jeremy Taylor is travelling through the Amazon rivers along with his wife and daughter, when his boat gets attacked by some indigenous cannibals who eat his wife Elisabeth and take Jeremy prisoner. The little girl Léna manages to hide herself instead inside the boat, even though the cannibal witch-doctor and his son Yakeké find her fainted on the side of a river and carry her to the village, where she gets worshipped as the "white goddess."

After having suffered an arm amputation, Jeremy flees from the cannibal tribe and, rescued, manages to return to New York. His recovery, both physical and psychological, is still slow. Ana's presence is decisive, the doctor who, after having cured him with love, gets engaged to him. But Jeremy is obsessed with the idea of retrieving his daughter, of whom he believes of seeing reflected images on the shop window. Thus, after ten years, he manages to organise a new expedition in the cannibals' land, financed by a billionaire lover of adventure, Charles Fenton, and his partner Barbara Shelton.

During the journey, the members of the expedition get killed one after the other by the natives hidden within the vegetation. Only Jeremy, Ana and a young photographer reach the village but as prisoners, and the doctor gets immediately eaten by the cannibals. Léna, who in the meantime has grown and has married Yakaké, the witch-doctor's son, seems unable to recognise her father; but when she learns the day after tomorrow that the two men will be sacrificed she decides to free them at nighttime. Jeremy begs her to return to the United States with him, but Léna does not want to leave those which are by now her place and her people. Already on the wayback, Jeremy decides to return to the village to expend his resources. He sneaks into the tent of Léna and takes hold of her. Whilst he is leaving the village, he still gets found by Yakaké, who in the river, in front of the mayhem of the natives, faces up in a rustic duel before the photographer, defeating him, and then Jeremy himself, who manages to have the upper hand despite his amputated arm.

While Yakaké does his usual salute to his "White goddess", Jeremy and his daughter return to civilisation.

Cast

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Production

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Franco said in the interview that he only did the two cannibal films (this one and Cannibal Terror) for the money, and said that he had no idea why anyone would want to watch such films. He said that Sabrina Siani was the worst actress that he ever worked with in his life (second only to Romina Power) and that Siani's only good quality was her "delectable derrière" (lit. "delectable behind").[1]

Release

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The film was theatrically released in France on October 21, 1981.[2]

Blue Underground released a DVD version on November 13, 2007.[3]

Reception

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Ian Jane from DVD Talk awarded the film 1.5 out of 5 stars, criticizing the film for its poor acting, ineffective special effects, screenplay, music score, and editing. However, Jane went on to state "there's a strange manic energy to the picture that makes it a lot of fun to watch."[3]

Nanarland found that "The pace of the film, deliberately slow, can provoke boredom if the spectator is ill-disposed, but the pretension which underlies this “disturbing” atmosphere contributes to the general comical effect of the production."[4]

Another commentator described the film as "Without the tight compositions, dizzy visuals, and strategically placed reverb" that generally characterise Franco's work, "Cannibals is just another cheap Cannibal Ferox rip-off with savages in flip-flops .."[5]

References

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  1. ^ Blue Underground (November 13, 2007). Franco Holocaust: Interview with writer/director Jesús Franco. Cannibals DVD Extras (Interview). Retrieved 12 March 2018
  2. ^ "Mondo Cannibale (La Déesse des Barbares) de Jess Franco, Franco Prosperi (1980) - Unifrance". www.unifrance.org. Retrieved 2023-10-31.
  3. ^ a b Jane, Ian. "Cannibals : DVD Talk Review of the DVD Video". DVD Talk.com. Ian Jane. Retrieved 29 May 2019.
  4. ^ Nanarland. "Mondo Cannibale - la chronique de Nanarland". www.nanarland.com (in French). Retrieved 2023-10-31.
  5. ^ Ziemba, Joseph A.; Budnik, Dan (2020-10-29). Bleeding Skull!: A 1980s Trash-Horror Odyssey. SCB Distributors. ISBN 978-1-909394-14-8.
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