Mil Mascaras vs. the Aztec Mummy (2007) Poster

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8/10
Fun times below the border
hoodcsa30 April 2009
Fans of the old Mexican wrestling/horror films will get a kick out of this homage starring one of the greatest of the masked superheroes, Mil Mascaras. The Aztec Mummy, after being brought back to life by some plump acolytes, immediately launches into a plan to take over the world. But do not fear, Mil Mascaras, and an assortment of other masked Mexican grapplers, are here! There's more cheese in this picture than at the Velveeta factory, but it's all good. Veteran director Jeff Burr knows the material and manages to keep it breezy and fast moving. From the inane dialog to the illogical plotting to the low budget effects, this movie captures the feel of a near-forgotten, but much loved sub-sub genre.
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8/10
Loved it
BandSAboutMovies18 October 2023
Warning: Spoilers
An Aztec mummy (Jeffrey Uhlmann, an American research scientist whose work is concentrated on the linear quadratic estimation; he also wrote this movie) is brought back by a human sacrificed and given a jeweled staff that can control minds thanks to the hallucinogenic powers of Aztec mushrooms. He also has twin witches (Gwenda Perez) to help him dominate humanity.

Jeff Burr shot about two weeks of this film before leaving - he's credited as Andrew Quint - and the movie was finished by Uhlmann's fellow University of Missouri professor Chip Gubera.

This movie is so respectful of Mascaras - it says that he has "the mind of a scientist, the soul of an artist, the body of a great athlete, and yet there's something more about him. Something that separates him from other men." This also throws everything lucha movies should have against our hero. Beyond just the mummy, we get a robot, vampire women and zombies.

But even better, it has the President of the U. S. be played by Richard Lynch and at that point, this movie had me in its headlock. It tops that by giving us a tag match between El Hijo del Santo and Mil against two rudos that is judged by PJ Soles and Harley Race and then, Mil gets help against the zombies from Blue Demon Jr., Dos Caras, Neutron and Huracán Ramírez, Jr.

This movie is amazing. It doesn't make fun of its subject and at the same time it doesn't get ultra serious. It's a perfect way of making a lucha film that works, even in the 2000s.
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It's like a Lucha Cinema "Greatest Hits" Collection!
SheliakBob26 July 2011
Mil Mascaras still has charisma and looks great after all these years. The man has possibly the most recognizable rib cage in the Western World! This film is a love letter to the great Lucha classics of the Sixties and Seventies, and a fan's wish list come to life. Practically every scene is an homage to a trope from the classics. You get an Aztec Mummy, shambling Momias, wrestler vs monster scenes, plenty of ring action, sultry Aztec cult dancer, superhero wrestler HQ, some light bondage, blood and body-slams! And there are cameos from the modern legend legacy wrestlers like Hijo del Santo and Blue Demon Jr among others. You can keep your hyperactive CGI flash-cut action scenes! Give me a pack of masked wrestlers lumbering into battle with the Undead any day! The movie suffers a little from some loose editing and pacing issues. The acting ranges from quite good to, well, not so quite. I sometimes get the feeling that the screenplay looked perfect on paper, but the execution struggles to keep up with it in places. Still, the film never fails to entertain and is a heartfelt homage to a bygone classic genre, starring one of the greatest legends of that genre! How can you go wrong with that? I'm looking forward eagerly to more Lucha Cine action to come!
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10/10
Cheeeeeeeesy.....But Fabulous!
I grew up in the San Antonio, Texas, area and watched a lot of Mexican wrestlers in person and on TV as a kid and I got hooked on the masked wrestlers movies. Even now, as I look back, I realize that the films were made cheaply with bad dialog and writing, but they still fascinated me. And this one is the cream of the crop in this admittedly strange film genre.

Produced as an homage to the wrestler films with tongue firmly in cheek, Jeff Uhlmann brought together an envious assortment of masked wrestlers including living legend Mil Mascaras as the hero to battle the nefarious Aztec Mummy (played by none other than Uhlmann himself). These films are meant to entertain and not vie for Oscars, so check your logic and high hats at the door.

An Aztec Mummy (who has been the nemesis in older masked wrestler films) is revived from a long sleep to continue his plan to rule the world. Mil and his band of wrestlers plus a professor and police captain line up to stop the evil doer. Mil plays the part with a blend of soft-spoken confidence and air of command that comes from years of dispatching bad guys who always seem to outnumber him tenfold. Even though you know the outcome in these good vs. evil plots, the joy is watching Mil and his cohorts pummel the hordes of bad guys.

The twist in this outing is that Uhlmann has managed to lend some respectability to the film by adding several known actors in cameo roles. Solid character actor Richard Lynch plays the US President and one of my favorites, P.J. Soles (Halloween), and Hall of Fame wrestler Harley Race show up at ringside in a match. There are Mayan temples, dancing Indian girls in loincloths, caped henchmen, a boss tomb room inside the temple and lots of suspended disbelief in this "Greatest film of its kind ever produced", according to the film's poster.

This film will attract people like me who already know the genre, but this film should satisfy the whim of anyone looking for some action-packed fun. Cheesy, yes. But if you don't take it too seriously and accept it for what it is, you just might enjoy it.
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4/10
Cheesy beyond belief...which is why it is fun.
planktonrules25 November 2023
During the 1950s-70s, the Mexicans churned out dozens and dozens of luchador films starring the likes of El Santo, Blue Demon and Mil Mascaras...among others. While I would never consider any of these good films, they are, in their own cheesy way, fun to watch because they don't even try to be sophisticated or anything other than silly fun.

Imagine my surprise when I found something unusual tonight...a luchador film with American and Mexican actors in this American-Mexican co-production. The Mexicans are mostly dubbed into English in the copy I saw.

The story is insane...but that's par for the course for a luchador movie. A weird Aztec cult has just awoken a mummy and this grumpy mummy now has plans on ruling the world. So, it's up to Mil Mascaras to stop him before the President of the United States (Richard Lynch) nukes Mexico to try to stop the mummy! But before Mil Mascaras can do this, he tells the President that he must fight a wrestling match (seriously).

The film is silly...period. There isn't a lot to recommend it other than its silliness...which it has in spades. Overall, a great film to watch with friends, as it will provide ample laughs.
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9/10
Truly Epic
thegreat_jothulhu16 May 2012
Warning: Spoilers
What I don't like movies is the angst that occurs near the end. This movie did not have that.

Therefore,it rocked!! Also, look at it this way: Gogo Vampires, Luchadores fighting demonic zombies, and more cheese than the entire state of Wisconsin. What more could you want?

There is only one thing that could have made it better, and that would be featuring the legendary Fray Tormenta. FYI: Fray Tormenta ("Friar Storm") is a priest who became a luchador to support an orphanage.

Other than that, it was a great film. There is a term in independent, low budget films: "psychotronic." It is the description of films which mix two or more genres and have the feel of being directed by men with neither a lot of money or a lot of sanity. Many big budget films strive to be psychotronic, but few succeed. This film can teach those filmmakers a lesson!

And that is why this film is truly epic!
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