Santa Sangre

1989

Action / Drama / Fantasy / Horror / Thriller

Plot summary


Uploaded by: FREEMAN

Top cast

Guy Stockwell Photo
Guy Stockwell as Orgo
Brontis Jodorowsky Photo
Brontis Jodorowsky as Orderly 1
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1.05 GB
1280*682
English 2.0
NC-17
23.976 fps
2 hr 3 min
P/S 0 / 2
1.91 GB
1920*1024
English 2.0
NC-17
23.976 fps
2 hr 3 min
P/S ...

Movie Reviews

Reviewed by Coventry10 / 10

Holy Mother of God, Jesus Christ and everything else that is sacred! What a stunning experience!

This is not just a movie…THIS is a cinematic orgasm! For start to finish, "Santa Sangre" stands for one brilliant sequence after another, a staggering use of color shades, sensational musical guidance, disturbing themes and some of the most original story ideas that never ever featured in cinema before! To sum the film up in simply one word, it would be: AMAZING! I caught myself staring at the screen with my eyes and mouth wide open most of the time and I kept on thinking how I never wanted this movie to end. "Santa Sangre" unhesitatingly catapulted itself in my top-5 movies of all-time and I sincerely think it's there to stay. It's not very often that you encounter a film that is impossible to categorize under simply one genre, yet the masterful director Alejandro Jodorowsky here successfully assembles various genres like it's no trouble at all. To define "Santa Sangre" as just another foreign horror movie would be obvious, but at the same time truly short-sighted, as it contains an equally large amount of genuine drama that is actually a lot more captivating than most Oscar-winning (and hugely overrated) motion pictures. And if that isn't enough yet, this simultaneously is an immensely artistic and experimental effort that brings forward uniquely bizarre visions and dared symbolism.

The story is composed of two main chapters that are set in different eras, but both revolving on protagonist Fenix, who is briefly introduced as a resident in a mental institution. The fist (and most dazzling) part of the film is a 40 minutes long flashback in which we get an illustration of Fenix' unpleasant childhood. He's the son of traveling circus artists, and a promising young magician himself, but they don't exactly form a model family. Fenix' alcoholic and aggressive father has an affair with the obscene tattooed woman and his mother is the leader of a dangerously fanatic cult that worships an armless Goddess. Another violent argument between the parents results in a real tragedy that settles young Fenix up with an everlasting trauma. This brilliantly choreographed flashback is indescribably unsettling, and this without showing much graphic images. Tod Browning's classic film "Freaks" already made clear that a circus can be a truly petrifying place and the wide versatility of eerie characters (midgets, clowns, white-faced acrobats, magicians…) is well represented in Jodorowsky's imagination as well. Particularly Fenix' father is a disturbing man, not in the least because he subjects his own son to bloody rituals that supposedly make a 'real man' out of him. Despite the constant atmosphere of surrealism, these were some of the most shocking 40 minutes of my life.

The second and larger part of the film is slightly less powerful, mainly because Jodorowsky's script tries to convince us of something that clearly is implausible. Under the influence of his mother who returns after many years, Fenix escapes the mental clinic and starts to give shows again with a totally new act. The mother is still very dominating, though, and merely sees her son as an instrument with killer arms that she can use to avenge herself. Only the reuniting with his long lost love can bring some peace and quiet in Fenix' unbalanced life. This second part is far bloodier than the first and the uncanny circus setting has been replaced with grim big city ghettos where drug abuse and prostitution are the most natural things in the world. This surrounding is still disturbing but definitely less overwhelming than the circus, also because you're more familiar with it. The clear references towards Freud and the infamous Oedipus syndrome still work but they aren't new things anymore. Thank God everything is still filmed in a hugely fascinating way, with camera angles and color shades that pretty much make your head spin, and most characters actually evoke real sentiments of compassion and admiration. Especially Alma, I loved her! In conclusion, "Santa Sangre" is a terribly neglected movie that deserves a ranking in the IMDb top-250 (honestly!) and I wish I could reward it with a rating higher than 10 out of 10.

Reviewed by kosmasp4 / 10

Acting vs. (surreal) story

I's a big struggle. As a story that is surreal, this movie could've been great (as great as it is rated by some here),but mixed with the acting (director and relatives playing major roles, due to financial reasons I reckon) found in here ... although calling this acting, is not only a stretch of that word, it's giving it a new meaning! A whole new meaning!

If you are into surreal movies (there are some that I do like actually, see the Japanese Strange Circus for example),you might be able to overlook the flaws (see above) and enjoy this more. There are great ideas here, after all! Many great metaphors and ambiguous scenes, but while watching this (with a group of friends) almost all of us, just couldn't stop laughing ... not the intention of the director of course! Again, everyone has their own liking, as one can see by the high rating of this movie, but I could only recommend the movie if you're aware of the work that Alejandro Jodorowsky has done and/or are a fan of his!

Reviewed by gavin69428 / 10

Oh That Crazy Guy

A young man is confined in a mental hospital. Through a flashback we see that he was traumatized as a child, when he and his family were circus performers: he saw his father cut off the arms of his mother, a religious fanatic and leader of the heretical church of Santa Sangre ("Holy Blood"),and then commit suicide.

Santa Sangre did not receive a wide release in the U.S. since its original premiere, only screening at a few theaters familiar with Jodorowsky's previous work. On January 25, 2011, Severin Film gave the film a release on both DVD and Blu-ray with more than "five hours of exclusive extras". If you have seen the film, this is probably where you saw it (though it was on Netflix for a while).

Roger Ebert gave the film a positive review, and said that he believed it carried the moral message of genuinely opposing evil, rather than celebrating it like most contemporary horror films. Ebert described it as "a horror film, one of the greatest, and after waiting patiently through countless Dead Teenager Movies, I am reminded by Alejandro Jodorowsky that true psychic horror is possible on the screen – horror, poetry, surrealism, psychological pain and wicked humor, all at once." Although I like the "dead teenager films" Ebert has a problem with, he is right to praise this film. It is glorious, and really captures the strange imagery we come to expect. Perhaps not as strange as "Holy Mountain", still strange enough to astound.

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