A bus load of tourists, several oddballs amongst them, travel to Mexico to learn about the ancient Aztecs and Mayans, but end up fighting zombies, human sacrifice, etc. I first saw this years ago on a bootleg VHS, now just revisited it on DVD. The film does boast some pretty good splatter but not until the second half. It's also pretty funny at times. However it also suffers from bad acting, a fairly dull first half and a plot that just confused the hell out of me. Admitably I felt tired at the time, perhaps that's why I was losing a grip on what was happening. If you like bad, gory movies then be sure to check out this one.
Plot summary
While questioning his faith in God, the Catholic priest, Father Ezekiel O'Sullivan, leads the annual archaeology tour for the local community college. Heading to the spiritual Mayan ruins of Todo Santos in Mexico, against the backdrop of the Grand Festival of the Laughing Dead, O'Sullivan and a motley crew of tourists are in for a shock when they cross paths with Dr Um-tzec, a wicked occultist bent on ushering in a new era of darkness. As warm, bright-red sacrificial blood flows, the unsuspecting visitors meet their horrible ends, paving the way for the advent of an unspeakable, ancient terror from the depths of history. Is O'Sullivan prepared for the ultimate confrontation with the blackest of evil?
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I laughed one minute, yawned the next
i was on the set of this movie when i was 8
well the cool thing about this movie was that my aunt was in the movie. I went to the set when i was 8 and played with all the zombies while they were in makeup. i went down all the slides and wrestled with my brother. I watch this movie with my friends when we need an "its so bad its funny" movie night. you can see in one scene the time change from day to night to day again. just like plan 9 from outerspace. also there is a bleeding heart where you can see the wires for the mechanism. It took them a long time to film the struggle over the knife in the final scene, they shot it the whole day i was there. were fate a bit different, I would have been a stand in for the kid during the basketball scene with the zombies. Love this movie for sentimental and just plain stupidity.
Poor horror movie is fun if you know the background
The delights of this movie lie in the fact that so many of the characters are played by writers of science fiction, fantasy, and horror rather than by professional actors. Somtow's talents as a popular writer are hardly in evidence here, though he is clearly a gifted musician and composer; that really is him playing the piano. The scene in which he rips out the hearts of children one after another is hilarious rather than grotesque. Tim Sullivan brings as much soul-tortured emotion and dramatic range as he can to a silly script; his flailings and roars while being possessed are delightful. Gregory Frost, whose fiction is noted for comedic rage (much like the work of John Cleese and Carl Hiaasen),exudes a haughty if inexplicable fury at everyone around him, while real-life jokester Raymond Ridenour has a great time being himself (while named for science fiction editor Gardner Dozois). Larry Kagen, at the time a bookstore owner,is fervent and rather sweet as a doting husband who rises above his wife's attempts to henpeck him. Krista Keim, as his wife, is totally believable as a crystal-worshipper; according to Frost, she really did believe in the powers of crystals at the time the movie was shot. Premika Eaton delivers every line poorly and was cast because she is Somtow's sister, not for any innate talent; she is, however, pretty. Ed Bryant, a great favorite among horror fans, steals every scene he appears in; Sullivan reports that they had to shoot the 'great big armadillo' scene several times because the two of them couldn't stop laughing (and adds that Bryant was squicked by the scene of his own death). Tim Powers is barely visible as a zombie; look for his red flannel shirt in the zombie scene near the end.