The Return of Count Yorga (1971)

The Return of Count Yorga (1971)

5/5
(1 votos)

El Conde Yorga continúa aprovechándose de la comunidad local mientras vive en un orfanato cercano.

También tiene la intención de tomar una nueva esposa, mientras alimenta a su grupo de vampiras.

Actores
George Macready·Mariette Hartley·Robert Quarry·Roger Perry
Dirigido por
Bob Kelljan
Género
Horror
Idioma
English
País
USA
5.8IMDb

Director
Bob Kelljan

Bob Kelljan
Robert QuarryCount Yorga
Mariette HartleyCynthia Nelson
Roger PerryDr. David Baldwin
George MacreadyProf. Rightstat
Walter BrookeBill Nelson
Philip FrameTommy
Yvonne WilderJennifer Nelson
Tom TonerRev. Thomas Westwood Orphanage
Rudy De LucaLt. Madden
Craig T. NelsonSgt. O'Connor
David LampsonJason - Ellen's Boyfriend
Karen EricsonEllen Nelson
Helen BaronMrs. Liza Nelson
Jesse WellesMitzi Carthay
Michael PatakiJoe
Corinne ConleyWitch
Allen JosephMichael Farmer - Winner of Costume Party
Peg ShirleyClaret Farmer
Liz RogersLaurie Greggs
Bill Marx
Ingrid PittVampire: Clip from 'The Vampire Lovers'
Michael Macready
Ferdy MayneVampire's Victim: Clip from 'The Vampire Lovers'
Joyce King
Richard H. CampbellMan at Party
Fabien D. Tordjmann
Laurette Odney
Vee Kasegan

Robert Quarry is back as Count Yorga, a ruthless vampire who takes up residence with his many brides near an orphanage, only he seems determined to add one more(played by Mariette Hartley) to his harem. Once again, some local men decide he must be stopped, only they underestimate the evil they have to face...

Following in the tradition of Hammer Films' Dracula series, this sequel resurrects the vampire AND his assistant even though they were clearly killed at the end of the first Yorga movie! Yes, inexplicably he's back and in a different locale--now terrorizing suburbia instead of Los Angeles.

The ever-suave and charismatic Bulgarian vampire Count Yorga (the wonderful Robert Quarry in peak sardonic and sinister form) returns to continue his campaign of terror at a nearby orphanage. Ably directed by Robert Kelljan (who also co-wrote the clever script), with slick, vibrant cinematography by Bill Butler and an eerie, shivery score by Bill Marx, this sequel to the immensely enjoyable original is in some ways even better: the production values are more polished, the pace much snappier, there's a greater atmosphere of skin-crawling dread, an amusingly dry sense of spot-on sarcastic humor, several well-mounted shock set pieces (a sequence with a whole family getting slaughtered by a horde of vicious vampire women is positively harrowing), and a stirring conclusion complete with a jolting surprise bummer ending.