A former circus artist escapes from a mental hospital to rejoin his mother – the leader of a strange religious cult – and is forced to enact brutal murders in her name.
Axel Jodorowsky
Fenix
Blanca Guerra
Concha
Guy Stockwell
Orgo
Thelma Tixou
The Tattooed Woman
Sabrina Dennison
Alma
Adan Jodorowsky
Young Fenix
Faviola Elenka Tapia
Young Alma
Teo Jodorowsky
Pimp
Jesús Juárez
Aladin
Gloria Contreras
Rubi
Mary Aranza
Fat Prostitute
Sergio Bustamante
Monsignor
S. Rodriguez
The Saint
Zonia Rangel Mora
Trini
Joaquín García Vargas
Box-office Attendant
Teo Tapia
Business man
Edgar E. Jiménez Nava
Monsignor's Chauffeur
Jacobo Lieberman
Monsignor's Secretary
Héctor Ortega
Doctor
Brontis Jodorowsky
Orderly 1
Valérie Crouzet
Orderly 2
Óscar Serafín Álvarez
Soldier 1
Billy Motton
Soldier 2
Hilario 'Popitekus' Vargas
Wrestler 1
Guadalupe 'TNT' Aguilar
Wrestler 2
Arturo 'Rinoceronte' Contreras
Wrestler 3
Gustavo Aguilar Tejada
Beggar
Roger Fayard Arroyo
Beggar
Director, Screenplay, Story
Alejandro Jodorowsky
Screenplay
Claudio Argento
Screenplay, Story
Roberto Leoni
August 27, 2021
5
_**Life is a colorful psychosexual circus in Mexico City**_
A man ends up in an asylum after a shocking experience as a boy in a traveling circus in Mexico. When he escapes he finds his maimed mother and falls under her negative influence. Guy Stockwell plays the grossly overweight circus owner.
Released in 1989-1990, “Santa Sangre” (meaning “Holy Blood”) is a surreal circus fantasy made by cult director Alejandro Jodorowsky, who’s known for “El Topo” (1970) and “The Holy Mountain” (1973). His son, Axel, plays the protagonist here, Fenix.
Surreal or not, I love circus/carnival-oriented flicks and this one works well in its bizarre way for the first half, but totally bogs down in the second. The colors are vibrant and there’s a lot of deep symbolism with a Christ figure, a giant snake and so on. The various women are displayed in a creative titillating manner (Thelma Tixou as the tattooed woman, Blanca Guerra as the lithe high wire artist, Sabrina Dennison as the innocent Alma and Gloriella as Rubi) and I suspect this is a key reason why a lot of guys hail the film.
Unfortunately, the second half is dreadfully dull. Fenix doesn’t develop as a character in any attention-grabbing way and the story isn’t compelling, unless you find Fenix using his arms to help Mommy interesting. It’s still worth catching if you appreciate eccentric cult flicks that dare to be different, just be prepared for a tedious time in the second hour.
The film runs 2 hours, 3 minutes, and was shot in Mexico City.
GRADE: C
Status:
Released
Original Language:
English
Budget:
$787,000.00
Revenue:
$0.00