Panic Beats (1983) Poster

(1983)

User Reviews

Review this title
24 Reviews
Sort by:
Filter by Rating:
6/10
Nice little piece of Euro Horror!
rundbauchdodo3 January 2001
This entertaining effort from 1983 has everything you would expect from a Spanish horror movie: a) Paul Naschy, b) a low budget, c) a curse from the past and d) gratuitous gore to satisfy splatter freaks.

Even though the production values are rather low key, the film is always entertaining and keeps you interested from beginning to end. There are enough twists to develop a decent plot filled with surprises. And, as mentioned before, there are also a handful of gory moments that are well crafted and really nasty (but don't expect a movie focused on blood and guts).

The most remarkable aspect of the plot is its mix of crime thriller and ghost story elements, which fit together surprisingly well. And this is one of those movies, where Paul Naschy's character is NOT the ill-fated Valdemar Daninsky!

Recommended for all friends of European horror.
11 out of 15 found this helpful. Was this review helpful? Sign in to vote.
Permalink
7/10
Paul Naschy - Trash Virtuoso
"Latidos De Pánico" aka "Panic Beats" of 1983 is a neat little Horror film that mainly profits from a load of sleaze and Spanish Horror/Exploitation-icon Paul Naschy, who serves as leading man, writer and director. Paul Naschy enjoys a cult-status among my fellow fans of European Exploitation cinema, and, as far as I am concerned, his reputation is more than deserved. While the films he was involved in (as actor, writer, and sometimes, such as in this one, as director) may not qualify as being masterpieces or milestones, all Naschy films I've seen so far are highly entertaining, sleazy and violent little films that any fan of trashy low-budget Eurohorror should enjoy. What is most important, however, is that all of the man's films have a certain inimitable charm to them that can not be found anywhere but in a Naschy film. Naschy is probably best known for his role as Werewolf Waldemar Daninsky, whom he played in thirteen films so far, most famously in "La Noche De Walpurgis" of 1971. The character of the blood-thirsty knight Alaric De Marnac, whom Naschy plays here, is more sardonic than the Werewolf character, and, once again, the film has to do with a family curse. Naschy had already played Alaric De Marnac once, ten years earlier, in "El Esperanto Surge De La Tumba" ("Horror Rises From The Tomb", 1973). In addition to a creepy atmosphere and the usual Naschy-esquire charm, this sequel has a wonderful sense of black humor.

In the 16th century, the insane knight Alaric De Marnac (Naschy) terrorizes rural France with his blood-lust, using mainly his favorite weapon, the flail. Centuries later, his ancestor Paul Marnac (also Naschy) comes to his family's old castle with his wife, who needs the rural air in order to cure her heart disease... The film may not have the most logical storyline ever, but it delivers more than just diverting sleaze and gore. Naschy the director delivers a wonderful atmosphere, and Naschy the actor delivers an awesome lead. Sexy Paquita Ondiviela gets naked at every occasion and she also fits very well in the female lead. Paul Naschy plays his two roles with his usual greatness. Some may disagree, but I am personally a massive Naschy-fan, as he makes every film worthwhile, and his status as a Eurohorror-icon is more than justified. And while "Latidos De Panico" is maybe no milestone, I highly recommend it to my fellow fans of Eurohorror. Even if cheesy, this is great fun and a film that Exploitation lovers should enjoy. Not to be missed by my fellow Naschy-fans!
5 out of 6 found this helpful. Was this review helpful? Sign in to vote.
Permalink
6/10
Decent Euro-Horror...
EVOL66630 June 2006
Warning: Spoilers
PANIC BEATS is another Mondo Macabro release where all the good parts are pretty much in the trailer. The film isn't terrible by any means, and actually has a few decent "twists" in the plot (though much of it is pretty predictable...) - but I also found it dull at points and unremarkable overall...

Paul (played by Euro-horror mainstay, Paul Naschy) is the descendant of a knight who used to bash his out-of-line bitches with a mace. Legend has it that the knight comes back every 100 years to lay the smack-down on any ho's that are messin' around behind the man-of-the-house's back. When Paul moves his terminally ill (and rich) wife up to the old castle that used to be the home of the knight - weird things begin to happen that supports the legend...OR is it all just a figment of the wife's imagination...OR is there something even more diabolical going on???

The storyline for PANIC BEATS is decent enough, and the acting and cinematography are up to par for this sort of mid-budget Euro-trash - unfortunately, I like a bit more sleaze in films of this sort, and although there is some nudity (including full-frontal), it doesn't come til towards the end of the film (other than the brief opening scene). The gore is decent - nothing to write home about, but a few decent scenes. The twists in the plot make it somewhat more interesting than some other Euro-horror entries - but most of those are predictable as well. Overall, not a bad diversion, but I wouldn't consider it a "must-see" either...6.5/10
8 out of 11 found this helpful. Was this review helpful? Sign in to vote.
Permalink
6/10
Naschy directs himself ... and himself!
Coventry25 August 2007
Paul Naschy was quite an important contributor to the industry of European horror films, and I'm an unusually big fan of his work and persona, but he undeniably never accomplished anything major or classic during all his years of film-making. The titles in his repertoire provide large portions of gore and sleaze (thumbs up for that!) but his screenplays are generally uninspired and too often revert to the same old and repetitive basic premise. Apparently, Mr. Naschy just loves to play his own descendant in stories that revolve on ancient folklore legends and family curses. The entire "Hombre Lobo" cycle is based on this principle as well. "Panic Beats" is sort of like a re-telling of Naschy's earlier film "Horror Rises from the Tomb", as both films feature a murderously mad 16th Century knight - Alaric de Marnac - who supposedly returns from the grave to slay unfaithful women. In this film, 20th Century sleaze-ball Paul uses the petrifying myth to scare his wife to death, inherit her family fortune and marry a young & viral beauty. But, unfortunately for Paul, there's a lot more treason going on behind his back and he also never took into consideration that the myth of his malevolent ancestor might have some truth in it. The plot of "Panic Beats" is overall very dull and it doesn't feature a single story-element or twist that you can't see coming from several miles away. Every dire cliché and stereotype you can think of regarding isolated country mansions and medieval curses is predictably processed into the script, including the loyal old servant and the knight's armor that seemingly moves all by itself. But hey, as usual it was the high gore & sleaze factor that eventually convinced me to reward "Panic Beats" with a positive rating after all. There are a handful of truly nasty murders, committed with axes and other typically medieval armory. Beautiful feminine nudity is provided by luscious women such as Silvia Miró and Paquita Ondiviela, who both go full frontal without hesitating. I just wished Paul Naschy didn't insist on showing so much of his own naked and unusually hairy torso. Oh well … Recommended to all fans of trashy euro-horror, and the Mondo Macabro DVD is a real treat full of phenomenal extras!
5 out of 7 found this helpful. Was this review helpful? Sign in to vote.
Permalink
7/10
Naschy directs himself in familiar territory
The_Void26 February 2008
Paul Naschy films can be more than just a little bit hit and miss - and unfortunately there's a lot more misses than hits, but every now and again you happen upon a good one and this flick is certainly among the better Naschy films that I've seen. The film is directed by Naschy himself, and true to form (considering how a lot of his films are rather similar to each other) this one takes a hell of a lot of influence from Naschy's earlier works, particularly the boring Horror Rises from the Tomb. It's not original by any stretch of the imagination, but Panic Beats works well thanks to its atmosphere, gore and plot twists - it's almost verging on being a Giallo! The plot focuses on Paul; a rich descendant of a legendary knight named Alaric de Marnac. The knight has his own legend, and apparently he reappears every 100 years to batter any unfaithful women around his house. Paul decides to move his rich, but terminally ill wife up to the castle where the knight is reputed to have lived. Strange things start happening, and it appears the legend may be true...

The film gets off to a great start as we watch the knight chase down and slaughter a young woman. The film slows down from there and focuses more on the plot and characters. I won't say that it's all that interesting, but the film never gets boring and the way that we focus on the legend of the ancient knight is good. The film really picks up around the middle when the twist in the tale is revealed and it becomes obvious what the film is actually about. Naschy packs this flick with plenty of gore which is nice and the way that it's dished out is often unpleasant, which of course is also nice. There's a fair bit of bloodshed and the budget constraints were obviously a problem as it looks rather cheap - but it's still nice to watch. There's not as much nudity on display as some Euro-horror fans will be used to but Naschy is nice enough to cast some beautiful women and we do get some nudity. It all boils down to a predictable but well worked ending and while I cant say that Panic Beats is right up there with the best that Euro-horror has to offer - it's certainly a decent little film and above average for Naschy flick so I can recommend it.
3 out of 4 found this helpful. Was this review helpful? Sign in to vote.
Permalink
5/10
Paul Naschy again with his classic character , Alaric De Marnais , and frightening to viewer
ma-cortes27 October 2005
Jacinto Molina or Paul Naschy is actor, screenwriter and director of this film about his popular role ¨Alaric De Marnais¨ based on a real character , Gilles De Rais , a knight of the Dark age during XV century , under command of Charles VII of France in times of Joan of Arc and as well as a murderer of hundreds of children . The first film he appeared was ¨El Espanto Surge de la Tumba¨ (Horror rises from the tomb 1972) directed by Carlos Aured and where Alaric is beheaded in public execution , then he swears revenge facing the executioner and his descendants . Now is a ghostly presence that heckle his eternal rest for executing a merciless vengeance in a script plenty of gaslight , murders and adulteries at a countryside mansion .

It's a B series entertainment with abundant sensationalistic scenes and a ¨Naif¨ style . The movie has a bit of ridiculous gore with loads of blood similar to tomato . Revolting , horrible scenes and nasty images take place as slashing , decapitation , and bloody murders with axes and other tools . As usual , Paul Nashy exhibits breast , as he was a weightlifting champion . Julia Saly interprets as the suffered wife and Lola Gaos as the old servant . Abundant nudism in charge of gorgeous Pat Ondiviela . It's a sequel to ¨Devil's possessed¨ or ¨Mariscal del Infierno¨ based on the historic character Gilles De Rais . Gilles was a devoutly religious follower of Joan of Arc who fought valiantly on her side and was later trialed and executed by the Catholic Church for heresy and sexual crimes committed against children . As Rais served as a commander in the Royal Army , distinguishing himself by displaying reckless bravery on the battlefield during the renewal of the Hundred Years War . Rais's prosecution would be on charges which included murder , sodomy , and heresy. The precise number of Gilles' victims is not known, as most of the bodies were burned or buried. The number of murders is generally placed between 80 and 200 ; a few have conjectured numbers upwards of 600 . The victims ranged in age from six to eighteen and included both sexes.

The motion picture was regularly directed by Jacinto Molina , being produced , wrote and shot in his peculiar style . The late Naschy was a good professional , writing, filmmaking and acting about hundred titles , mainly in terror genre . ¨Marshall of Hell¨ is written by Molina along with 21 screenplays as ¨Mark of Wolfman¨, ¨Night of Walpurgis¨, ¨Vengeance of the mummy¨, ¨Licantropo¨, among them . The flick will appeal to Paul Naschy fans and horror genre enthusiasts . Rating : mediocre but entertaining .
7 out of 11 found this helpful. Was this review helpful? Sign in to vote.
Permalink
Typical Naschy movie, but a must-have DVD
lazarillo16 June 2006
This is a typical Paul Naschy movie and as such is difficult to describe to someone who hasn't seen one. On one hand, it is very old fashioned movie hearkening back to classic American thrillers like "Gaslight" or classic European thrillers like "Diabolique". On the other side, it opens with the scene of a completely naked women being chased through the woods by a knight on horseback and then brutally maced (in the medieval sense)into bloody pulp. (People who complain about the sexism and violence toward women in American films ought to take a gander at this).

Naschy has a way of combining disparate horror themes and subgenres in what seems like a very random, everything-but-the-kitchen-sink manner (his werewolf films, for instance, have involved everything from Dr. Jeckyl and Mr. Hyde to Countess Elizabeth Barthory to a Himalayan yeti). In this film he uses the evil Count Marnac he created for an earlier movie, "Horror Rises from the Tomb", but rather than making a conventional sequel he freely re-writes the legend making the knight an avenging figure who punishes unfaithful women (in "Horror" the count's wife was a conspirator in his crimes, here she is his first victim). Then he proceeds to ignore the supernatural elements of the story until the very end to tell a "Gaslight"-like tale of a man (Naschy himself, natch) who is only using the legend to frighten his wife to death. He wants to be with a mistress, of course, but just to needlessly complicate things he has TWO mistresses--the very sexy "bad seed" niece of his housekeeper(insert audible drooling sounds here) and another woman (who seems to only exist to provide additional nudity and and another gory killing, but oh well). The whole thing really shouldn't work, but somehow it does.

The recent Mondo Macabre disc this comes on is one of their best with a very interesting (but lamentably short) documentary that serves as an excellent primer for Spanish horror in general, and a longer, equally interesting interview with the erstwhile Spanish werewolf himself. This is neither the best or the worst Naschy movie I've seen, but this new disc should be a must-have for any Naschy/Spanish horror fan.
4 out of 6 found this helpful. Was this review helpful? Sign in to vote.
Permalink
7/10
The big bad dragon will leave you be...
lastliberal13 February 2010
Hasn't Naschy already done the ancestor/descendant thing? No matter, for watching Naschy direct and write and act (he does it all here) is always a pleasure - a guilty one, of course, as his films will win no awards.

The film opens with a man on horseback in full armor swinging a mace as a naked girl runs for her life. Let's see Scorsese do a better job of directing that scene!

Initially, the film does not appear to be more than lots of screaming at ghosts and gore, semi-transparent nightgowns, and a man determined to rid himself of a sick wife. But, hey, that's enough for an enjoyable film. However, more murders occur, the gore gets ratcheted up, and there are some interesting twists.

Besides Naschy, Paquita Ondiviela by herself makes the film worth watching. Too bad it is the only film available in which to see her. Silvia Miró is no slouch either. Both provide considerable full frontal.
1 out of 3 found this helpful. Was this review helpful? Sign in to vote.
Permalink
4/10
pretty weak none-too-scary film from Naschy, but at least the DVD extras were good!
FieCrier10 July 2005
This is out on DVD from Mondo Macabro, and I confess I own every DVD they've put out, even the UK-issued PAL ones. Well, one exception: I did not get O Ritual dos Sádicos (1970) AKA Awakening of the Beast, since I'd seen it already in Image Entertainment's Coffin Joe box set and I absolutely hated it. I'll also admit to the fact that I get a kick out of watching horror movies that have relatively few user ratings on the IMDb (less than 100, less than 20). So of course I bought Panic Beats when it came out!

The lead in Panic Beats is played by Paul Naschy AKA Jacinto Molina, a very prolific Spanish actor specializing in horror. In spite of his many films, I think the only ones I'd seen previously were La Orgía de los muertos (1973) and Dr. Jekyll y el Hombre Lobo (1972), the latter of which was one of Mondo Macabro's PAL DVDs. So far, I don't see the appeal of him as an actor. He looks a little like the late John Belushi, but seems to lack the humor and charisma. Naschy's acting, particularly in Panic Beats is very stoic, very nearly expressionless.

Panic Beats starts off energetically, with a scene set in the past with a knight chasing down a fully nude woman and killing her with a mace. The knight is Alaric du Marnac, a Gille de Rais-type character Naschy'd played before in Espanto surge de la tumba, El (1973).

After that, it's in the present day. Naschy is married to a nervous woman prone to nightmares. He takes her to an isolated home owned by his family, and their trip is not without incident. At the home is an old family servant and a pretty young relative of hers. The movie's pace is pretty slow for some time after their arrival, and it becomes evident that Naschy intends to "gaslight" his wife (Naschy, as the film's writer/director was consciously drawing from Gaslight, and Rebecca, the novel of which is mentioned by a character). Also being referenced is Les Diaboliques (1955), particularly in one scene stolen from that film, and poorly imitated here.

Much of the terror of the film is supposed to come from what is supposed to be a ghost of du Marnac, dressed in armor. Naschy, as writer/director again thought the idea of a knight moving like a tank through a modern home to be terrifying in itself. Given the incongruity, perhaps it could have been, but it is not here. It doesn't help, for example, that the house is already filled with several sets of armor; gone the incongruity - this is no "clown at midnight" to borrow Robert Bloch's phrase. The armor is also quite plain and shiny, which I didn't think helped either. And for myself, I'll add that I more or less immediately thought both of the knight in Scooby Doo, and the rubber-chicken wielding knight in Monty Python's Flying Circus TV series. An example of a terrifying knight in a modern context that worked would be the knight in Terry Gilliam's The Fisher King, so the idea is not without potential.

Naschy has lovers, and confidants, and people outside his plot yet within his circle, so there is the potential for things to start going wrong. The movie gets more interesting when this happens. There is some gore, but really not a lot. There is some full frontal nudity, and you also get to see rather a lot of Naschy who for an ex-weightlifter looks more burly than muscular.

I found the movie to be disappointing. I did like the special features, though. There is one on Spanish horror films, making particular mention of Naschy, Jess Franco, Jorge Grau, and Amando de Ossorio. There is another that is an interview with Naschy. Both are quite interesting, and made the movie not seem like such a bad purchase.
10 out of 18 found this helpful. Was this review helpful? Sign in to vote.
Permalink
6/10
Passable...
markovd11116 January 2024
"Panic Beats" or "Latidos de pánico" is a movie made just well enough to be an OK watch. However, storywise, it's more reminiscent of an episode of soap opera than a horror movie, which isn't necessarily bad, but it's surely not an achievement. Horror parts of the movie are nothing special and rely on gore to be shocking. There are no tense moments and there are no cool chase scenes and the opening and ending music theme of the movie absolutely doesn't fit into a horror movie. However, the movie looks and feels OK, there is some decent nudity thrown in the mix and, all in all, there are far worse movies for a horror movie genre fan to spend time on. I give it 6/10, but I recommend it only to the most hardcore genre and Naschy fans, because the rest won't find anything worth their trouble here.
0 out of 0 found this helpful. Was this review helpful? Sign in to vote.
Permalink
3/10
Major Disappointment
bensonmum28 May 2005
Warning: Spoilers
  • From the moment I saw this listed as on the Mondo Macabro website, I was intrigued. It looked good and the reviews I read were mostly positive. So when it was finally released, I couldn't wait to get my hands on it. After watching it, I wish I would have waited.


  • What a major disappointment. Right from the start, I knew that Panic Beats couldn't meet my expectations. The whole look and feel of the film is terrible. It has that straight-to-video look that usually destroys atmosphere. The sets are nothing special at all. Most of the film looks like it could have been shot in my house. The story is incredibly predictable. There are a lot of twists and turns in the plot, but most are telegraphed from a mile away. The gore scenes are horribly done. And the whole concept of a knight that comes back from the dead is straight out of Scooby Doo. It's not a very frightening image.


  • Paul Naschy does his best to provide some chills. With raised eyebrows and a menacing stare, he does his best to look frightening. But for the most part, it doesn't work. The most frightening scenes are of Naschy naked in the bathtub. Now that had me screaming.


  • As for Mondo Macabro's disc, it's very well done. I have no complaints with the image, sound, or subtitles. The extras are quite nice, including a brief history of Spanish horror.
6 out of 13 found this helpful. Was this review helpful? Sign in to vote.
Permalink
8/10
Fun and sleazy Paul Naschy's black comedy.
HumanoidOfFlesh1 April 2008
Paul Marnac,the offspring of Alaric de Marnac(of "Horror Rises from the Tomb aka El Espanto surge de la tumba",1973)takes his ill wife Genevieve on a vacation.Marnac family's manor hides an terrible history beneath and after awhile it seems that something evil has risen from the past.At the same time young woman Julie is going to have an affair with Paul.It looks like either a cruel plot against innocent Genevieve or something evil and unnatural.This mix of horror,sleaze and black comedy works for me.There is a little bit of gore and a decent amount of fill-frontal nudity,so my grimy exploitation heart was satisfied.Simple but stylish camera work combined with vivid colours is very close to 60's era of Hammer Films' classics.But like Naschy in his lead role,the whole film contains fun and foolish camp tone in it and therefore cannot be taken seriously.8 out of 10.
2 out of 3 found this helpful. Was this review helpful? Sign in to vote.
Permalink
4/10
A sub-par Euro-horror from Paul Naschy.
BA_Harrison30 March 2007
Cult Spanish horror actor Paul Naschy not only stars in Panic Beats—he wrote and directed it too; I guess that puts the majority of the blame for this dreadful mess squarely on his massive hairy shoulders.

Taking the basic premise of French classic Les Diaboliques for the first half of his story—someone plots to kill their spouse by scaring them to death—and then veering wildly off in to all manner of convoluted goings on, until the final supernatural ending, Naschy delivers a muddled effort that bores more than it scares.

The film starts rather promisingly with a nifty pre-credit sequence that sees a nekkid chick running for her life from an evil knight on horseback. Falling to the ground in terror, she is beaten to death by the knight—weapon of choice: a nasty looking flail with spiked metal balls.

The rest of the film is set in the present day, and proves to be pretty uninspiring stuff, until about 20 minutes from the end, when viewers are treated to smattering of cheesy OTT gore. At least Naschy has the decency to feature a couple of Euro-babes in the altogether to keep us from completely glazing over; Paquita Ondiviela (¡Ay, caramba!) is particularly winsome as the wayward niece of Naschy's housekeeper.

Panic Beats is a film I can see appealing only to die-hard Euro-horror completists; anyone else will have a hard time seeing this one through to the end.
4 out of 8 found this helpful. Was this review helpful? Sign in to vote.
Permalink
Panic Beats
Michael_Elliott12 March 2008
Panic Beats (1982)

** 1/2 (out of 4)

Paul Naschy plays a man trying to care for his ill wife while carrying on affairs with two other women. All three women are causing him problems but thankfully there's a family curse that has a Knight return from the grave a kill anyone who dares harm him. Naschy also wrote and directed this film that has a very nice premise that goes back to his Horror Rises From the Tomb film. As usual, there are plenty of beautiful naked women but Naschy also adds some nice atmosphere, gory death scenes and some tense moments. However, like many other Naschy films, this one here eventually drags in a few spots but it's still well worth watching especially for a couple nice twists in the story.
3 out of 5 found this helpful. Was this review helpful? Sign in to vote.
Permalink
6/10
You Won't Want This Knight In Shining Armour. Worth A Watch.
P3n-E-W1s315 May 2022
Greetings And Salutations, and welcome to my review of Panic Beats; here's the breakdown of my ratings:

Story: 1.00 Direction: 1.25 Pace: 1.25 Acting: 1.25 Enjoyment: 1.25

TOTAL: 6.00 out of 10

Panic Beats is a definite Paul Naschy vehicle. Not only does he star, but he has written and directed this Dark Thriller come Horror flick. The lucky thing for the audience is that Naschy's accomplished in all of the principles.

The story's been written and filmed many times. Boy meets girl and falls in love - Love turns to despisement - Disdain germinates into murderous notions - People die. What provides the story with a breath of freshness is the motivations and complications of its characters. Naschy litters the tale with red herrings, both scripted and visually on screen. However, I still found it easy to surmise who the killer was before two-thirds of the story was complete. Luckily Naschy adds extra interest with his characters and background mythology, so I never lost my involvement.

The filmmaking is a tad simpler than the narrative. Naschy opts for basic camerawork, which works well. He tries to get creative with light and shadow and more engaging camera angles, usually when the scenes demand it - like when he uses special effects. Though, more inventiveness would only have added power to the picture. The one thing he excels in is controlling the pacing. He keeps the storytelling to a steady trot but gets it up to a gallop or a sprint when the action starts and the jump scares spring forth. And when he wants you uneasy, he adds the creepiness by prolonging the scene. One of the worst things about the filming was the FX heads. I loved the idea of the human heads mounted on the walls in place of the stags. What would have shoved the nightmare into awesomeness would have been realism. They looked so cheap and fake that they were laughable. It's sad because there aren't that many effects in the movie.

Naschy and the cast are outstanding in their performances. Each actor and actress play their part to the full. Only one actress stood out for me, Lola Gaos as Mabile. I believe it's because I liked her character the most, and Gaos superbly nails the servant woman come surrogate mother's persona.

Panic Beats is a watchable and enjoyable movie. You can use your detective skills to derive the murderer's identity or merely sit back and savour the film. Thanks to the story and film construction, either works well. Definitely worth one watch.

Please feel free to visit my Killer Thriller Chillers, Absolute Horror, and The Game Is Afoot lists to see where I ranked Panic Beats.

Take Care & Stay Well.
0 out of 0 found this helpful. Was this review helpful? Sign in to vote.
Permalink
7/10
leaving us with a smile
christopher-underwood27 June 2022
A wonderful, although nasty, opening with ancient knight in full armour swinging a mace on horseback galloping in the woods at moonlight and chasing a naked woman and finally bludgeoned to death. The film then gets a bit slow but then after about half way it really starts up again and there is a lot of killing which is rather silly and horrible with plenty of gore and nudity. There is usually we can imagine what is going to happen but there is the odd surprise and the end leaving us with a smile.
0 out of 0 found this helpful. Was this review helpful? Sign in to vote.
Permalink
5/10
Trashy Gothic soap opera
capkronos14 August 2006
Warning: Spoilers
This isn't all rotten if you hang in there. It's like a trashy Gothic soap opera running at half-speed with pretty decent acting, mild sex scenes, plenty of female nudity and a hilariously mean-spirited and lecherous roster of characters who use, deceive, manipulate, seduce and kill other people without thinking twice about it. It opens with a foggy, great-looking, atmospheric scene of infamous sadist Alaric de Marnac (laid over from Naschy's fun 1972 film HORROR RISES FROM THE TOMB) tracking down a (nude) victim on horseback before mauling her to death. In modern times, Alaric's look-a-like descendant Paul (Paul Naschy) decides to take his terminally ill, wealthy wife Genevieve (Julia Saly) out to his secluded childhood home for a much needed break from the stress of big city life (and possibly buy her some more time). Waiting for them at the home are elderly maid Mabile (Lola Gaos), who's been around since Paul was a young child and used to spook him with stories about the family lineage, and her sexy niece Julie (Paquita Ondiviela), who had a rough childhood and claims she is looking to make something of her life. A month after arriving in the home, Genevieve has gotten close to both Mabile and Julie and her health is improving, but the peace doesn't last long as she's haunted by mysterious visions of Alaric back from the dead. It doesn't take a rocket scientist to figure out that the forces conspiring against her are actually in human - not spirit - form, and said forces want her dead to get her money, but the less I reveal about this one the more you will probably enjoy it. It does sound like your standard issue psycho thriller, and in most ways it is a bit on the ordinary side, but the story does hold a few surprises that I won't spoil.

One of the things that this movie has going for it is that none of the characters are portrayed as saints and there's a certain duality to everyone, making the interplay between them a bit more interesting and unpredictable than what you normally see. The cinematography is competent; very stylish and colorful anytime something "supernatural" is going on. The four leads are all good. Plus there's one moment of over-the-top gore that will definitely catch you by surprise. It's worth a look.

Go straight for the Mondo Macabro DVD (an excellent print); quality for the Spanish language VHS version and the subtitled VSOM video don't do the film justice.
2 out of 4 found this helpful. Was this review helpful? Sign in to vote.
Permalink
3/10
Master slayer.
bombersflyup15 February 2021
Warning: Spoilers
Panic Beats is a trashy foreign "Melrose Place," in the countryside.

The story was actually tangible, until the predictable fantasy ending, hehe. It's a tad amusing, containing beautiful women. Not the worst of its kind, but still bad.
1 out of 5 found this helpful. Was this review helpful? Sign in to vote.
Permalink
4/10
This is a below average movie that isn't a complete waste of time
kevin_robbins5 October 2021
Panic Beats (1983) is a Spanish horror movie I recently watched on Tubi. The storyline for this picture involves a sick wife whose husband takes her out of the city and to their home in the country. Unfortunately for the couple a deceased creature is under the estate committing heinous murders. What is the creature and where did it come from? This movie is directed by and stars Paul Naschy (Night of the Werewolf), Lola Gaos (Poachers) and Manuel Zarzo (The Adventures of Baron Munchausen). The storyline for this picture had potential but due to limited budget, poor film quality and a lot of the scenes filmed way too much in the dark this wasn't as entertaining as it could have been. The creature once you see it is absolutely awesome. I loved the makeup and mask, which only further showed how much potential this film had (they should have showed the monster the entire film). There was some good music and surrounding sounds as well. Overall this is a below average movie that isn't a complete waste of time. I'd score this a 4/10.
0 out of 0 found this helpful. Was this review helpful? Sign in to vote.
Permalink
9/10
An unrepentantly gory tribute to the more unhinged qualities of vintage Gothic horror mayhem!
Weirdling_Wolf22 May 2021
The god of Gothic Grisly, Paul Naschy leaves no crumbling terror tomb undisturbed in his unrepentantly gory tribute to the more unhinged qualities of vintage Gothic horror mayhem! With one of the more spectacularly lurid introductions from his glorious oeuvre, we see the truly nightmarish plight of the nude adulterous wife of sadistic, Alaric de Marnac (Paul Naschy) being chased through the crepuscular woods by her enraged husband!!! Finally exhausted, she collapses and tearfully begs for mercy, only to receive a heinous shellacking with a menacingly wielded mace!!! The revered Spanish scion of shock begins his wantonly wicked splatter opus 'Panic Beats' in an audaciously bludgeonous fashion, happily, saving the bloodiest beating for last!

Gifted writer/director, Jacinto Molina (Paul Naschy) puts his burly physique, and sinister screen charisma to grisly good use in the gruesome guise of egregious villain, Alaric de Marnac. Simmering no less sinisterly as erstwhile architect, Paul de Marnac, the apparently dutiful husband to his beautiful, very rich, terminally ailing wife, Genevieve (Julia Saly). Paul spirits her away to his isolated ancestral home, ostensibly to be cared for by stalwart housekeeper, Mabile (Lola Gaos), and her feckless, strikingly nubile, altogether troubled niece, Julie (Frances Ondiviela). Into this increasingly uneasy domestic tableau, writer, Naschy upturns a veritable hornets nest of rampant infidelity, bloodthirsty black magic, ice-cold intrigue, darkly fulminating sexual passions and a sinister soupçon of, Henri-Georges Clouzot's insidiously influential 'Les Diaboliques'. This deliciously toxic cauldron of matrimonial deceit, macabre medieval retribution is sonically sweetened with a lush, especially groovy, David Axelrod-like score by blissful beat magicians Moncho Alpuente & Servando Carballar. Macabre movie icon Paul Naschy's majestically mean spirited 80s horror still beats you in the face with all the formidable bloody force of a medieval mace!
1 out of 1 found this helpful. Was this review helpful? Sign in to vote.
Permalink
8/10
Alaric de Marnac is back... or is he?
Groverdox1 February 2016
Paul Marnac, descendant of the 16th century warlock Alaric de Marnac, takes his sick wife back to his family home where she will be looked after by two maids in the family's employ: one, old and faithful, the other, young and beautiful.

Before the married couple even arrive at the house events transpire to threaten the wife's fragile health. There is an attempted robbery on the road, thwarted by the powerfully-built husband, but when the pair arrive at the de Marnac family estate rather than quieting down things take a turn for the bizarre and the gruesome.

This is a delightful Naschy horror romp in which the character of Alaric de Marnac makes his second and only appearance after the classic Horror Rises From the Tomb. Naschy keeps you guessing with constant surprises as the supernatural aspect of the story, generally a Naschy mainstay, is played down in favour of good old fashioned human iniquity. Indeed, the story makes you wish Alaric de Marnac could have made further appearances, but this was the last we ever saw of the character.
1 out of 1 found this helpful. Was this review helpful? Sign in to vote.
Permalink
8/10
Bathtub Naschy!
BandSAboutMovies12 February 2021
Warning: Spoilers
In case you didn't guess from all the films of his we've covered, we kind of love Paul Naschy around here.

Sort of a sequel and a remake of 1973's Horror Rises from the Tomb, this Naschy effort was written and directed under his real name, Jacinto Molina. Naschy also brings back the same role he played in that movie, Alaric de Marnac.

Within moments of the film starting, Alaric is already chasing women down while in horseback and caving in their skulls with a mace. Fast-forward a few hundred years and we meet Paul Marnac (also Naschy), who brings his infirm wife Geneviève (Night of the Werewolf, The People Who Own the Dark) to his family's ancestral home. Of course, you know that this home was built above the ruins of Alaric's castle and that Marnac's ancestor comes back every hundred years or so to ruin his relatives' lives, starting with scaring Marnac's wife literally to death.

Or was it all a ruse? Did Paul really just want to get with his younger lover Mireille all along? Is Paul also sleeping with the maid's niece Julie? Is Alaric real and coming for everyone? Yes, yes, yes and oh yes, just wait until the absolutely gore-drenched last ten minutes,

Somehow, this movie goes from a twist and turn tale of lovers getting people out of the way to a Fulci-level splatterfest by the end of the film. Bravo!

Also, if you love the body of Naschy - and I know who you are and I think you do - he's nude in a bathtub for your viewing enjoyment.

Naschy also played Marnac in The Devil's Possessed. Most people would worry about typecasting. Not Naschy - he also played the werewolf by night Count Waldemar Daninsky twelve times in his career.

You better believe that this movie has my absolute recommendation. If I came to your house and it wasn't in your collection, I would silently judge you.
1 out of 3 found this helpful. Was this review helpful? Sign in to vote.
Permalink
8/10
What Ever Happened To Alaric De Marnac?
ferbs5414 March 2011
Warning: Spoilers
The character of necromancer/Satanist Alaric de Marnac was first introduced by screenwriter Jacinto Molina (aka Paul Naschy) in Carlos Aured's 1973 film "Horror Rises From the Tomb," with Naschy playing both Alaric and his hapless descendant of five centuries later. A decade would pass before Naschy, now director as well as scripter, would revisit the character in "Panic Beats," but with some changes in Alaric's biography. Whereas in the first film he had been beheaded in 1454 by his own brother (and stayed dead...until modern times, at least), in the latter, he is said to have died in 1565, a ghostly figure who would return every 100 years to take vengeance on all cuckolding de Marnac women. In "Panic Beats," Naschy the actor does double duty again, playing the demon and his descendant. In modern-day Paris, we meet Paul, an architect who is having major-league women problems. His wife, Genevieve (played by Julia Saly, a beautiful actress who resembles the young Eleanor Parker), has such severe heart troubles that he is compelled to bring her to his ancestral estate in the country for a rest cure. His mistress, Mireille (the luscious Silvia Miro), is putting all sorts of pressure on him. And once ensconced in his country estate, he falls hard for the charms of the housekeeper's niece, Julie (gorgeous Pat Ondiviela). And then the murderous fun begins....

More a companion piece than a sequel, "Panic Beats" features, by necessity, all-new characters (virtually no one survived the carnage of "Horror Rises"!) and is a truly wild ride. Naschy, an admitted fan of the Universal horror films of the '30s and '40s, has obviously taken in many other scary pictures over the years as well, as "PB" brings to mind, in sections, such wonderful classics as "Gaslight," "The Spiral Staircase," "House on Haunted Hill," "What Ever Happened to Baby Jane?" and, of course, "Diabolique," to which he adds black-gloved giallo elements AND the supernatural. But the point at which Clouzot's "Diabolique" ends is just the halfway point for this truly remarkable film, which, for this viewer, is superior to the initial Alaric outing. Naschy does a wonderful job behind the camera, the production values are very high, the acting is superb across the board (indeed, Julia Saly's death scene is one of the most convincing I've ever witnessed), and the shocks and surprises just keep coming. This is the type of film in which virtually every character is either plotting against someone or being plotted against, and, as in the first film, the body count is extremely high; practically total. And if some sections are a tad predictable, watching the picture go through its paces still remains great fun. What's more, this Mondo Macabro DVD looks just fantastic, and is packed, as usual, with extras. In one, the late Naschy is interviewed and exhibits a remarkable memory and pleasingly self-effacing demeanor; an enormously likable gentleman. Bottom line: All horror fans should certainly pounce on this one. And, oh: The film's best line belongs to Ms. Ondiviela, when she chucks that space heater! Look out!
1 out of 3 found this helpful. Was this review helpful? Sign in to vote.
Permalink
Quentin Tarantino meets Marlon Brando meets John Belushi
lee_eisenberg5 February 2011
Having seen a number of the late Paul Naschy's flicks, I expected "Latidos de pánico" ("Panic Beats" in English) to have no shortage of gore. It didn't disappoint. I also knew in advance that this is one of the movies in which Paul Naschy - whose real name was Jacinto Molina - does not play werewolf Waldemar Daninsky. The plot has a man and his infirm wife moving to his childhood estate, which was also the residence of his bloodthirsty ancestor. There is a legend that his ancestor rises from the dead to get revenge on anyone who wrongs his descendants. When mysterious things start happening at the estate, the wife begins wondering if the legend is true.

I do prefer the movies in which Naschy grows fur and fangs, but this one was still cool. There's plenty of nudity, and even a see-through nightgown! There was something else. Usually I think that Paul Naschy resembles Quentin Tarantino. In most of this movie he did, but while wearing a hat, he looked like Marlon Brando in "The Godfather", and in the photo he looked like John Belushi in "Animal House". And this is in a horror flick!

Anyway, it's some real fun. In the first scene with the snake, I blurted out "I've had it with these mother***king snakes on this mother***king grave!"

PS: It's too bad that Paul Naschy never collaborated with Pedro Almodóvar on a movie. THAT would have been something cool! Probably a story of a werewolf having to deal with a damaged relationship.
1 out of 8 found this helpful. Was this review helpful? Sign in to vote.
Permalink

See also

Awards | FAQ | User Ratings | External Reviews | Metacritic Reviews


Recently Viewed