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Region: All Video: Enhanced Widescreen Letterbox for 16x9 TV DVD Aspect Ratio: Cinemascope (2.35:1) Audio: Dolby Digital Mono Weight factor: 1 item(s)
Plot Synopsis
Susan Stevenson (Ursula Andress) and her brother, Arthur (Antonio Marsina), travel to New Guinea in the hopes of finding her husband, who has gone missing for three months. The pair encounter anthropologist Dr. Edward Foster (Stacy Keach), who agrees to lead a jungle expedition in search of the missing man. As mantraps and other jungle dangers slowly whittle away the search party, Foster becomes convinced that Susan's husband is somewhere on the tiny coastal island of Roka, home to the sacred island of Ra Ra Me. En route to the mountain, the party is captured by the Puka, a Stone Age tribe long considered extinct. Foster reveals that the tribe is cannibalistic, having been captured and forced to consume human flesh years before. This gruesome news, however, pales before Susan's discovery of her husband's fate -- a fate that will surely befall the entire party if they are unable to escape. ~ Paul Gaita, All Movie Guide
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Editorial Reviews:
Director Sergio Martino's contribution to the Italian cannibal horror-adventure cycle of the early to mid-'70s is a rung or two below the vomitus excesses of the subgenre's most unpleasant entries, Cannibal Holocaust and Cannibal Ferox. It's still a graphic and unpleasant film, with all the noxious trademarks intact: gratuitous violence, real-life atrocities committed against live animals, and an uncomfortably imperialist attitude towards underprivileged peoples. But Martino tempers the blow with professional direction and lush cinematography, and the presence of Stacy Keach (an infrequent star of Italian exploitation in the '70s) and Ursula Andress (whose undraped frame, still impressive in her forties, is on display in several scenes) helps add touches of much-needed class and skill to the proceedings. But professionalism and class aren't what fans of these films are looking for, and exploitation fans may be somewhat disappointed by the film's sluggish pace and lack of suspense or dread, something that despite their hideousness, both Cannibal Holocaust and Cannibal Ferox had in spades. By contrast, Mountain of the Cannibal God comes across as a sort of grisly Boys' Own adventure -- nasty, but also somewhat quaint with its old-fashioned cursed mountains and white goddesses. Anchor Bay's widescreen DVD presentation is uncut and retains about four minutes of graphic sexuality (including a genuinely shocking moment of faux bestiality) missing from most American prints. It also includes a 12-minute featurette on the making of the film, as well as the original Italian trailer and bios on Martino, Keach, and Andress. ~ Paul Gaita, All Movie Guide
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Director Sergio Martino's contribution to the Italian cannibal horror-adventure cycle of the early to mid-'70s is a rung or two below the vomitus excesses of the subgenre's most unpleasant entries, Cannibal Holocaust and Cannibal Ferox. It's still a graphic and unpleasant film, with all the noxious trademarks intact: gratuitous violence, real-life atrocities committed against live animals, and an uncomfortably imperialist attitude towards underprivileged peoples. But Martino tempers the blow with professional direction and lush cinematography, and the presence of Stacy Keach (an infrequent star of Italian exploitation in the '70s) and Ursula Andress (whose undraped frame, still impressive in her forties, is on display in several scenes) helps add touches of much-needed class and skill to the proceedings. But professionalism and class aren't what fans of these films are looking for, and exploitation fans may be somewhat disappointed by the film's sluggish pace and lack of suspense or dread, something that despite their hideousness, both Cannibal Holocaust and Cannibal Ferox had in spades. By contrast, Mountain of the Cannibal God comes across as a sort of grisly Boys' Own adventure -- nasty, but also somewhat quaint with its old-fashioned cursed mountains and white goddesses. Anchor Bay's widescreen DVD presentation is uncut and retains about four minutes of graphic sexuality (including a genuinely shocking moment of faux bestiality) missing from most American prints. It also includes a 12-minute featurette on the making of the film, as well as the original Italian trailer and bios on Martino, Keach, and Andress. ~ Paul Gaita, All Movie Guide
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Chapters
Disc #1 -- Mountains of the Cannibal God
1. Program Start/Main Titles [1:59]
2. Arrival [3:58]
3. Dr. Edward Foster [4:47]
4. Rescue Mission [4:52]
5. Lizard For Lunch [4:25]
6. Island of Death [4:10]
7. Coils of the Serpent [4:36]
8. Killer Crocodile [3:58]
9. Deadly Trap [2:49]
10. Cannibal Attack [2:54]
11. Jungle Sanctuary [4:06]
12. Nightmare [4:32]
13. Forbidden Rituals [4:15]
14. Death in the Dark [4:18]
15. River of No Return [3:37]
16. Fighting the Rapids [4:18]
17. Waterfall [4:04]
18. Sacred Mountain [4:12]
19. Uranium [3:35]
20. Slaves of the Cannibal God [4:25]
21. Pit of Horror [3:05]
22. Bestiality [3:08]
23. Defiling a Goddess [4:58]
24. Sudden Death [2:39]
25. Pygmy Torment [2:46]
26. Desperate Escape [5:02]
27. End Credits [1:10]
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DVD Menu
Disc #1 -- Mountains of the Cannibal God
Chapters
Extras
Trailer
Legacy of the Cannibal God (13 Mins.)
Poster & Still Gallery
Talent Bios
Sergio Martino Director
Stacy Keach
Ursula Andress
Play
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4 - customer reviews
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Cast
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Production Credits
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Cesare Frugoni
| - | Screen Story, Screenwriter | |
Guido de Angelis
| - | Composer (Music Score) | |
Maurizio de Angelis
| - | Composer (Music Score) | |
Sergio Martino
| - | Director, Screen Story, Screenwriter |
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Format: DVD
Release Date: 11/13/2007
UPC: 827058110990
Item ID: 873490
Studio: BLUE UNDERGROUND
ProductID: BLUG1109DVD
Region: All Video: Enhanced Widescreen Letterbox for 16x9 TV DVD Aspect Ratio: Cinemascope (2.35:1) Audio: Dolby Digital Mono Weight factor: 1 item(s)
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Features
Legacy of the Cannibal God - Interview with director Sergio Martino
Theatrical trailer
Poster & still gallery
Talent bios
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