Nights of the Werewolf

1968
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1968 Spanish horror film that is the second in a long series about the werewolf Count Waldemar Daninsky, played by Paul Naschy. The film is considered a lost film. It apparently was never theatrically released, nor has it ever turned up on video. Since Naschy insisted the script was filmed, it has come to be referred to as the second of the 12 Waldemar Daninsky werewolf movies, even though no one has ever seen it. To make matters even stranger, the lead actors whom Naschy attributed to this film (Peter Beaumont and Monique Brainville) apparently never existed. The "French director" Rene Govar seems to have directed only this one film as he has no other credits under his name on imdb.com. This is why most Naschy fans regard this movie listing as a hoax, some thinking that Naschy may even have made it up to boost his resume at a time when he was just starting out in the industry.

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Reviews

MoPoshy Absolutely brilliant
Sharkflei Your blood may run cold, but you now find yourself pinioned to the story.
Benas Mcloughlin Worth seeing just to witness how winsome it is.
Darin One of the film's great tricks is that, for a time, you think it will go down a rabbit hole of unrealistic glorification.
kevin olzak 1968's "Las Noches del Hombre Lobo" (The Nights of the Werewolf) remained a frustratingly elusive title during Paul Naschy's illustrious lifetime, either uncompleted or simply unreleased, shot on location in Paris by director Rene Govar (his only credit), who apparently died during filming. Only the second outing for hirsute Waldemar Daninsky, who catapulted Naschy to stardom with the previous year's "La Marca del Hombre Lobo," and scripted by Naschy under his real name Jacinto Molina, in collaboration with director Govar and C. Bellard (like Govar, no other credits). Of the four actors listed on IMDb (Peter Beaumont, Monique Brainville, Helene Vatelle), only Beba Novak had any other credits, Naschy's own "El Vertigo del Crimen," and Freddie Francis' German comedy "Gebissen Wird nur Nachts" aka "The Vampire Happening." Storywise it's a plot that Naschy would return to quite often, a mad scientist exploiting Wolf Man Waldemar for his own nefarious reasons, popping up in the next Daninsky title, "Assignment Terror," in which Michael Rennie's scientist is revealed to be from another planet, or "Dr. Jekyll and the Werewolf," with Jack Taylor's Jekyll using his Hyde formula on the already cursed Daninsky, or "The Fury of the Wolf Man," which made the mad scientist a beautiful woman (Perla Cristal). Considering that he repeated the same role in a dozen features, "Las Noches del Hombre Lobo" could very well be no great loss but coming so soon in his starring career, we can only speculate at such a late date. The third Daninsky title, "Assignment Terror," threw in every conceivable monster in existence, solidifying Naschy's hold on the crown for King of Spanish horror, but the next one that followed, "La Noche de Walpurgis," became an undisputed international sensation.