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・ La Nigérienne
・ La nipote
・ La Nitteti
・ La Niña
・ La Niña Buena
・ La Niña de fuego
・ La Niña de los Peines
・ La Niñera (Argentine TV series)
・ La niñera (Mexican TV series)
・ La nobla leyczon
・ La Noblette Aerodrome
・ La Noce de Pierres
・ La Noche
・ La Noche de los Bastones Largos
・ La Noche de Venus
La Noche de Walpurgis
・ La Noche del 10
・ La Noche del hurto
・ La noche del pecado
・ La noche es para mí
・ La noche más hermosa
・ La Noche Más Larga
・ La noche oscura
・ La Noche Triste
・ La Nocle-Maulaix
・ La Noisette
・ La Nola Pritchard
・ La nonne sanglante
・ La Norte
・ La Norteña de mis amores


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La Noche de Walpurgis : ウィキペディア英語版
La Noche de Walpurgis

''La Noche de Walpurgis'' (''Walpurgis Night'', released in the United States as ''The Werewolf vs. The Vampire Woman'' and in the UK as ''Werewolf Shadow'') is a 1970 Spanish horror movie starring Paul Naschy, the fifth in a series about the werewolf Waldemar Daninsky. This film was directed by León Klimovsky and written by Naschy and Hans Munkel, and is generally regarded to have kickstarted the Spanish horror film boom of the Seventies, due to its awesome box office success upon its release. Patty Shepard was so convincing as the vampiric Countess, it was thought at the time that she might replace actress Barbara Steele as Europe's reigning horror queen. Klimovsky filmed many of the scenes in slow motion, to add to the otherworldliness of the film.
Naschy followed up this film with a sequel entitled ''Dr. Jekyll and the Wolf Man''.
Note
* - There is a scene in this film that obviously inspired Spanish director Amando de Ossorio to write ''Tombs of the Blind Dead'', which was made just a few months later in 1971. A skeletal zombie in a monk's garments assaults Naschy in a cemetery in one scene, bearing a strong resemblance to de Ossorio's Templar Knights in his "Blind Dead" films.
== Plot ==
Following the events in ''Fury of the Wolfman'', the deceased lycanthrope Waldemar Daninsky is revived to life when two doctors surgically remove two silver bullets from his heart while performing an autopsy on him. Waldemar transforms into a werewolf, kills the doctors and escapes from the morgue. Some time later, two students, Elvira and her friend Genevieve, go searching for the tomb of medieval murderess (and possible vampiress) Countess Wandessa de Nadasdy. They find a possible gravesite in the vicinity of Waldemar Daninsky's castle, and he invites the girls to stay for a few days.
When Waldemar leads them to the grave of the countess Wandessa, Elvira accidentally revives her by bleeding on the corpse. The vampire woman turns the girls into creatures of the night like herself, and they roam the forest at night, killing people in eerie slow motion. Daninsky later turns into the Wolf Man, is forced to battle and destroy the vampire woman at the end of the film, and then is himself destroyed by Elvira, a woman who loves him enough to end his torment. (An interesting note - Naschy's real life wife of 40 years was named Elvira.)
Daninsky's lycanthropy is not given a specific origin in this film; the events of the film are assumed to have followed from the ending of ''Fury of the Wolf Man'' (1970), which involved a yeti's bite as the cause of Daninsky's curse. How Daninsky went from being a college professor in ''Fury'' to being a castle-owning count in "Walpurgis'' is never addressed.
It is explained that Waldemar was raised in this castle from infancy by an old woman who cared for him after his real parents died. The local townspeople consider her a witch, and rumors abound about a werewolf living in the castle. Apparently after Waldemar escaped from the morgue in the beginning of the film, he returned to his castle & his stepmother. This backstory totally contradicts Waldemar's being a college professor in the previous film, and this is why most Naschy fans don't even try to relate the Hombre Lobo films to each other storywise.

抄文引用元・出典: フリー百科事典『 ウィキペディア(Wikipedia)
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