aka The Werewolf Versus the Vampire Woman/Shadow of the Werewolf/Walpurgis Night/Blood Moon /Satan vs The Wolf Man
On the grounds of the estate being rented by Waldemar Daninsky (uh oh) the gravesite of the Satan-worshipping vampire/witch Countess Wandesa (uh oh) can be found. Two sexy college girls (oh no) are searching for said final resting place and, thanks to being lost and low on gas, manage to stumble upon Daninsky’s homestead. He invites them to spend the week (after all, the nearest town is twenty miles away and his handyman will be by on Sunday and can take them into town) and the girls accept. Elvira is a bit wary but Genevieve is all about going with the flow. The girls are ecstatic to discover that their thesis subject is in fact buried on the grounds and upon digging up the Countess, Genevieve not only removes the silver cross lodged in the skeletons chest but manages to bleed on the skull (UH OH!) Before you can say “God damnit Genevieve!” Countess Wandesa is back and doing what them vampires do. Unfortunately she’s not the only issue plaguing the Daninsky residence. There’s an old curse which causes poor Waldemar to transform into a werewolf during the full moon. His slightly insane sister has been managing to chain him up during the transformation but thanks to her recent murder at the teeth of the newly vampirized Genevieve, Waldemar is running around doing what them bloodthirsty hairy beasts do. Of course he and Elvira fall hard for each other which is quite convenient considering he can only be killed by the hands of his true love, thus ending his cursed existence. But before he can be put down for good, he’ll have to take care of that pesky vampire woman who wants Elvira as her slave to keep Daninsky in check. Paul Naschy is at his tortured best and there are plenty of boobs and blood to keep ya occupied. There’s an excellent atmosphere and the Barbara Steele-esque Patty Shepard is a wonderful visual presence as the evil Countess. An unnecessary subplot with Elvira’s police detective boyfriend coming to the rescue doesn’t distract that much but feels a bit tacked on. Nonetheless, this one is justifiably revered and a classic of monster cinema.








