Attack of the Mayan Mummy
By Cavett Binion
American "B"-movie mogul Jerry Warren can always be counted on to turn a cheap but fun horror import into a boring, unwatchable mess--as proven by this tedious effort, originally produced in Mexico as The Aztec Mummy and later padded out with deadly-dull exposition. The original film is silly enough; the first of a popular Mexican series, it involves the awakening of the mummy Popoca to avenge the desecration of his tomb by infidels. As a cost-saving measure, instead of re-dubbing the Spanish dialogue, Warren added new scenes with American actors, who drone on about reincarnation and past-life regression and bring the action to a screeching halt.
Similar Works
La Casa del Terror (1959, Gilberto Martinez Solares)
La Maldicion de la Momia Azteca (1957, Rafael Lopez Portillo)
La Momia Azteca (1957, Rafael Lopez Portillo)
Plus these items:
Written language of the Maya shocks scientists with its brutality
Ancient Mayan Mummy Proves A Tattoo Is Forever
Note: A naturally mummified body isn't the same as the artificially mummified body in Castle.
Hackmaster Stats for Mayan Mummies
Comment: The last image pretty much sums up the linkage between Mesoamericans and horror. If blood and death were involved, the people had to have been evil, right?
The second link is the only semi-scientific reference I found to Maya mummies. And it comes from a UFO site. So far the existence of Maya mummies remains unconfirmed, to put it mildly.
For more on the subject, see Maya Invented Werewolves? and Indiana Jones and the Stereotypes of Doom.
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