After unleashing gory sci-fi mayhem in The Mad
Doctor of Blood Island (1968), director Eddie Romero and star Josh Ashley
reteamed for this sequel, which is also known as Return to the Horrors of Blood Island, among many other titles. The
picture begins with Dr. Bill Foster (Ashley) heading back to civilization after
his adventures in the first picture. Alas, one of evil Dr. Lorca’s creatures is
on the same boat trip, leading to a slaughter and an explosion. Bill survives
and resolves to visit Dr. Lorca’s chamber-of-horrors island once more. Tagging
along is leggy reporter Myra Russell (Celeste Yarnall). The purpose of the
return visit is somewhat murky, though it presumably has to do with Bill
proving he didn’t invent the story of what happened to him. In any event, the outcome is
predictable. Upon returning to the island, Bill receives a chilly welcome from native inhabitants who don’t want anything to do with Dr. Lorca and his
grotesque experiments. Bill’s arrival prompts attacks by
mercenaries and monsters, leaving many natives dead. Yet Bill presses on, again
for reasons that are never particularly clear, although he finds time to have
sex with Myra and to rebuff the advances of a busty native guide. The
real weirdness happens in Dr. Lorca’s lab, where he keeps a man’s body and
head alive separately. The head, resting in a jar and connected to wires but
made up to resemble a vampire that’s been badly burned, taunts Dr. Lorca. Suffice to say that’s more interesting to watch than the
sequence of Bill leading an expedition into a haunted mansion, where Myra falls
through a trapdoor into a small chamber occupied by an irritable cobra. Boring
and stupid, except for a few fleeting moments when it’s insane and stupid, Beast of Blood is shoddy even by the low
standards of the many Filipino shockers that Ashley and Romero made together.
Beast of Blood: LAME
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