The commercial success of
La Momia Azteca would spawn a series of
exploitation films imitating Universal's monster movies, the first of which would be
El Vampiro (1957), modeled after Universal Studios'
Dracula series and released the same year as Alfredo's film. The film has since gained a small
cult following over the years and is now considered a
cult classic.
Sequels The film was the first in a trilogy starring the mummy Popoca, having been written and filmed back to back at the same time as
La Momia Azteca. Each sequel would incorporate different genres into its storylines, though these later entries would be given more negative reviews by critics, who highlighted the increasingly poor quality, and overuse of
flashbacks. The first sequel,
La maldición de la momia azteca (English:
The Curse of the Aztec Mummy) was released the same year. Unlike its predecessor, the sequel would incorporate the increasingly popular
Luchador film genre into its storyline, featuring the Mexican wrestler
Crox Alvarado as the masked
superhero known as El Ángel. The final entry in the series was released in 1958, titled
La Momia Azteca contra el Robot Humano (English:
The Robot vs. The Aztec Mummy), it would incorporate elements of
science fiction, with Popoca battling a robot built by the series reoccurring antagonist Dr. Krupp.
Attack of the Mayan Mummy In 1963, American producer
Jerry Warren acquired international rights to the film. Cutting a significant amount of the original film, Warren shot new scenes featuring American actors, editing it into a new film titled
Attack of the Mayan Mummy. The plot of the Americanized version, though retaining some of the original's storyline, would significantly alter major sequences in the film. The resulting version, cut down to 77 minutes as opposed to the original's 80-minute runtime, was released as a
double-feature alongside a similarly "Americanized" foreign film
Creature of the Walking Dead. Both were largely ignored by mainstream critics, with reviews that exist being largely negative. Warren would implement the same business practice some years later, splicing scenes from
La Momia Azteca and the Mexican comedy horror film
La Casa del Terror (1959) into newly filmed sequences featuring
Lon Chaney Jr. The resulting film, titled
Face of the Screaming Werewolf (1965). ==See also==