Search results
Results From The WOW.Com Content Network
By the 1900s [citation needed] the mummies began attracting tourists. Cemetery workers began charging people a few pesos to enter the building where bones and mummies were stored. [not verified in body] This place was subsequently turned into a museum called El Museo de las Momias ("The Museum of the Mummies") in 1969. As of 2007, 59 mummies ...
La leyenda de las Momias, also known as The Legend of the Mummies of Guanajuato, is a 2014 Mexican animated horror adventure comedy film produced by Ánima Estudios and distributed by Videocine. The third installment of the Leyendas film saga, following Nahuala and Llorona , the story is a fictional take on the origin of the mummies , mainly ...
Las momias de Guanajuato (English title: The Mummies of Guanajuato) is a Mexican horror telenovela [1] [2] produced by Televisa and transmitted by Telesistema Mexicano. Cast [ edit ]
One of the main reasons for the mummies’ fame in Mexico is the 1972 film El Santo contra las momias de Guanajuato, which featured Mexico's most famous lucha libre wrestler, El Santo, as well as two others called Blue Demon and Mil Máscaras. In this movie, the mummies are reanimated by a wrestler known as “Satán” and El Santo fights to ...
La leyenda de las Momias From a page move : This is a redirect from a page that has been moved (renamed). This page was kept as a redirect to avoid breaking links, both internal and external, that may have been made to the old page name.
Manchester Mummy: England: 1688–February 1758: Maunula mummy: Finland: 1938–1994: Mao Zedong: China: 1893–1976: Elmer McCurdy: USA: January, 1880–7 October 1911: Moimango: New Guinea [28] [29] José dos Santos Ferreira Moura: Portugal: 1839–1887 [30] Mummies of Guanajuato: Mexico: died in Cholera outbreak in 1833: Mun (δΈεζζ° ...
The best known luchador film made outside of Mexico is 1962's Santo vs. Las Mujeres Vampiro ("Samson vs. the Vampire Women"), which was featured in an episode of Mystery Science Theater 3000. Las Luchadoras ("The Wrestling Women") appeared in six films, the most famous being The Wrestling Women vs. the Aztec Mummy (1964) and Doctor of Doom ...
The Mummies of Guanajuato is a 1978 book which reprints Ray Bradbury's novelette, "The Next in Line", illustrated with photographs, by Archie Lieberman, of the actual mummies discovered in Guanajuato which inspired the story. The story originally appeared in Bradbury's first book, Dark Carnival, in 1947.