Manuel Esteba P.C.: Difference between revisions

From the Audiovisual Identity Database, the motion graphics museum

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[[File:Manuel Estaba P.C. (1983).jpg|center|300px]]
[[File:Manuel Estaba P.C. (1983).jpg|center|300px]]
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'''Nicknames:''' "Get It On, Break the Gong", "The Man Who Inspired Rob Liefeld", "Gong Fail", "The Shoddy Gongman"


Logo: At the beginning of the movie, a very muscular man with red briefs poses as Rank's "Gongman" and hits a gong that reads "Una Producción Manuel Esteba P.C." all in capitals. The gong immediately breaks.
'''Logo:''' At the beginning of the movie, a very muscular man with red briefs poses as Rank's "Gongman" and hits a gong that reads "Una Producción Manuel Esteba P.C." all in capitals. The gong immediately breaks.


'''Closing Variant:''' At the end of the film, the man is seen trying to fix the gong, but he can't, and starts weeping in frustration.
'''Closing Variant:''' At the end of the film, the man is seen trying to fix the gong, but he can't, and starts weeping in frustration.

Revision as of 08:26, 11 December 2022


Background

Manuel Esteba was a producer and director of exploitation films whose main "merit" is to have directed what's considered to be the worst movie ever made in Spain: the 1983 E.T. spoof El E.T.E. y el OTO, filmed in two weeks with a ridiculously low budget. Not surprisingly, this was his last film (by the way, he still claims that Spielberg gave him permission personally to make the movie).

(March 28, 1983)


Logo: At the beginning of the movie, a very muscular man with red briefs poses as Rank's "Gongman" and hits a gong that reads "Una Producción Manuel Esteba P.C." all in capitals. The gong immediately breaks.

Closing Variant: At the end of the film, the man is seen trying to fix the gong, but he can't, and starts weeping in frustration.

Technique: Live-action.

Music/Sounds: In the first part, only the sound of the gong breaking. In the second part, a happy-go-lucky piano tune, which the last part of the ending music, accompanied by the man's sobbing.

Availability: Extremely rare; seen only on the Spanish E.T. spoof, El E.T.E. y el OTO, which is very hard to find.

Legacy: A really cheap parody, but considering the film it's on, it may have been intentional. It can get a few laughs out of it, however, even if the gong shattering may surprise some first-time viewers.

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