Blood Circus (film)

For the band, see Blood Circus (band). For the singer formerly known as Santogold, see Santigold.

Blood Circus is a science fiction movie, with a professional-wrestling theme, produced in 1985.[1][2] The movie was produced by Baltimore-native Santo Victor Rigatuso, also called Robert "Bob" Harris, who promoted it through infomercials for his mail-order "Santo Gold" jewelry business.

Plot

Aliens from the planet Zoran are sent to Earth to fight against professional wrestlers from the United States and the Soviet Union, who prove actually to be man-eaters who devour their opponents upon defeating them.

Production

Filming for Blood Circus began in 1985. After spending two years editing it, Rigatuso could not find a distributor for the film. He ended up renting several theaters in the Baltimore area to show his film. It was shown for only a week, and took in far less than the $2 million it cost to make the movie. The movie was never shown to the public after it ended its initial run, and the original copy of the film was believed to have been lost.[3] Clips of Blood Circus can still be seen in portions of "Santo Gold" infomercials circulating on the internet.

Some of the "Earth wrestlers" were actual professional wrestlers from the San Antonio-based Southwest Championship Wrestling[4] promotion, including Douglas “Ox” Baker, an experienced actor in his own right, and Eric Embry.

One of the key moments in Blood Circus was filmed at the Baltimore Civic Center, where Rigatuso, playing a character called Santo Gold, performs a song before the climactic wrestling match. The song lyrics have nothing to do with the movie; instead, the song promotes Rigatuso's "Santo Gold" jewelry.

"Scream Bags" were also provided to moviegoers as a promotional tie-in. The bags had a long poem about Blood Circus on each side, as well as a coupon for a free diamond ring from Rigatuso's "Santo Gold" infomercials.

In 2008, the Santo Gold website[5] announced that the 35mm negatives of Blood Circus had finally been found, and that producers were being sought for its release.

References

  1. "The Fans Cry for 'Blood'!". Washington Post. 1985-02-11.
  2. Stein, Joe. "Airwaves replace carnival midway for pitchmen," The Tribune, 1987-03-25, p. E1.
  3. 6:05 Superpodcast, "Episode 18: Later, Brotherrr..." March 24, 2016

External links

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