Satan Called—He Wants His Movie Back
If you’ve ever wondered what would happen if The Exorcist hooked up with Friday the 13th in a cemetery behind a Televisa soundstage, congratulations—you’ve just described Grave Robbers (Ladrones de tumbas). Written and directed by Rubén Galindo Jr., the film tries to be a Mexican gothic slasher about Satan, virgins, and Armageddon. Instead, it plays like a soap opera where the villain is a sweaty guy with an ax and the script was written during a tequila hangover.
The premise should be terrifying: an Inquisition-era executioner swears allegiance to Satan, is killed by an archbishop, and vows to return one day to father the Antichrist. Centuries later, grave robbers disturb his tomb and unleash him. Sounds intense, right? In practice, it’s about as frightening as Scooby-Doo dubbed into Spanish with added cleavage and machetes.
The Executioner: Satan’s Least Impressive Employee
Agustín Bernal plays the Executioner, the undead Satanist who comes back swinging—literally, with his trusty ax. He’s supposed to be terrifying: an unstoppable satanic force destined to impregnate a virgin and bring about the Antichrist. Instead, he lumbers around like your drunk tío at a quinceañera, waving an ax and grunting.
Satan should really reconsider his hiring practices. This is the demon-sent executioner we’re supposed to fear? He kills peasants, grave robbers, and boyfriends, but spends most of the film failing to complete his one mission: deflowering Olivia, the virgin descendant of the archbishop. Michael Myers had better time management.
The Virgin: Because Horror Movies Love a Womb
Enter Olivia, played by Edna Bolkan. Her sole personality trait is being pure enough for the Executioner’s Antichrist insemination ritual. She’s a virgin, she’s a descendant of the archbishop, and she’s got all the character development of a porcelain doll.
The film spends more time explaining her father’s police rank than giving her any agency. She screams, she faints, she gets kidnapped, and she’s constantly saved by everyone else. If she had been replaced by a blow-up doll wearing a crucifix, the movie would’ve played out the same.
The Grave Robbers: Dumb, Dumber, and Psychic Girlfriend
Then there are the titular grave robbers: Manolo, his psychic girlfriend Rebeca, and their buddies Armando and Diana. They stumble into the Executioner’s tomb looking for treasure, pull out the ax (because who doesn’t love disturbing cursed corpses?), and unleash Satan’s dullest killing machine.
Their biggest crime isn’t robbing graves—it’s robbing the audience of patience. They spend most of the movie running, screaming, and occasionally helping Captain López, Olivia’s dad, fight back. Rebeca, the psychic, gets bonus points for seeing visions no one listens to, proving once again that psychic powers in slashers are as useful as a dead battery in a flashlight.
Captain López: Machine Guns Solve Everything
Fernando Almada plays both the archbishop in the prologue and Captain López, Olivia’s father, in the present. Apparently, centuries of Satanic curses are best confronted with a machine gun, because when López faces the Executioner, he just unloads bullets like Rambo at Sunday Mass.
Of course, it doesn’t work. Satan laughs at your bullets. But damn if López doesn’t look like the coolest grandpa at the firing range. Subtlety? No. Fun? Briefly. Effective? About as much as holy water in a Super Soaker.
Supporting Cast: Fodder for the Ax
Like any self-respecting slasher, Grave Robbers fills its runtime with side characters who exist only to die. Peasants Pablo and Toño? Chopped. Olivia’s fiancé Raúl? Axed before he could get a wedding night. Andrea, Jorge, Armando, Diana? All slaughtered like piñatas at a demonic birthday party.
The Executioner racks up a decent body count, but the kills are unimaginative. Slash here, chop there, sprinkle some Satanic seasoning on top. For a movie about unleashing Hell on Earth, the creativity level is about “high school Halloween play.”
Satanic Rituals on a Budget
The big threat is that the Executioner will impregnate Olivia to bring about the Antichrist. Sounds like a climax fit for Rosemary’s Baby with mariachi horns. Instead, we get endless chasing, screaming, and a last-minute exorcism ritual that feels like it was written by someone skimming a Latin dictionary.
The showdown comes down to Captain López and the grave robbers stealing the Satanic figurine and the Executioner’s ax, which somehow robs him of power. Then Manolo blows him up with dynamite. Yes, dynamite. The Antichrist is thwarted by the Acme catalog. Satan wept.
The Look: Gothic Meets Telenovela
The film wants atmosphere. What it delivers is an identity crisis. One moment, we’re in misty cemeteries with flickering torches and ominous chanting. The next, we’re in brightly lit police stations that look like they were borrowed from a soap opera set.
Wardrobe is equally confused: executioners in medieval leather straps, virgins in ’80s fashion, grave robbers dressed like MTV extras. It’s as if someone tossed a Hammer horror film, a Televisa melodrama, and a Judas Priest music video into a blender and forgot to put the lid on.
Violence: Satan Demands More Gore
For a slasher, Grave Robbers is surprisingly tame. Yes, people die. Yes, there’s blood. But most kills are quick chops, awkward stabbings, or off-screen suggestions. The gore level hovers somewhere between “PG-13 vampire flick” and “student film with ketchup packets.”
When your premise is an undead Satanist impregnating virgins to spawn the Antichrist, you better go all-in on the grotesque. Instead, the film keeps cutting away, leaving the audience with nothing but disappointed sighs and half-empty tequila glasses.
Why It Fails
Grave Robbers fails because it never decides what it wants to be. Is it a supernatural gothic horror? A slasher? A Satanic exploitation flick? Instead, it’s a lukewarm stew of clichés.
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The Executioner is dull.
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The Virgin is lifeless.
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The Grave Robbers are annoying.
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The Kills are uninspired.
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The Ending is a literal dynamite cop-out.
Even Satan himself would’ve fallen asleep before the credits rolled.
Final Verdict
Grave Robbers had all the ingredients for cult glory: Satan, virgins, graveyards, and an undead killer with an ax. But instead of embracing its insanity, it delivers a plodding, cliché-ridden mess with all the edge of a butter knife.
It’s not scary. It’s not shocking. It’s not even campy fun. It’s just a Mexican telenovela where the bad guy forgot his lines and improvised with an ax.

