More New Releases

Marquis de Sade's Justine The Beyond Pieces

Grindhouse Releasing will be releasing Lucio Fulci’s masterpiece, The Beyond, on DVD October 28th. The release promises to be one of the most have releases of the year, even though a lot of the extras on the disc are the same as Anchor Bay’s previous release. Of note this time around is a new introduction by Catriona MacColl, interviews with cast and crew, and liner notes by Chas. Balun.

Grindhouse are also releasing the video nasty Pieces (1983), directed by Juan Piquer, in a special 2-disc edition which should blow away the previous knock off release a number of years back. The disc is packed with extras, and promises to be another must have. Hits stores October 28th.

English label Salvation Films who specialize in Euro sleaze are starting to get their Stateside releases back on track. Virgin Witch, Lips of Blood, Killer’s Moon, Nude For Satan, and Black Magic Rites were released earlier in the year on their Redemption label, and now Jean Rollin’s Fascination (as mentioned previously) and Marquis de Sade’s Justine (1977, Chris Boger) both see release on a hot day for horror fans… October 28th.

Posted in American Horror, British Horror, Exploitation, French Horror, Jean Rollin, Lucio Fulci | Tagged , , | Leave a comment

Severin Problems

Several of Severin Films DVD releases have been delayed until October 28th. As reported here earlier Franco’s Bloody Moon and Devil Hunter were meant to be released in late July, but problems with each, as reported on Severin’s website, created delays. These delays were for the right reasons, and the folks as Severin should be commended for ensuring we had the best quality and most complete versions possible. The print of Bloody Moon was missing some violence, but it was eventually found on a German version of the film after much scouring, and with Devil Hunter, they almost lost their far superior French language track, but all is well and we should have both films later this month. In The Folds of the Flesh was also delayed, and will be out in October as well, so it looks to be a good month!

British company, Salvation Films, are releasing an extremely rare Jean Rollin film, Les Échappées (The Runaways) on 31st March 2009 (26th January in the UK). The print is from the original negatives and the transfer was supervised by Rollin himself. This is a very exciting release. Échappées tells the story of two girls who escape an correctional facility for children, and was originally released in 1981. Salvation are also re-release Rollin’s masterpiece, Fascinaton, which as been long out of print, on October 28th.

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Zombie Holocaust (1980)

(aka Dr. Butcher M.D.; Dr. Butcher, Medical Deviate;La Regina dei cannibali)

Director: Marino Girolami
Producer: Ron Harvey, Terry Levene
Writer: Fabrizio De Angelis, Romano Scandariato

Starring: Ian McCulloch, Alexandra Delli Colli, Sherry Buchanan, Peter O’Neal, Donald O’Brian, Dakkar

Although Zombie Holocaust is directed by Marino Girolami, better known for directing sex comedies, the film obviously bares evidence of more than a heavy hand at work. The hand in question takes the shape of one Fabrizio De Angelis, who’d produced one of Lucio Fulci’s masterpieces, Zombi 2, a year earlier. In fact, much of Zombie Holocaust owes a deep debt to Zombi 2. It’s shooting location is the same, some of the cast members make a reappearance, and Lucio Fulci has even claimed that some of left over footage, from the far superior Zombi 2, actually appears in Zombie Holocaust! Once watched, it is hard not to believe this claim.

A New York hospital is having problems, human body parts turning up missing from the recently deceased laying around the hospital. The doctors are doing their best to avoid a scandal by failing to inform the police of these disturbing occurrences. For those of us who have seen at least one cannibal movie, we know what we are in for when one of the do doctor’s state that “it wouldn’t be surprising in a savage society”. Oh, those primitive socialites! When the next body turns up with its heart ripped out, things seem to be getting a little worse. Maybe we really are in the jungle with all those savages.

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Posted in Italian Horror, Ruggero Deodato, Spanish Horror, Zombie Films | Tagged , , , | Leave a comment

Love Me Deadly (1972)

(aka Secrets of the Death Room)

Writer and Director: Jacque Lacerte
Producer: Buck Edwards

Starring: Mary Wilcox, Lyle Waggoner, Christopher Stone, Timothy Scott.

The sleeve of Shriek Show’s release of this obscure 70′s exploitation film includes blurbs about the shocking nature of Love Me Deadly, and while it has it moments, this is no Nerkomantik (1987); a film that genuinely shocks and appalls on a number of levels. If your stomach can’t quite take the excess of Nekromantik, Love Me Deadly is a nice little starter in necrophilia.

Love Me Deadly wastes no time in letting you know what it’s about. A woman sits at the back of a funeral parlor as she observes the proceedings of the sermon. She stays behind while everyone leaves, making her way to the open casket where she proceeds to practice the art of French kissing on the unresponsive cadaver. Strangely though, she is seen by a funeral employee, perhaps this is normal course of action in a funeral parlor because nothing is said.

If that sparked your interest, it could be quickly destroyed by a woman crooner blabbering on about how she’ll “Love you deadly”, all the while footage of a father and daughter relationship is deployed for our benefit as the opening credits roll. We now know there’s an odd father daughter relationship buried somewhere in the plot, and it quickly becomes apparent it’s our job to figure out how that comes into play.

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Posted in American Horror, Exploitation, Necrophilia | Leave a comment

Freakmaker (1972)

(aka Mutations)

Director: Jack Cardiff
Producer: Robert D Weinbach
Screenplay: Robert D Weinbach, Edward Mann

Starring: Donald Pleasence, Tom Baker, Julie Ege, Jill Haworth, Brad Harris, Michael Dunn, Scott Antony

The Freakmaker is probably one of the more interesting efforts to merge the horror and science fiction genres from the 1970′s. The seeds of this intriguing piece of cinema have obviously been sown together from another classic period for horror cinema, the 30′s. The effectiveness with which Tod Browning’s Freaks (1932) and the classic mad scientist elements from James Whale’s Frankenstein (1931) are quite startling.

Professor Nolter (Donald Pleasence) is giving a bio-chemistry lecture to his students where he explains his theories on the subject of mutations. It is his belief that all humans are mutations, and there is a need to induce and create mutations of our own choosing in order to improve the human race. After the students leave the class it is apparent that they are already onto professor’s mad scientist tendencies, believing his theories to be somewhat…out there.

While walking home one of the professor’s students, Bridget, passes a midget who is putting up a poster for a traveling circus and Freak Show. She fails to notice, but the man putting up the poster doesn’t fail to notice her. When she enters the park, the man begins to follows her. Along with another midget they continue to follow her silently until she spots what is happening. She runs from them, and their little legs give chase. She is finally accosted by Lynch (Tom Baker) as he springs from the bushes to grab her.

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Upcoming Releases

Severin Films have several new releases lined up to hit shelves in the summer months, including a couple Jess Franco movies – one having, surprisingly, been absent from the US market.

devilhunter.jpgDevil Hunter, The29th July 2008Director: Jess Franco

“Re-Mastered In High-Definition And Featuring An All-New Interview With Jess Franco!King Of EuroSleaze Jess Franco (BLOODY MOON, MACUMBA SEXUAL) takes on the ’80s Cannibal genre and delivers a jungle sickie like no other! When a safari of sexy babes and violent boneheads ventures into native-crazed wilderness, Uncle Jess unleashes a deluge of relentless nudity, dubious anthropology and his own brand of cut-rate carnage. Ursula Fellner (SADOMANIA), Al Cliver (ZOMBIE), Robert Foster (CANNIBAL TERROR) and Gisela Hahn (CONTAMINATION) co-star in this original ‘Video Nasty’ – also tastefully known as SEXO CANNIBAL and MANDINGO MANHUNTER – with something to offend everyone, now fully restored from the original Spanish negative and presented uncut and uncensored for the first time ever in America!”

bloodmoon.jpgBloody Moon29th July 2008Director: Jess Franco

Re-Mastered In High-Definition And Featuring An All-New Interview With Jess Franco!

As the ‘body-count’ genre stabbed its way into audiences’ hearts in the early ’80s, EuroTrash auteur Jess Franco (SADOMANIA, MANSION OF THE LIVING DEAD) was asked to create his own saga of slaughtered schoolgirls complete with gratuitous nudity, graphic violence, and gory set pieces. But just when you thought you’d seen it all, Franco shocked the world by delivering surprising style, genuine suspense and a cavalcade of depravity that includes incest, voyeurism and roller disco. The luscious Olivia Pascal of VANESSA fame stars in this twisted thriller that was banned in England yet is now presented uncut and uncensored – including the complete ‘stone mill power saw’ sequence – for the first time ever in America!”

papaya.jpgPapaya, Love Goddess of the Cannibals24th June 2008Director: Aristide Massaccesi (as Joe D’Amato)

“Now Uncut & Uncensored For The First Time Ever In America!

Her name was Sirpa Lane, the succulent Finnish beauty who became an international sex symbol in Roger Vadim’s CHARLOTTE, then shocked the world with her inhuman degradation in Walerian Borowczyk’s THE BEAST. But perhaps her ultimate cinematic destiny was to star in this tropical sleaze-fest from the notorious Joe D’Amato – director of EMANUELLE AND THE WHITE SLAVE TRADE and ANTHROPOPHAGUS – as a woman who hungrily surrenders to perverse trysts, native vengeance, graphic carnal carnage and much more. Severin Films is shamelessly proud to present PAPAYA fully restored – including the complete Disco Cannibal Blood Orgy sequence – from an Italian vault print seized from the private collection of a jailed magistrate!”

cannibalterror.jpgCannibal Terror24th June 2008Director: Alain Deruelle (as Allan W. Steeve)

“Deep In The Jungle The Flesheaters Are Waiting

Even by the sleaziest standards of ’80s EuroTrash, it remains a film that must be seen to be believed: When a pair of criminal knuckleheads and their busty moll kidnap the young daughter of a wealthy tycoon, they foolishly choose to hide in a local jungle infested with ferocious cannibals. What follows is a mind-roasting exercise in atrocious acting, gratuitous nudity and gut-munching mayhem by a ravenous tribe of flesh eaters who inexplicably sport comb-overs and Elvis sideburns. Robert Foster (INCONFESSABLE ORGIES OF EMMANUELLE), Pamela Stanford (WHITE CANNIBAL QUEEN) and Burt Altman (THE DEVIL HUNTERS) star in this infamous Spanish/French co-production that was banned in Britain as one of the original ‘Video Nasties’ and is now presented uncut, uncensored and mastered in High-Def for the first time ever in America!”

Posted in Cannibal Films, Jess Franco, Slasher Films | Tagged , , | Leave a comment

S.S. Experiment Love Camp (1976)

ssexperiment.jpg(aka SS Experiment Camp, Captive Women II: Orgies of the Damned, Lager SSadis Kastrat Kommandantur)

Director: Sergio Garrone
Writer: Sergio Chiusi, Sergio Garrone
Music: Vasili Kojucharov, Robert Pregadio

Starring: Paola Corazzi, Almina De Sanzio, Attilio Dottesio, Giovanna Mainardi

In the exploitation arena of film making there is apparently no subject that is off limits. The horrific acts of the Nazi’s and their treatment of Jews in the concentration camps of Germany is definitely not off limits. There has been a slew of, dare I say, highly entertaining films in this subgenre.

The Nazi concentration camp films began with the Liliana Cavani’s The Night Porter (1974), and we were then graced with a whole slew of classics of exploitation with the likes of Ilsa, She Wolf of the SS (1975), Salon Kitty (1976), and Beast in Heat (1977). But who could forget SS Experiment Love Camp? This was the film that began the “Video Nasty” madness in England, during the rise of Video in the early 80′s. The cover art of its initial release depicting a woman hung upside down, almost completely naked, in kind of upside down cross, was discovered by some highly offended individual. All hell soon broke loose, and nothing was quite the same again.

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A number of female Jewish prisoners have been sent to a German concentration camp for a series of experiments ordered by the Fuhrer. If you need any help in figuring out what those experiments might be, well lets have a look again at the title: SS Experiment Love Camp.

Hot off the front lines a number of Germany’s best soldiers have been pulled to help with this special assignment. They don’t quite know what the experiments are, but are hoping for some action with all the women around the camp. It appears that the Fuhrer wants to improve the master race by conduction experiments into reproduction, and the countries best soldiers are sure to be able to improve the master race.

As with any test into fertility, the first thing you need to do is get a couple of willing participants (or unwilling, whatever the case may be) getting it on in a tank of water. Luckily, SS Experiment Love Camp is not amiss on this vital test, even having a tank in which you can turn the heat up and down in – just in case things get too hot or not hot enough! In these first experiments, along with the wave making couple, the other participants are left to get things going in a more traditional bed scenario. I’m still personally trying to figure out how getting German soldiers to rape Jewish women is going to help improve the master race. A ‘master race’ that wanted to eliminateall Jewish blood, the inferior race, but it seems I’m thinking way to hard right about now.

The Love Camp portion of the title of the film is not far off because there is love in the air. One German soldier, Helmet (I am not joking), who have been enlisted to help with the experiments has been making eyes at one of the female prisoners, and she’s been making some eyes back. Luckily for them, they have to experiment together, and their love blossoms in this vile place. Another couple isn’t so lucky though. When the woman really isn’t into the man she was paired with, claiming “He’s not my type” she is exposed to the full ”terror” of the water tank. In order to cure her fridged nature she is put in the water tank and the heat is turned up to boil, and she quickly begins to cook. She’s seems to warm up to their ideas pretty quick, so they decide to cool her down again. But instead of just cooling her down, they freeze her alive in the tank (or cover her in cotton wool – you get to decide!), and it’s off to the furnace for her.

lovecamp2.jpg

The film began with a woman being thrown into a furnace after being killed on an electric chair. Along with other naked bodies in the furnace the flames devour them… but you can’t help but chuckle when the bodies start dancing about in the ”fire”. The pain the dead bodies must be enduring!!

lovecamp3.jpg

The Colonel of the camp has his own agenda in regards to the experiments. When his manhood was manhandled in a war zone after raping a woman he has some reproduction issues of his own. He bribes the doctor into doing a transplant in order to cure his problem. The doctor has to agree after it is revealed that the Colonel knows his secret, that of being a master surgeon who is hiding his identity from the German’s. Handy that!

So the surgeon begins to prepare for the surgery by experimenting on the women in the camp, transplanting their ovaries, only to have the women die on him during the procedure. The doctor complains about the wasted loss of life, but is forced to carry on.

The Colonel has his man picked out for his transplant and invites Helmet to his office one evening to see just how well he performs. A couple of women from the camp brothel come for a visit and the Colonel watches as Helmet gets down to business with the women. When Helmet later confesses of his love for the woman in the camp, the Colonel offers Helmet a way to be with his love forever, by volunteering to be part of a surgical experiment. He is given one more night with the woman of his dreams and then the surgery begins, little does he know what is about to happen.

After a night of bliss with his love Helmet’s testicles are removed during the operation. Maybe it’s just me, but these things are enormous, the size of eggs! The Colonel receives these humongous objects, and in a matter of hours he’s ready to try them out, and who wouldn’t be?? Those German’s are a tough sort. Amazingly enough they work!

lovecamp1.jpg

Helmet on the other hand… starts getting really mad when he can’t perform. He doesn’t realize he is missing his egg sized friends and so begins his enraged journey to find out what happened to him in surgery. When he gets his answer he confronts the colonel and asks “What have you been doing with my balls?” to which he responses “I’ve been trying them out and seeing how they feel”. Hilarious!

In reality SS Experiment Love Camp is a pretty tame affair. There isn’t any extremely nasty torture of the inmates. Compared to something like Ilsa, She Wolf of the SS it is almost a Disney movie. There is torture, a couple women are put in an electric chair and forced to pledge allegiance to the Fuhrer. Some of the women have a pressure test conducted on their ears to see what kind of pressure the ear drum will with stand, not very shocking, but it is pretty mean! The most shocking moment though is when the female doctor takes an interest in one of the prisoners, subjecting the prisoner to a naked examination with the doctors mouth…stomach turning stuff!

There really isn’t much of anything that makes sense in SS Experiment; from the dancing furnace scenes, to the illogical use of Jews to create a master race, and the fact that if you had a couple of egg sized testicles removed you might actually notice. But still, this is what makes the film entertaining, and entertaining it surely is. If you want compelling viewing, and some sense of realistic logic, stick to Schindler’s List, but SS Experiment Love Camp is schlock at its greatest.

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Exploitation Digital have been releasing a slew of these SS films, films with appalling bad taste, but trust me I’m not complaining. After first witnessing Ilsa, She Wolf Of The SS some years ago, I’ve got a soft spot in my heart for the SS films. Exploitation Digital’s releases are somewhat varied in their quality, and unfortunately SS Experiment Love Camp is one of those that have suffered slightly. The picture is nice and crisp, and the colors seem well balanced, but the sound is really appalling. It is only a mono soundtrack, which is fine in itself, but the levels are far too low and I had to really crank the TV up to get a decent level. Which is a shame as it’s an otherwise really nice, and yes, essential release.

Specifications: Anamorphic Widescreen (1.85:1)

Extras: Trailer, Photo Gallery, Exploitation Digital Trailers, Interview with Sergio Garrone

Posted in SSploitation, Video Nasty | Tagged , , | Leave a comment

The Beast Must Die (1973)

(aka Black Werewolf)

Director: Paul Annett
Producer: Robert H. Greenberg, Max J. Rosenberg, Milton Subotsky

Starring: Calvin Lockhart, Peter Cushing, Marlene Clark, Anton Diffring, Charles Gray, Ciaran Madden, Tom Chadbon, Michael Gambon

By 1973 the British horror was in a pretty dire position, something which it would almost failed to ever recover from. It has only been in the last decade that things have started to look up for British horror – thankfully. In 1968, when George Romero’s Night of the Living Dead emerged onto the scene it dragged horror into the 20th Century. With a modern and edgy approach it left most European countries at a loss, apart from Italy that is, who embraced the change and took a bloody step away from the Gothic horrors of the 60′s.

Amicus, who produced some of the greatest British horror films of the 60′s and 70′s, set themselves apart from Hammer Films by setting a lot of their films in a modern day setting, and although they succeeded on many levels, their output was still stuck firmly in the 60′s Gothic horror tradition. The Beast Must Die is a prime example of horror being produced by a country trying to come to terms with modern horror, and failing to deliver.

Tom Newcliffe (Calvin Lockhart) is a wealthy hunter who has more money than sense. He has rigged up his entire body of land with ‘high-tech’ surveillance equipment so that he can make visual and audio contact with anything that moves. The computer system that has been installed can even distinguish man from beast, which can surely only take the fun and challenge out of hunting. Tom though, has a special prey in mind.The film opens with a man in black trying to escape a group of men with guns. His every step is tracked by Pavel (Anton Diffring) with the camera’s that are mounted in the trees and microphones buried in the ground. The equipment makes sure his every step is known. When they approach the man with guns drawn though, they let him go so they can continue to chase him, and it’s not until he winds up on the lawn of a large house that they shoot him.

The man isn’t dead though. The man was Tom, and he was testing out his equipment to make sure it’s fail safe, to be sure that his new toy is worth the money he paid. It obviously is because he’s pretty anxious to get down to the real hunt, the hunt for the ultimate beast. A werewolf.

Tom has invited a group of people to his mansion in an effort to discover which of them is a werewolf. In his obsessive need to discover the identity of the werewolf he eventually holds them prisoner on his land. All the guests seem to have a strange pasts, at some point or other they’ve either tasted the flesh of humans or people die mysteriously around them. This, I guess, obviously leads to the assumption of lycanthropy within the group, and Tom is full of resolve to discover and kill the werewolf as the full moon approaches.

The cast of actors that make up this group of suspects is actually pretty impressive. It includes Amicus regular and horror icon, Peter Cushing, who graces the screen with his ever welcome presence, as does Charles Gray (The Devil Rides Out, Rocky Horror Picture Show). Anton Diffring (Fahrenheit 451, Faceless) also makes an appearance as Tom’s assistant, monitoring the surveillance system. The lead, surprising given to black actor, Calvin Lockhart, is an obvious move to cash in on the the popularity of blaxploitation and give the film a modern or hip flavor.

Unfortunately any modern credentials The Beast Must Die gathers is killed from the very start by the use of the old William Castle gag to lure punters into the cinema… Viewers are blessed with the opportunity to guess the identity of the werewolf, and towards the end of the film there is an intermission of sorts so the audience can be directed to guess who they think the werewolf is. A decade earlier this would have been funny, but its kind of desperate at this point. It’s nothing like 1970′s Mark of the Devil, the marketing campaign for which gave audience goers vomit bags for when the film got a little too stomach turning. The Beast Must Die has nothing to offer there though, it’s much more like an episode of the Avengers than an out and out horror film.

There isn’t too much to the plot from here on out, the concept has been set up and we are left to watch and wait for the guests’ numbers to dwindle as the film progresses, each one being killed by the werewolf amongst the group. The murders all pretty much occur off screen so there really isn’t that much to look forward to. What’s perhaps more interesting is Tom’s ability as a hunter, not to mention that he’s off his rocker! We assume that Tom has hunted everything under the sun, it’s what has made him rich. Yet, when he comes face to face with the werewolf (a large black fluffy dog) numerous times, he does nothing but miss. Even with a machine gun he doesn’t seem to be able to hit his target, but he does accidentally shot a helicopter in an effort to save the pilot who is being mauled by the werewolf. By the time the “guess the werewolf” gag comes about, you really don’t care who the werewolf is, not that there is much logic in the guess. You may as well close your eyes and point.

So, The Beast Must Die is not the best example of British horror that there ever was, but its not horrendous either. As with many British horror films of this era, is it well made, which is probably one of it’s saving graces. The direction and look of the film is very solid, the plot just leaves a lot to be desired. The plot is rushed and empty, and there is a severe lack of characterization. With not much else going on we could really have done with getting to know the characters a bit better, but then the identity of the werewolf might then have been obvious, and cinema gag we would not have. Oh, the priorities!

As usual, Dark Sky films have done a fine job on this disc, perhaps more than they should have. They’ve loading the disc with extras, releasing a really nice print of this substandard British horror. But, any film featuring Peter Cushing deserves special treatment, and so Dark Sky should definitely be commended for their efforts.

Specifications: 16×9 Anamorphic Widescreen; Dolby Digital 2.0 Mono.

Special Features: Commentary by Paul Annett; Theatrical Trailers; Still Gallery; Cast and Crew Biographies; “Directing the Beast” featurette.

Posted in British Horror, Werewolf Films | Tagged , | Leave a comment

Blue Eyes of the Broken Doll (1973)

(aka Los Ojos Azules De La Muneca Rota, House of Psychotic Women)

Director: Carlos Aured

Starring: Paul Naschy, Eiko Nagashima, Silvia Aguilar, Azucena Hernandez, Julia Saly, Lautaro Murua, Luis Ciges, Ricardo Palacios, Rafael Hernande

In the last few years, the DVD market has suddenly been flooded with Spanish horror films. It was only a matter of time considering that Italy’s output of genre classics has been almost completely exhausted (several times over in some cases). However, there is a lot to be excited about. We were recently graced with Amando De Ossorio’s horrendously entertaining Blind Dead series, and now finally, one of the true classics of Spanish cinema, Blue Eyes of the Broken Doll.

Gilles (Paul Nasch) is hitch hiking in France trying to escape his past. However, when he winds up in the small town of Perrouze looking for work, his past quickly catches up with him. He accepts a position as the caretaker to the home of three strange sisters who live in a large house on the outskirt of Perrouze and are unable to maintain the property themselves.

Two of the sisters, Claude (Diana Lorys) and Yvette (Maria Perschy), suffer from physical handicaps which they received after some mysterious accident; an accident that seems to have turned the villagers against them. Claude’s arm is scarred severely from burns, and Yvette is wheelchair bound. Yvette’s doctor believes her condition to be all in her head, and decides to try psychotherapy in an effort to get to the root cause of her problem. A nurse the doctor recommends is brought in to care for the wheelchair bound Yvette, but when the nurse arrives it’s not the nurse the doctor was expecting. Michelle has been sent in place of the expected nurse, due to some unexplained circumstances.

Nicole (Eva León), the third sister, has problems of her own, although not physical. She has been caged by her overbearing sister Claude and is desperate to roam free, having needs that can only be satisfied by a man. So, needless to say, it’s lucky that Gilles has shown up, and she is quick in trying to seduce him.

A movie starring Paul Naschy this would not be, if Mr. Naschy did not remove a shirt or two in order to show off his bulky manliness. And so, when Nicole sees Gilles chopping wood bare-chested she just has to touch, but she is interrupted by her sister who is seeing the doctor out after one of his visits. This however, does not stop Nicole. She waits until evening and then casually enters Gilles’s room in her lingerie and has her wicked way with him. Like Captain Kirk in Star Trek, Paul Naschy always gets the girl, and in Blue Eyes of the Broken Doll, Naschy has his eyes on more than one!

He quickly starts to make the moves on Claude when she first brought him into the house, and when she gets jealous after seeing him with Nicole through the window, he comforts her in an effort to get a little closer. However, Gilles has, like the sisters, problems of his own. He has reoccurring visions of strangling a woman. His thoughts are especially plagued by these sights whenever he starts to get intimate. This does not stop him until he tries to have his way with Michelle. After taking her into the barn to ‘offer’ his services, the visions become too much for him and he has to let Michelle run off to the safety of the house.

While working in the garden, Gilles is attacked by the sisters’ previous employee, which they only just recently fired. He manages to fend off the attacker by stabbing him, but he is hurt in the struggle. This gives Gilles a good chance to survey the surrounding women as they attentively tend to his wounds.

When the police arrive to investigate the incident, they reveal that a woman has been killed, and it turns out that the victim is the nurse that was originally meant to take care of Yvette. And so begins a series of vicious crimes in which women with blonde hair and blue eyes are killed as they wonder the village alone at night, their eyes gouged from their skulls and placed in small dishes of water.

Of course, suspicion falls on the newcomers to the village while the bodies begin to pile up. When it is discovered that Gilles has a violent past, there is obviously no other conclusion to draw upon, and the police, along with a few of the local villagers go after him and put and end to the horrific murders plaguing the village. But things are not quite as they seem…Blue Eyes of the Broken Doll is actually one of the best Spanish horror films from the 70’s, and is definitely a good starting place for a foray into Spanish horror cinema. You really do get the best of both worlds; a strong mix of the gothic, which Spanish directors seem to be drawn too, along with the modern (at that time) giallo coming from Italy. This kind of blending of the two genres seems to give the film a strange ambiance, which seems to work in its favor. However, it’s still a fairly dull affair. The murders are committed very fast, or off screen, something an Italian giallo would never do!

Therefore, the film does drag in places, and it suffers from what could be called an old school approach. By this, I mean that the film could take place at any time; throw on some period costumes and it would still work. The film’s link to the period horror films a decade earlier is very apparent. That said, it’s not until the finale that you see the true power of the film and just how effectively plotted it really is. The black gloved killer gives the film some Italian flavor, but it’s at the finale that it throws aside all its trappings and aligns itself firmly with the giallo genre. Just because you think you are safe to give yourself a gold star for guessing the identity of the killer, don’t be surprised if your gold star gets replaced with silver when all is said and done. I know mine was.

Paul Naschy does what he usually does, and that can only really be a good thing. He takes his shirt off, flexes his muscles, gets into a fight, has a shoot out, and gets some girls. There is a certain comforting quality to this. He is something akin to Peter Cushing, or say, Vincent Price. He might, well, he definitely isn’t on their level, but he is their lesser Spanish equivalent, and like the previously mentioned actors, seeing Paul Naschy in a film makes the film worth watching – even if the film is pretty bad. Luckily though, Blue Eyes of the Broken Doll is not a bad film. It’s actually a pretty great one.

Deimos Entertainment has done yet another great job on this release. They have managed to secure another nice print, and although it’s full screen, the image is crisp and the colors are strikingly rich. Even the dull mono soundtrack sounds good.

Specifications: Full screen; English or Castilian mono 2.0; English subtitles.

Special features: Commentary track by Paul Naschy and Carlos Aured; Still gallery; Spanish Credits; US Trailer; Introduction by Paul Naschy.

Posted in Giallo, Spanish Horror | Tagged , , , | Leave a comment

Delirium (1972)

(aka Delirio caldo, Death at the Villa)

Writer and director: Renato Polselli
Music: Gianfranco Reverberi

Starring: Mickey Hargitay, Rita Calderoni, Tano Cimarosa, Christa Barrymore, William Darni, Raoul, Steffy Steffen, Cristina Perrier, Katia Corsorich

Young girls are being viciously killed and Dr. Herbert Lyutak (Mickey Hargitay) is helping the police track down the savage killer. But little do the police know that Dr. Lyutak has some serious problems of his own in this deranged giallo from director Renato Polselli. Anchor Bay’s release features the longer International version, which is cover here in detail, and an American version which is short and quite different in it’s approach.

After fixatedly gazing at the bare legs of a short skirted girl in a bar, Herbert offers the girl a lift to a club she is meeting friends at. In the car the girl starts to get worried as Herbert constantly gazes to her bare legs in an effort to see where they end, and when she begins to freak out Herbert doesn’t hesitate in forcing his hand up her skirt to find out for sure. When she struggles against Herbert’s advances and demands to be let out the car stops and she gets out and starts running, but Herbert follows her. He catches up with her at a stream and begins to strangle her as he rips her wet clothes from her, then beats her about the head until she is dead.

This latest murder is the 7th girl now found dead and the police are at a loss, but this time they have something of a lead. The owner of the bar saw a man leaving with the latest victim, and the parking lot attendant saw the man drive away with the woman.When Herbert returns home to his wife, Marzia (Rita Calderoni), some time later he claims to go looking for cigarettes, but runs off to find a chest which he unlocks mysteriously. His wife spies on him, and when he leaves to help the police in their investigation she picks the lock where she discovers his blood stained shirt.

At the police station they bring in the owner of the bar and he identifies Herbert as the man leaving with the now dead girl, but the positive identification does not mean the police arrest him, especially since another woman turns up dead while he’s being questioned. But since they like Herbert all suspicion seems to be dropped – he has helped them extensively in the past after all, but not very successfully I’m assuming since they are up to body number eight now.

A call earlier by Herbert to his wife makes us believe the film is going to be over in no time, that the police are really arresting him, but when he returns home we get to climpse the strange relationship Herbert has with his wife, and the household at large. As he’s talking to his wife the maid is outside the door masturbating as she listens to their conversation.

Marzia is plagued by strange, ”erotic” dreams. In the latest dream she is alternating between naked and clothed in a basement with her niece and the maid, all the while Herbert is tormenting and strangling them. When she wakes from the dream Herbert is lying awake watching her. He reaches for her neck and begins to strangle her. She doesn’t fight back, but when he stops himself by fighting his uncontrollable urges he refuses to do that to her, but she tells him he can do anything to her.

It is revealed then why Herbert is the way he is. He is unable to be a ”real” man, and his wife is still a virgin and his problem has obviously driven him to some strange activities, like it would anyone! Herbert is tormented and considers himself a monster, wanting to end his marriage to spare his wife the lack of action. Even though Marzia though knows he’s a killer, but loves him still, and when she resorts to eroticising the strangulation of herself, Herbert loses all control and begins to beat her. In this violent act of passion he seems to find some pleasure but is ultimately unable to perform his manly duty.

After Herbert has calmed himself down he calls the police to tell them he’s conducted his own investigation and the killer will strike in an hour at a swimming pool. The police surround the area. When Herbert arrives and begins to talk to the woman, Miss Heindrich (Katia Corsorich) the police have planted, we are almost assured that Herbert is going to strike again, and right in front of the police! He obviously wants his reign of madness and murder brought to an end. As his hands reach for her throat, there is a scream. A different scantily clad woman is stabbed a short distance away.

Heindrich, the woman who the police used as bait, took the murder weapon from the scene of the crime. She tries to get in contact with Herbert to talk to him about it, but before she can she is killed. Heinrich is drowned in the bathtub and then her body is placed in the window, so when the police find her she falls the several stories to the concrete floor below, the killer wanting it to look like a suicide. The police know she took the knife though, and know her death was no suicide.

The reoccurring character of the parking lot attendant seems to be doing his own investigation. He appeared at the swimming pool, and after Heinrich is drowned he can be seen washing his hands of blood. As he continues to search around he finds a hidden passage to a basement, then gets himself locked inside. Once inside though he witnesses another murder, a woman is unclothed and then injected with morphine and left to die in a room filling with gas. The parking lot attendant manages to break through, but it appears he’s too late. When he find his way out it he ends up in the Doctor’s house, and finds the missing murder weapon. When he calls the police the line is disconnected and he gets trapped in the basement. When Herbert returns home and finds him in the basemen the is none too happy.

Delirium is a strange little giallo. There is a lot going on, and you really need to be paying attention to follow all the little details. Where in a normal giallo there is one murderer and then are relatively simple story line to follow, Delirium maybe tries to be too clever. After all it’s not too hard to guess what is going on, but even with a clue to the killers identity there is still a lot to be explained. Like why isn’t Herbert being tied to at least one of the murders like he should be since witnesses saw him leaving with a now dead woman, and just what is the parking lot attendants role in all this?

The inherent madness that seems to surround the doctor, and the overall texture of the film bares a striking similarity to Emilio Miraglia’s Night Evelyn Came Out of the Grave (1971), who’s Alan Cunningham character also has strong masochistic tendencies, but rather than directed at girls in short skirts it is directed towards women of the redheaded persuasion.

It isn’t unusual for a giallo to be lathered with a healthy does of nudity and sexual content but once again Delirium does things a little differently. The camera roams around the bare thighs of the short skirted girls as they are killed in varying fashions by the killer. This could be labelled slightly misogynistic since there is definitely is an eroticism to the scenes, but it seems more in place to link the death to the hands of the doctor who has a sharp eye for some skirt.

The American version of Delirium included on this disc is a very different film. There are a number of Vietnam war insert to make this film more relevant to American audiences, as well as a method of explaining why Herbert is the way he is. There is, of course, less sexual content, but most interestingly there is an additional murder towards to finale of the film and a different ending. The American version is definitely worth examining, but after the longer version of course! This American version of the film includes footage from a Dutch video cassette, so the quality on portions culled from the video source is not as good as the majority of the film, but it’s impressive to have such a complete package for this film.

Overall, Delirium is a lot of fun to watch. There is enough going on too keep the viewer engaged, and if you like your giallo’s on the sexy side this one is a must. Anchor Bay’s release is about to be re-released by Blue Underground on April 29th in their continuing pilfering of AB’s back catalogue, which is a good thing!

Specifications: Widescreen (1.85:1) enhanced for 16×9 TVs; International version in Italian with optional English subtitles.

Extras: International Version (102 minutes), American Version (85 minutes), The Theorem of Delirium – interview with Renato Polselli and Mickey Hargitay.

Posted in Giallo, Italian Horror | Leave a comment