This little-seen
later-day giallo (better known as 7, Hyden Park: la casa
maledetta) finally makes its way to UK DVD shelves in a
welcome uncut release, courtesy of cult label Shameless.
25 years after breaking
her back in a fall following an attack by a doll-brandishing priest,
Joanna (Christina Nagy) is a wealthy heiress who, as well as helping establish
a paraplegic sports centre, has sporting aspirations of her own.
She's aided by coach Craig (David Warbeck, The Beyond), and the pair have become so
close they are to be married. This puts her friend Ruth (Carroll Blumenberg),
who has also been a live-in nurse, in an awkward position as she must
move out of her lovely home. Joanna also plans to donate half her
fortune to a local church. Unfortunately, the priest has just had his
throat cut and Joanna has started having hallucinations of a
threatening priest carrying a bloodied doll. To make matters worse,
Craig is warned by Joanna's doctor that her encounter as a child was
much worse than she knows; she was also raped, but this has been
blocked from her memory, and that she is at risk of a fatal heart
attack if they make love and the memories return.
By the mid-eighties the
giallo craze was all but dead, but this taut thriller manages to
evoke a seventies feel, while being unequivocally of the period. All
the usual giallo tropes are present: the killer's black leather
gloves, shaving razor, the gory murders. The big difference is the
early reveal of the murderer (which will come as no big surprise,
especially since the cover art gives it away). That doesn't take the
fun out of the film, however, as there are still several neat little
turns which keep it interesting and the manic set pieces are
nightmarish and fun. It's essentially a re-tread of Les
diaboliques with added childhood trauma and a creepy doll being
thrust into shot every now and again; but it's still worth checking
out.
Director Alberto De Martino
(best known for cult favourites The Antichrist and Holocaust
2000) manages to get the most out of the locations, and with the
help of DP Gianlorenzo
(Demons)
Battaglia's
camerawork creates some fantastic looking set pieces. Equally nice is
Francesco De Masi's score, even if it does use whole passages from
his work in The
New York Ripper
- although that may be for economy, as both films also share a
producer, Fabrizio De Angelis.
The disc has a very
interesting commentary (in Italian, subtitled) with Battaglia,
in which he reveals the villa in Rome which doubled for Joanna's home
was owned by a man who had killed his wife in a crime of passion.
There is also a selection of trailers for other Shameless releases,
and - you need to watch the film for the significance - a yellow
Shameless-branded mackintosh.
7
out of 10
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