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Stefano Oppedisano,
Stefano Oppedisano,
Mickey Hargitay,
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:
Renato Polselli,
Renato Polselli
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: Not Rated
: Anchor Bay
: Foreign, Italy, Giallo
: 95 min.
: English, Italian
: English
see additional details...
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Italian filmmaker Renato Polselli (aka Ralph Brown) wrote and directed this wonderfully sick and demented giallo thriller, a shining example of the sort of outrageous psychosexual perversity for which the genre has become cherished by cult enthusiasts. Former Mr. Universe Mickey Hargitay was already a sleaze favorite for his turn as Il Boio Scarlatto and his disingenuously tearful tour of his late wife's estate in The Wild, Wild World of Jayne Mansfield. Hargitay only solidifies that image here as Prof. Herbert Lyutak, a perverse sex maniac employed as a criminal psychologist. Lyutak is first seen giving a young woman a ride in his car, eventually attacking her and chasing her through the woods to a creek, where he beats her to death. Lyutak's wife (Rita Calderoni) finds his bloody shirt, but because there is another murder while the demented shrink is consulting the police, he is cleared. Working with the authorities, Lyutak has a family friend (Katia Kardinali) pose as a prostitute to catch the killer, but he simply murders another hooker not far away. The bodies continue piling up, with so many alibis and confusing contradictions that it soon becomes apparent the killings are the work of several hands. Polselli keeps the sleaze factor high throughout, notably in some psychedelic nightmare sequences featuring Lyutak's fantasies of torturing nude women in his basement and in the murder of Kardinali, which features some fairly graphic whipping and kinky sexual allusions. There's also lesbianism, strangulation, and an interesting synth-rock score by Gianfranco Reverberi to keep viewers interested, and the ultimate conclusion is -- in keeping with the title -- a delirious, bloody battle between three psychopaths in a cellar. That's only in the original version, however, because the American re-edit removed most of the sleaze, changed the setting from England to the United States, and added two extra murders and a police shootout, not to mention some dubious Vietnam flashbacks. The ultimate entertainment value to genre enthusiasts, therefore, is highly dependent on which version they see, as the extensive changes reduce a wild, flamboyant shocker to just another dull mystery. Gaetano Cimarosa and Stefano Oppedisano co-star. ~ Robert Firsching, All Movie Guide
Special Features:
- The Theorem of Delirium - interviews with Writer/Director Renato Polselli and Star Mickey Hargitay
You might also enjoy:
The Reincarnation of Isabel
Polselli and Hargitay also teamed up for this fightening piece of sleazy satanic shocker
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| Good title for a movie that makes no sense
by KHambrecht
April 4, 2005 - 11:36 AM PDT
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2 out of 3 members found this review helpful
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Where exactly do these characters live that it is: A) Always nighttime B) Everyone who is not a Bob Guccione-lookin' policeman is a hot young girl standing alone in the middle of nowhere? There are a lot of beautiful shots of lovely women in this movie. Then for whatever Freudian/Jungian reason that people need these movies, all the beautiful women must be sacrificed bloodily and with much screaming. It got a little tedious and predictable. Possibly worth seeing for Mickey Hargitay's baffling speech to his wife wherein he says, "I am a no-good impotent husband! You must leave me!"
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GreenCine Member Rating
(Average 4.73) 44 Votes
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