Seven Blood-Stained Orchids  

From The Art and Popular Culture Encyclopedia

(Difference between revisions)
Jump to: navigation, search
Revision as of 22:42, 4 April 2009
Jahsonic (Talk | contribs)

← Previous diff
Current revision
Jahsonic (Talk | contribs)

Line 1: Line 1:
{{Template}} {{Template}}
-'''''Sette orchidee macchiate di rosso''''' è un film diretto da [[Umberto Lenzi]] nel 1971. È il terzo giallo di Lenzi. 
-Trama [modifica]+'''''Seven Blood-Stained Orchids''''' ({{lang-it|'''Sette orchidee macchiate di rosso'''}}) is a 1972 [[giallo film|''giallo'' film]] directed by [[Umberto Lenzi]], who also co-wrote the screenplay.
-Un assassino compie due omicidi con vittime donne, questo assassino si firma lasciando sul luogo del delitto una mezzaluna d'argento. Una donna di nome Giulia viene aggredita con la stessa metodica durante il viaggio di nozze ma riesce a salvarsi e la polizia capeggiata dal commissario Vismara inizia ad indagare su questi casi di violenza, ma è il marito di Giulia, Mario, a scoprire che le tre vittime del maniaco hanno tutte un legame: tutte hanno passato del tempo in un centro turistico di una località balneare. Mario mette immediatamente al corrente il Commissario di ciò che ha scoperto, e questi provvede rintracciando e proteggendo tutte le altre donne, tuttavia l'assassino riesce a colpire nuovamente alcune di queste persone nonostante la protezione fornita dalla polizia. Alla fine Mario riuscirà ad impedire all'assassino di uccidere Giulia, e si scoprirà anche il movente: il maniaco è un pastore evangelico fratello di un uomo che era morto per omissione di soccorso in quella località balneare, all'epoca dei fatti venne ipotizzato che il colpevole fosse una giovane donna e il pastore reso folle dalla rabbia decise di uccidere tutte le possibili colpevoli.+==Plot ==
 +A serial killer is on the loose, murdering certain women around the city. While travelling on a train on his honeymoon, Mario (Antonio Sabato) sees his wife brutally attacked aboard the train and after the killer gets away, the police accuse Mario of attacking his newlywed wife. Police decides to hide the fact that Giulia (Uschi Glas), Mario's wife is alive in order to protect her from the killer. Mario sets out to prove his innocence by attempting to solve the "Puzzle of the Silver Half Moons", which leads him to the hotel where he met his wife, a man name Frank Saunders, Christian Church's tour, a group of hippies, and Frank's ex-mistress. The film contains some very violent murders, some shown from the point of view of the knife-wielding, black-gloved killer, as he stabs a woman in her bed, bashes in the head of a prostitute, strangles a female artist with a telephone cord, drowns a mental patient in her bathtub, and even uses a power drill on one unfortunate victim. Mario must catch the real killer in order to prove his own innocence.
 + 
 +== Cast ==
 +* [[Antonio Sabàto, Sr.|Antonio Sabàto]] as Mario Gerosa
 +* [[Uschi Glas]] as Giulia Torresi
 +* [[Pier Paolo Capponi]] as Inspector Vismara
 +* [[Petra Schürmann]] as Concetta Di Rosa
 +* [[Marisa Mell]] as Anna Sartori / Maria Sartori
 +* [[Gabriella Giorgelli]] as Ines Tamborini aka Toscana
 +* [[Renato Romano]] as The Priest
 +* [[Claudio Gora]] as Raffaele Ferri
 +* [[Rossella Falk]] as Elena Marchi
 +* [[Marina Malfatti]] as Kathy Adams
 +* [[Bruno Corazzari]] as Barrett
 +* [[Linda Sini]] as Wanda
 +* [[Aldo Barberito]] as Lt. Palumbo
 +* [[Franco Fantasia]] as Lt. Renzi
 +* [[Nello Pazzafini]] as Giovanni Rau
 +* [[Ivano Davoli]] as Dr. Palmieri
 +* [[Enzo Andronico]] as Hotel Director
 +* [[Carla Mancini]] as Anna's maid
 + 
 +==Production==
 +Towards the 1970s, Umberto Lenzi began focusing his attention on ''[[poliziotteschi]]'' films and his contributions to making ''gialli'' began to deteriorate.{{sfn|Howarth|2015|p=204}} The score in the film by [[Riz Ortolani]] borrows liberally from his previous scores, including ''[[So Sweet...So Perverse]]'' and ''[[Perversion Story]]''.{{sfn|Howarth|2015|p=205}}
 + 
 +The appearance of German actress Uschi Glas was imposed on by the German co-producers, who promoted the film as both a ''[[krimi]]'' film and an [[Edgar Wallace]] adaptation.{{sfn|Howarth|2015|p=205}} Editor Clarissa Ambach is credited only in the German version of the film.{{sfn|Howarth|2015|p=204}}
 + 
 +==Reception==
 +Lenzi later declared the film to be "superbly shot" as well as having a "pendantic" story.
{{GFDL}} {{GFDL}}

Current revision

Related e

Wikipedia
Wiktionary
Shop


Featured:

Seven Blood-Stained Orchids (Template:Lang-it) is a 1972 giallo film directed by Umberto Lenzi, who also co-wrote the screenplay.

Contents

Plot

A serial killer is on the loose, murdering certain women around the city. While travelling on a train on his honeymoon, Mario (Antonio Sabato) sees his wife brutally attacked aboard the train and after the killer gets away, the police accuse Mario of attacking his newlywed wife. Police decides to hide the fact that Giulia (Uschi Glas), Mario's wife is alive in order to protect her from the killer. Mario sets out to prove his innocence by attempting to solve the "Puzzle of the Silver Half Moons", which leads him to the hotel where he met his wife, a man name Frank Saunders, Christian Church's tour, a group of hippies, and Frank's ex-mistress. The film contains some very violent murders, some shown from the point of view of the knife-wielding, black-gloved killer, as he stabs a woman in her bed, bashes in the head of a prostitute, strangles a female artist with a telephone cord, drowns a mental patient in her bathtub, and even uses a power drill on one unfortunate victim. Mario must catch the real killer in order to prove his own innocence.

Cast

Production

Towards the 1970s, Umberto Lenzi began focusing his attention on poliziotteschi films and his contributions to making gialli began to deteriorate.Template:Sfn The score in the film by Riz Ortolani borrows liberally from his previous scores, including So Sweet...So Perverse and Perversion Story.Template:Sfn

The appearance of German actress Uschi Glas was imposed on by the German co-producers, who promoted the film as both a krimi film and an Edgar Wallace adaptation.Template:Sfn Editor Clarissa Ambach is credited only in the German version of the film.Template:Sfn

Reception

Lenzi later declared the film to be "superbly shot" as well as having a "pendantic" story.



Unless indicated otherwise, the text in this article is either based on Wikipedia article "Seven Blood-Stained Orchids" or another language Wikipedia page thereof used under the terms of the GNU Free Documentation License; or on research by Jahsonic and friends. See Art and Popular Culture's copyright notice.

Personal tools