The Exquisite Cadaver (1969) Poster

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6/10
Intriguing , mysterious but downbeat picture about the strange events happen when an editor receives a macabre box
ma-cortes28 April 2018
It's an uneven story in suspense style and brief elements of terror , it revolves around a novel editor (Carlos Estrada) who receives a macabre gift containing a woman hand . A forgotten relationship between the publisher and a young ( Judy Matheson) returns when is sent the rare box . He discovers it has been sent by a mysterious woman nicknamed Parker (Capucine) . Then , the happenings get worse when his jealous wife (Teresa Gimpera) to be aware of the treason his husband .

Along the sixties four strange pictures were shot with scripts written by Gonzalo Suarez : ¨De Cuerpo Presente¨(65) , ¨Diritambo¨(67) by Gonzalo Suarez , ¨Fata Morgana¨(66) by Vivente Aranda and this one ; all of them blend reality and fantasy . Being a passable yarn middlingly filmed with several strange scenes and weird situations with no much sense . This ¨Las Crueles¨ is based on a tale titled ¨Bailando con Parker¨ or ¨El cadaver exquisto¨, it had a certain success at Spanish boxoffice . This is a peculiar suspense film concerning about a twisted love affair with strong psychological charge and fine interpretations . Hard-edge mystery /drama centers around strange happenings and a past love story who suddenly ensues again . The picture is acceptable but uneven and slow-moving . Because the story needs a vibration more real than the one offered in this sometimes tiring flick , though also contains exciting scenes , thrilling images and sensitive moments . Well starred by International actors as the Argentina-born Carlos Estrada , the French Capucine , the Spanish Teresa Gimpera , and the British Judy Matheson . And brief interpretations of notorious Spanish secondaries as Victor Israel , Luis Induni , Alicia Tomas and Luis Cigues .

It packs an atmospheric and suspenseful score by Marco Rossi . Evocative and colorful cinematography by Juán Amoros and Fernando Arribas . The motion picture was professional though regularly directed in his particular style by veteran filmmaker Vicente Aranda , being hard to follow . He directed a series of award-winning movies firmly establishing him as one of the best Spanish filmmakers . His usual film editor is own wife , also producer , Teresa Font . Vicente is an expert on literary adaptations , as he has adapted four novels written by Juan Marsé as Canciones Amor en Lolita's Club (2007), El Amante Bilingüe (1993), Si Te Dicen Que Caí (1989) and La Muchacha De Las Bragas De Oro (1980). Vicente often shoots strong erotic scenes , being ¨jealousy¨, a customary issue in his films . Vicente has been working from the 60s with ¨Fata Morgana¨ , ¨Las Crueles¨ , ¨Novia Ensangrentada¨ , ¨Clara es el Precio¨ , among others . His greatest successes were intense dramas with plenty of sex such as ¨Pasion Turca¨ , ¨Intruso¨ , ¨Jealousy¨, ¨Tiempo De Silencio¨ , ¨Carmen¨ , along with a delinquency tale : ¨El Lute¨ I and II starred by Imanol Arias , his fetish actor along with Victoria Abril (They have worked together 12 times) . And directed a terror movie ¨The blood spattered bride¨ . His biggest hit was ¨Amantes¨ : Lovers : a true story , although originally intended to be produced as an episode of the TV crime anthology series 'La Huella Del Crimen 2' (1991), before producer Pedro Costa decided to rewrite the script as a theatrical film . And specially the historical story titled ¨Juana La Loca¨or ¨Mad love¨ .
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7/10
A slick, sick Spanish soap with a feminist slant
melvelvit-115 July 2007
Carlos (Andre Argaud), a well-do-do publisher and family man, receives a severed hand in the mail at work and buries it before going home but once there, his beautiful wife (Theresa Gimpera) reads him a telegram asking if he'd like a forearm. Carlos makes up a lame, work-related explanation but now suspicious, she follows her husband and spots a mysterious woman in black following him as well. That woman is Parker (Capucine), whose lesbian lover, Esther (Judy Matheson), was once Carlos' mistress who never got over being cast aside. Esther committed suicide but Parker kept the body and, holding Carlos responsible, devises a complicated plan to have him framed for Esther's murder...

THE EXQUISITE CADAVER is a slick, stylish, and very strange Spanish soap-opera with a decidedly Feminist agenda. Some unusual directorial touches, lyrical cinematography, and a somber jazz score by Marco Rossi give the film an Art House air that blends easily with the glossy grisliness of a few grind-house plot elements. The beautiful Capucine is coolly elegant as the enigmatic avenging angel and the secret bond all women share can turn the tables on a "common, ordinary Romeo not worth the pain he caused". A very unusual but not uninteresting film if one goes in with no expectations but it's usually marketed and sold as either a Giallo or horror film, so there's bound to be disappointment in some quarters.
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6/10
Hands, shoulders, knees and toes (knees and toes)
Bezenby28 July 2017
A grumpy publisher receives a mysterious yellow package in the post while at work and discovers to his alarm that it contains a human hand. He convinces his secretary that it's a wax hand but doesn't seem so convinced himself when he buries the package and doesn't tell his wife, who is already suspicious as there is another package waiting for him when he gets home from work, and this one contains a torn dress and a picture of a mysterious woman. Subterfuge, chin stroking, pretension - it's one of 'those' Gialli.

The grumpy man is being stalked by a woman with a fake hand (who is being stalked by the man's wife) and the questions start to arise - Does he know this woman? Does his wife? Who's parts is he receiving in the post? Why does his body turn yellow for no reason halfway through the film? Why does the woman with a fake hand have two normal hands for the duration of the film?

Flashback aplenty (it's up to you to decide what's real and what is not I guess) and loads and loads of very arty shots make up the bulk of this film, as well as a lot of mumbling, bad poetry, LSD taking and staring off into space. It seems to have equal amounts of good and bad and even though the premise starts of well enough, the last half hour (which tries to explain things) drags on a bit.

There's also a feminist slant about it that I thought was kind of unique to The Laughing Woman, so I was wrong again I guess.
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2/10
What's in the box?
BA_Harrison26 January 2024
A book editor (Carlos Estrada) receives a delivery at his office, the package containing a hand; this is just the start of a strange chain of events orchestrated by Lucia (Capucine), who is punishing the man for having jilted her lover Esther (Judy Matheson), who consequently committed suicide.

The Exquisite Cadaver is a bizarre Euro-horror from director Vicente Aranda, who also gave us the better known The Blood Spattered Bride. Aranda's arthouse style is quite impenetrable a lot of the time, the experimental film-making techniques, 'dreamlike' atmosphere, and offbeat dialogue making the film far too pretentious for my liking. The film is slow-moving, frequently baffling and often very boring, the only good thing about it being the fact that it helped to launch the acting career of the very lovely Matheson, who went on to become a Hammer babe.

2.5/10, rounded down to 2 for the scene where the focus repeatedly shifts between the editor and his wife (Teresa Gimpera) as they robotically deliver their lines - it's incredibly awkward and unintentionally funny.
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8/10
amazing scene involving a fridge
A real surprise, this Vincent Aranda movie that plays more like a French movie. Uneasy narrative flow, many arty moments, different versions of the story unfold and reality not always something certain and a surreal edge. Indeed the main guy in this reminded me of Gaston Modot who starred in L'Age D'Or - he seemed to hold his jaw the same way and move with that slightly awkward motion akin to a lurch. Everyone performs well and helps this sometimes demanding movie always compelling and memorable. The English actress, Judy Matherson is excellent as the mysterious girl with a death wish who only appears in flashbacks. Strange to think that the same year she made this she also appeared in an episode of Coronation Street. Indeed after this and a few Hammer movies she returned to TV. Aranda made the equally compelling, Blood Spattered Bride after this and I recall that too having a similar dream like quality. There is an amazing scene involving a fridge but as I've resisted this long, I won't give it away now.
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5/10
"Imagination is everything"
RodrigAndrisan28 June 2016
If a beautiful and mysterious woman, dressed in black, invites you, without words, only with her eyes, to follow her, are you going without asking anything in her car and you'll let yourself be taken in an unknown direction? If yes, you'll find out later that she has an artificial arm. Would you step with her then in her house, although it is night, is raining and the owl is singing? If you'll do that, after a drink, you'll find the corpse of another woman, young and beautiful, hidden in the refrigerator. That woman tried to commit suicide many times, putting her head on the rail, trying to throw herself from a tall bank into the sea, shooting herself with a pistol in the mouth, everything from obsessive love for you. Eventually, she managed to kill herself with some pills. And the woman with the artificial arm, who loved that woman, severed her head and a hand, and she sent them to you by post. And finally, after you supposedly gone all mad, she stuck with your wife, with whom you have two children. Basically, that's what you'll see in this film. You think it worth? It remains to discover for yourself...
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8/10
AWESOME
BandSAboutMovies10 January 2024
Warning: Spoilers
Directed by Vicente Aranda (The Blood Spattered Bride), who wrote the story with Antonio Rabinad, based on the short story Bailando para Parker by Gonzalo Suárez, Exquisite Cadaver starts with a girl committing suicide by laying down headfirst on train tracks.

We meet a man (Carlos Estrada) who is the publisher of pulp horror - giallo - and someone who has become quite successful as a result. He gets a severed human hand in the mail, which he buries in a park. Another package is sent, this time with a torn dress and a photo of a woman. He also gets a telegram, which his wife (Teresa Gimpera, Hannah Queen of the Vampires) reads and it ends with the promise of sending a forearm. He lies and says its for work, but as she follows him, she notices that he is also being stalked by a woman in a black veil.

The woman is Parker (Capucine, The Pink Panther), who lures the man to her house where she gives him LSD. He staggers through her villa, following the sound of her voice, which leads him to a woman's body inside a refrigerator. He passes out and wakes up at home, his wife having been called by Parker to get her husband.

The man reveals to his wife that he had an affair with a woman named Esther (Judy Matheson, The House That Vanished; is it too soon to talk about '72?) who told him "I'd die so that my love for you will last. So that indifference will not kill it" before she laid down on the train tracks, as we saw as the movie began. Except that a detective that the man's wife hired saved Esther.

As she tried to get her life together, Esther fell for a doctor before meeting Parker, who she soon began an affair with. Parker was in love with her, trying to save her, but Esther never stopped loving the man, finally killing herself. Parker then made this plan to get revenge for her lost love, even cutting. Her corpse to pieces, sending each one until finally, the head arrives. The man looks for his wife but she is gone, leaving for Paris and a new relationship with Parker, who has seduced her.

After filming ended, Aranda gave Matheson the silver hand pendant that her character wore in the film. She still has it to this day and even established a trademark of wearing it in her subsequent films.

As for the director, he had an accident on the set which led to him directing much of this movie from a stretcher.

Thanks to Theater of Guts, I know that this was released in the U. S. by Gadabout-Gaddis Productions, who released The Man from Nowhere, Find a Place to Die, Hatchet for the Honeymoon, One On Top of the Other and Marta. According to the site, it played drive-in screens as late as 1983 as a double feature with Twilight Zone: The Movie.

The title Exquisite Corpse comes from the game created by Surrealism founder André Breton that has a collection of words or images collectively assembled by several creators who have no idea what has come before other than a line, which is added to until a complete art piece emerges. The name comes from the phrase that was part of the first work created by the game, "The exquisite corpse shall drink the new wine."

The Spanish title, Las Crueles (The Cruel Ones), is meant to sound like Les Diaboliques. It was not the title preferred by Aranda.
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4/10
First 30 minutes super slow. Then it picks up. Interesting. But still needed work. The story, acting, cinematography, music all decent, but not great.
Bababooe19 July 2017
Warning: Spoilers
Beginning 1/3rd of the movie was so slow I almost shut it off. Once the main male actor takes the pill and the narration starts, we are lead into the trip, the narration and the girl in the fridge. The narration is great. It reminds me of Messiah of Evil, even though this movie came out first. "I'm grateful for the pain you caused me & I despise the painless days before we met." Great stuff! The only thing the girl has left is the pain. She finally kills herself with pills. Her lesbian lover starts sending her body parts to the male character. His wife gets involved in the investigation and at the end decides to go with the older lesbian. Not bad. But what about the two children? This would have worked better if the husband and wife didn't have any kids, and the whole dead turtle thing. Too many extra parts, long and drawn out unnecessary scenes that bring us the boredom of the first 30 minutes of this film. The part with the doctor was interesting but was not explained very well.

This film is on youtube, in a not so good copy. But it's there for free. The dubbing is decent. But overall the story needed more work. And the acting, cinematography and music was all good but not great. As is, this is a C/C- or 4 stars at best. And most of the stars come from the narration and the scenes with the dead girl.

I would also like to add that even though there are some super slow sections, especially in the beginning, I would still rather watch a film like this than anything presented by Argento Dario. Suspiria is one of the worst films I have ever seen. And Four Flies and Plumage are not too far behind the garbage presented in Suspiria. Mario Bava is only a little better than Argento. Take a look at Planet of Vampires, and Bay of Blood. This is some serious amateur film making.
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