Evil Eye (1975) Poster

(1975)

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6/10
Bizarre borderline Giallo
The_Void9 August 2009
This film is often said to be a Giallo; I would say it just about qualifies, but it's really very much on the borderline. Eroticofollia is just as strange and surreal as its nonsense title suggests it is; and generally makes just about as much sense too! The film could be described as a psychological horror film, and it's clear that director Mario Siciliano wanted to put more focus on the imagery than the storyline, and as such the film is very thin in terms of plot. Luckily, the imagery is rather good and the director creates a good atmosphere for the film. The plot focuses on a playboy named Peter Crane. He is plagued by terrible nightmares, and this leads him to murder - his first victim being a girl that has dreams of him murdering her! As his grip on sanity slips further, Peter decides to seek help from his doctor; however, the murders continue. Peter's problems increase when he receives an anonymous phone call from someone saying they've seen him committing the crimes...

This film reminded me somewhat of the classic Giallo The Night Evelyn Came Out of the Grave in terms of style, characters and content. However, this one is nowhere near as good as the earlier film. Eroticofollia gets off to a good start that promises it might lead somewhere worthwhile, but it then gets overloaded with its own bizarreness and things soon get rather tedious. The way that it delves into supernatural territory certainly doesn't help proceedings either, and it's an ill-advised twist. The film could have been quite decent if it tried harder to stay on the straight and narrow. To the film's credit, lead actor Jorge Rivero is rather good in the lead role and always holds the audience's interest well. He gets good back-up from Richard Conte and the beautiful Daniela Giordano; though Anthony Steffen does not get an opportunity to deliver his best performance. Despite its shortcomings, the film does stay just about decent for most of the duration; but then completely spoils itself with a very ill-advised twist at the end.
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6/10
weird curiosity
movieman_kev26 October 2007
Peter Crane (Jorge Rivero, star of the later "Conquest") is a rich womanizing playboy who suffers from a string of vivid nightmares. Peter may or may not also be a murderer in this strange, off-beat, and wildly disjointed Grindhouse curiosity. While a tad hard to follow simply for the logic (or rather lack of), the movie is strangely compelling none the less and is probably best viewed as a product of a bygone era. It more than made up for the sheer tedium that I had experienced when I sat through the previous "Black Candles" skin-flick fiasco.

My Grade: B-

Region 1 DVD Extras: Trailers for "Pick Up", "Legend of Eight Samurai", "Don't Answer the Phone", "Prime Evil", & "Sister Street Fighter" (also the same DVD holds a second feature movie "Black Candles")
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4/10
Evil Eye
Scarecrow-8829 March 2009
Warning: Spoilers
Confusing, incoherent mess about a wealthy swinging Italian hunk whose having weird nightmares involving a naked Satanic cult. It seems this cult has a command over him, forcing him to murder several folks who were responsible for killing relatives for inheritance or property. The Italian Lothario is Peter Crane(Jorge Rivero), the kind of handsome stud who wears his shirt collars open revealing his hairy muscular chest causing the female populace to swoon. After Crane strangles his victims, he awakens as if they were unpleasant nightmares, but it's enough for him to visit a psychiatrist, Dr. Stone(Richard Conte)regarding them. Soon Stone's assistant Sarah(Pilar Velázquez)and Crane become lovers, with her life in potential danger. The film shows the sex-heavy atmosphere of this period in Italy as a collection of men and women join together at either Crane's sprawling luxuriously posh mansion or his decadent party pal Robert's(Luis La Torre) sizable abode, getting wasted, kissing, swimming, making out, removing their clothes, and just whatever unpredictable lurid activities that come to mind, embracing sin and immorality, basking in excess. Some familiar faces pop up such as Eduardo Fajardo as Crane's corrupt butler, Walter and Luciano Pigozzi as a victim who kindly offers to help repair Crane's mysteriously immobile vehicle which went kaput while driving on the road.

Director Mario Siciliano seems to have control of the film, until the supernatural phenomena increases with objects moving on their own and a detective(Anthony Steffen), whose wife places a charm to ward off evil in his pocket, begins hearing strange noises as he pursues the killer. Gorgeous women in the film such as leggy Daniela Giordano as Crane's mistreated sex kitten Tanya, and Pilar Velázquez, who could shrink my head anytime she wants. Amusing is the fact that Crane can seduce any female he so chooses as they just fall head-over-heels. Before Crane murders his victims, director Siciliano moves the camera into his menacing eyes, hands clinching tight, objects turning towards the target, the women slow to realize(..and seem frozen as he draws near)that they are to be strangled.. all this accompanied by a pulse-pounding score that steadily builds as the killer approaches the victim, reaching it's zenith when the hands grasp the woman's(..or man's)throat. A certain victim's death, after he had murdered an accomplace who feared for her safety, is a laugher..after puking a frog from his bloody, puss-ozing mouth, a shot gun falls from a shelf shooting him in the temple. Specters with white faces also visit Crane and the detective pursuing him. A REALLY bonkers scene shows Sarah the victim of a train accident, while also displaying her and Crane going over a cliff while driving haphazardly..random sequences like this leave one scratching their heads wondering what the hell Siciliano was attempting to accomplish.

MAJOR SPOILER:The ending, when Crane and Sarah get away at her cabin in the mountains, is particularly a groaner as Siciliano just lets everything go berserk as they are bombarded by demonic supernatural terror with the irksome "it's all a dream" conclusion dropped right in our lap. It's a shame when a film leads you down such a bizarre path, hurling crazy events that make little sense at you, only to take the easy route by claiming it's all a dream.
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Especially bizarre, supernatural giallo
lazarillo21 October 2007
Although this movie is categorized by some as a giallo, it goes beyond having a plot that is merely delightfully absurd, like most films in the genre, to one that is almost completely non-sensical, including even several possibly supernatural nods to "The Exorcist". The plot involves a wealthy playboy and swinger who begins to have strange dreams where he murders people (one of whom actually calls him up at the beginning of the movie and tells him SHE had a dream that he was going to murder her!). When the same people actually end up dead, he begins to think he is going crazy or is being controlled by a satanic cult (or something), so he checks himself into a psychiatric clinic under the care of a doctor (Richard Conte) who bears more than a little resemblance to Dr. Caligari. But then he runs off with a pretty nurse to her isolated villa. . . There is all manner of other weirdness happening, including things moving by themselves a la a low-grade version of "The Exorcist". There's also a cop (Anthony Steffens) investigating, but he seems to be in a completely different movie. I don't want to spoil the ending (although it spoils itself pretty well), but it's both a cliché and a cop-out.

The lead actor (Jorge Rivero) is a good-looking guy, which ALMOST explains why every woman he meets immediately throws herself at him, even if they are married, they have just had a dream he murdered them, or he just checked into their clinic as a potentially homicidal schizophrenic. As typical for the genre there are a lot of pretty women on display including former Miss Italy Daniela Giordana, who's virtually unrecognizable (and spends all her screen time NOT quite getting naked), and Lone Fleming, a fixture in Amando Ossorio "Blind Dead" and Paul Naschy horror films.

I'm not really sure whether or not I'd recommend this. Oh well, I've reported, you decide.
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5/10
Very ordinary Spanish/Italian/Mexican co-production with good cast as Jorge Rivero , Richard Conte , Pilar Velazquez
ma-cortes7 December 2021
People around Peter Crane (Jorge, ¨George¨, Rivero) begin dying in mysterious circumstances . Peter starts having nightmares dealing with grisly killings . The police authorities have to face some really brutal murders. A hard-nosed police inspector (Anthony Steffen) and a deputy (Alvaro De Luna) start investigating the case , they have to find out if the wealthy playboy Peter Crane is involved in the bizarre crimes . He suffers from terrible nightmares that make him believe that he is responsible for these murders . As psychiatrist Dr. Stone (veteran Hollywood actor Richard Conte) and his helper Dr. Turner (Pilar Velazquez) place Paul in a hospital for a deep observation . As Crane maybe really possessed by malevolant dreams until a surprising and astonishing final . Along the way , Peter falls in love for the beautiful Dr. Sarah Turner .

This terrifying and chilling Italian/Spanish exploitation displays creepy images , disturbing frames , eerie scenes , nudism and horror . This is pretty entertaining fantastic stuff about a young playboy turns possessed from a strange cult , while seeks answers from his astonishing nightmares . This is the Spanish/Italian/Mexican answer to American horror hit , The Exorcist by William Friedkin . Atmospheric and oddball horror movie contains terrifying scenes when appears a weird magic circle with a lot of naked people , possession scenes and taking place cruel killings , terror , and confusion around Peter Crane and other people around him . The movie is running out of ideas a lot ; however , being still good enough to be fun . Although there are some lousily made scenes , including primitive special effects . It's a slight fun with so-so make-up , naive FX , adequate set decoration and functional art direction . The fable is sometimes silly and laughable , though a few effects and intriguing set pieces are professionally made . Some illogical parts in the story are more than compensated for the excitement provided by some bizarre images , though sometimes are a little bit cheesy . Main and support cast are acceptable . The Mexican Jorge Rivero plays the unsettling playboy trying to unravel the mystery suffering from the effects caused by his nightmares . Pilar Velazquez plays a gorgeous psychiatrist who helps him , along with veteran Richard Conte as a suspicious shrink . Being a Spain/Italy co-production here shows up a number of familiar faces as Spanish actors : Eduardo Fajardo, Terele Pavez , Alvaro de Luna , Lone Fleming , as Italian players : Spaghetti Western star Antony Steffen , Daniela Giordano , Luis La Torre and Luciano Pigozzi , nicknamed the Italian Peter Lorre . All of them starred several exploitation films during the 60s, 70s and early 80s.

The Exorcist by William Friedkin spawned countless imitations , rip-offs , and clones all around the world ; in fact Malocchio (1975) its Spanish title is ¨Más allá del exorcismo¨, meaning "Beyond the Exorcism" in English , and it features no exorcism . And it pretended to be a spin-off to The Exorcist (1973) , a sub-genre who abounded in Italy and Spain in the Seventies , hoping in getting some successes from the original movie , such as : ¨House of exorcism¨ by Mario Bava , ¨L'anticristo¨ by Alberto de Martino , ¨Holocaust 2000¨ by Alberto de Martino , ¨La bimba di Satana¨ by Mario Bianchi , ¨Malabimba¨ by Andrea Bianchi ; and likewise in Spain with others knock-offs , there was made four at the same time , such as : ¨Devil play¨ by Jorge Darnell (74), ¨Demon Witch Child¨ or ¨La Endemoniada ¨ by Amando De Ossorio (74) , ¨The Spiritist¨(1975) and ¨Exorcismo¨ (1975) by Juan Bosch .

Malocchio(1975) packs an agreeable and groovy musical score by Stelvio Capriani by composing blending some smooth funky and lounge sounds . As well as atmospheric and functional cinematography by Vicente Minaya , being shot in Spain and Italy , RPA - Elios Studios, Rome, Lazio . This bewildering picture was middlingly directed by Mario Siciliano . He was an Italian professional who wrote , produced, directed various films in all kinds of genres . As he directed s the following ones : Wartime (Seven red berets , Overrun) ,Terror (Evil eye) , Adventure (Lions of St Petersburg , Wild geese attack) , Adult and Western (Alleluja and Sartana strike again ; Trinity and Sartana are coming) . Rating 4.5/10 . Inferior Giallo/Horror movie , containing some images being near unwatchable at times . This terrror movie is appointed exclusively for Eurotrash hardcore fans .
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4/10
Boring And Clumsy
Steve_Nyland10 April 2010
Reporting in to note that I tried my best to like THE EVIL EYE and have failed. The movie has a lot in it to like: Spaghetti Western favorites Anthony Steffen & Eduardo Fajardo, the beloved Luciano Pigozzi, deliriously sexy Daniela Giordano, Pia Giancaro, Eva Vanicek & Pilar Velázquez, plus Lone Flemming, nothing to sneeze at herself. Music by genre film legend Stelvio Cipriani. Story & screenplay by Julio Buchs and Federico De Urrutia, who had graduated from the Joaquín Luis Romero Marchent school of Spanish Spaghetti Westerns themselves, and had previously collaborated on the under-appreciated A BULLET FOR SANDOVAL.

So the film bombards viewers with all sorts of fantastic elements, including some great Italian urban & rural scenery, a feast of cavorting nude women, some hunky Euro Manbeef for the ladies (or whoever -- is this movie gay?) and a couple of truly bizarre scenes that are difficult to explain ... Like the scene where a 2 ton pallet of cinder blocks are dropped on somebody, but when the camera goes in for the medium angle it looks like someone had tossed a few bricks into a pile. Was it a gaffe due to the film's tight budget or a surrealist touch meant to make you stop for a minute and say "Wait, did I see that right?"

The problem is that the film never really gels. It seems hesitant to tell its story and pads out the scenes which do move the narrative along with excessive travelogue photography, or just small scenes thrown in that have nothing to do with the story. I would also single out the lead Jorge Rivero, a fine actor from Mexico, with being totally wrong for the role. He doesn't come across as tortured or even involved in his story no matter what language his voice voice dubber was speaking. Roles like this need a tortured soul to wander through the film looking for answers -- Fabio Testi, George Hilton, Farley Granger, even cast mate Anthony Steffen, they could all do it in their sleep. Rivero comes off poorly but it isn't his fault.

It does have Anthony Steffen though, made up & costumed to look like Dirty Harry right down to the corduroy tie. The problem is that the film doesn't come up with anything for him to do that required the role to be filled by Anthony Steffen, who was a very special presence. They don't even do anything with the Dirty Harry angle, which would have made sense given how Steffen was marketed as Italy's own answer to Clint Eastwood. He isn't wasted in the role because he's just one of those actors where every performance is always pretty decent, the script just wasn't sure if it wanted to tell its story and subsequently doesn't really give him anything to do.

It also kept Daniela Giordano cruelly encased within her clothing, while lingering many a flattering camera angle on Jorge Rivero and his hunky roommate buddy -- who apparently share bathrobes -- lounging around in various states of semi-dress. Which led me to wonder if the film had a quietly gay subtext to it, which would be fine and can be the basis for some interesting results (look up a little number called ROOM OF CHAINS sometime). But the story dances around the idea clumsily, parading out the usual quota of bared breasts in a manner that comes across as perfunctory. The real passion is in showing Jorge Rivero lying in bed with his shirt off, and that in itself makes the film somewhat unique.

4/10; Euro Horror fans will be more sympathetic than others.
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2/10
Odds are you'll find playing with your cat more interesting than watching this film
dbborroughs2 September 2009
Warning: Spoilers
Cult uses magic to control the behavior of one man. Maybe. Maybe not. Is he involved with the string of recent murders? And what of those headaches?

Not very good film that makes not real sense as we get cult scenes that seem separate and apart from the rest of the film which may or may not be about a man going mad or having a dream or something. To be honest I got about a half an hour in and lost interest. I let the film play one but as it did so I got distracted with other things like playing with my cat, obviously that's not a ringing endorsement or anything other than the cuteness of the cat. Given the choice I'd take a pass.
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7/10
Great, until the end
Bezenby3 March 2019
Warning: Spoilers
This could have been some sort of weird-ass classic, if they'd actually included a satisfying ending. Spoilers ahead, even if the only spoiler is 'you'll come away from this one feeling let down'.

In Rome, rich playboy Dave or whatever has a strange dream where red-eyed naked hippy types scream wordlessly at him while a ritual is conducted. He awakes in his big rich guy villa with lots of partied-out people lay about, and orders his cockney (Spanish) butler to get rid of them all.

The dream haunts him throughout the day, and worse still, he meets a lady from out of town (Lone Fleming) who jumps at his name, saying she had a dream where Dave or whatever would kill her. Dave might be suffering brain problems, but there's nothing wrong with his balls: he puts the moves on Fleming but ends up tearing her throat out with his fist instead. Or does he?

So begins Dave's long weird journey, where nothing might be quite what it seems. His car breaks down at a house and an old woman lets him. He finds two people who claim to know him and who tell him the old woman is dead. Objects constantly move when he starts having one of his episodes. Someone who might be Dave visits an old friend and although we only get to see the back of his head, everyone treats Dave like he's Dave. Or do they?

Antony Steffen is brought in as the superstitious cop with a talisman to ward him from evil. He suffers from strange hearing loss from time to time, especially around the presence of possibly sinister brain doctor Richard Conte. He stops two men beating a woman only to find the woman grinning at him insanely before loads of rubble nearly kills him and the woman disappears. Or does she?

Dave receives blackmailing letters from someone and his butler spews up a frog. He also gets it on with Richard Conte's assistant but then she asks him if he wants to listen to either Beethoven or Tom Jones but then puts on a different record altogether which spins so fast it flies into the air. Steffen goes to see Conte who is facing him but as Steffen leaves he finds Conte isn't facing him, then tells him he knows who the killer is without ever telling the audience who the killer is. Is Tom Jones Richard Conte in disguise?

I've tried to make this review as disjointed as the film. Nothing makes any sense but the whole bizarre merry-go-round is pretty entertaining as statues move, camera angles focus on things they shouldn't, people's characters change for no reason (especially the butler), but then everything is let down as you get to the end of the film and realise that every single question the film raised goes unanswered.

Was Dave possessed or was someone driving him crazy? Don't Know. Why did Antony Steffen say he knew who the killer was, then give up when his car broke down? Don't know. I don't think the filmmakers knew either. The closest I can come to an answer is that Conte was some sort of devil type who was punishing Dave for things his father had done.
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5/10
Evil Eye
BandSAboutMovies26 June 2022
Warning: Spoilers
Evil Eye was made in Italy and stars Mexican exploitation hero Jorge Rivero, oddball cowboy icon Anthony Steffen and an American actor known best for being in The Godfather, Richard Conte.

Rivero - who of course was Mace in Fulci's fog-obsessed Mexican vacation Conquest - is a playboy whose sleeping hours are filled with nightmarish visions of occult rituals and nude dead women who come screaming back to life. One evening, during a loud thunderstorm, he ends up meeting one of these women, Yvonne (Lone Fleming, Tombs of the Blind Dead) and their evening climaxes with him choking her into oblivion.

Or did he? Ah yes, that giallo chestnut - a murderer who may not be a murderer and then the body turns up. More people show up in Peter's deadly dreams, then die and he may be an avenging angel of sorts from the world of the shadows. Or maybe he just needs to stay in that insane asylum.

There's a gorgeous cast - Pia Giancaro (The Red Queen Kills Seven Times), Daniela Giordano (Your Vice Is a Locked Room and Only I Have the Key), Pilar Velázquez (Naked Girl Murdered in the Park) and Eva Vanicek - along with stalwart Eurohorror talents like Luciano Pigozzi and Eduardo Fajardo.

There's also a crazy scene in which Peter tries to save a woman from a mob only for a crane to drop a load of bricks directly on her in a kind of low rent proto-The Omen. That's also one of the few moments in this movie without full frontal nudity, as this movie goes all in on the sleazier side of Satanic splendor. It also has Fajardo throwing up a frog in one of the most disgustingly wild things I've seen before a possessed gun blow him away. And yes, the ending makes no sense, but I kind of demand that.

Director Mario Siciliano also made Alleluja & Sartana Are Sons... Sons of God and Trinity and Sartana Are Coming as well as Erotic Family and Orgasmo non-stop, so you know you're in good, if not slightly filthy hands. It also has a score by Stelvio Cipriani that makes hippie devil worship nightmare logic feel free and breezy.
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7/10
Sort of like a Giallo, but more offbeat than most.
Hey_Sweden15 September 2019
The handsome Jorge Rivero ("Rio Lobo") is cast as a playboy named Peter Crane, who loses his grip on reality, often believing himself to be murdering people. Determined to get some help, he checks into a hospital where he's watched over by psychiatrist Dr. Stone (Richard Conte of "The Godfather"). Stones' associate Dr. Sarah Turner (the stunning Pilar Velazquez, "The Flower with Petals of Steel") falls in lust with him, and they run off to a cabin together, despite his predicament.

Co-writer / director Mario Siciliano ("Lions of St. Petersburg") doesn't concern himself very much with the story making *sense*, really. Where he succeeds the most is in creating a very lurid, and very *surreal* atmosphere, designed to have viewers thinking, "WTF?" on numerous occasions. One scene near the end is particularly indicative of this style, and that involves slimy butler Walter (Eduardo Fajardo, "Django") and a frog.

"Evil Eye" starts out as if it is going to be more of a horror film, with a decidedly creepy feel. But, by and large, it takes place in a "reality" that keeps shifting. An inspector on the case (Anthony Steffen, "Viva Sabata") is kind of off in his own movie, but he experiences some of the weirdness, too: like a moment involving a body buried under rubble.

Aided and abetted by a wonderful soundtrack by Stelvio Cipriani ("A Bay of Blood"), Siciliano gets solid performances out of his cast, which includes other familiar faces such as Luciano Pigozzi a.k.a. Alan Collins ("Yor: The Hunter from the Future") and Daniela Giordano ("Violent Rome").

The film is loaded with sexy ladies, and bare female flesh, but never gets all that gory, making it fairly sleazy but never all that unpleasant. It's recommended to fans of Euro genre features who want something a little off the beaten path. The only real disappointment lies in that ending.

Seven out of 10.
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5/10
Make of it what you will.
BA_Harrison21 March 2021
Evil Eye is a very strange film. A very, very strange film. But it keeps the viewer watching to the end, if only to see how director Mario Siciliano can possibly bring it all together and make sense of the weirdness. In short: he doesn't even try, excusing the lack of logic throughout with a clichéd cyclical ending, finishing things as they began - with a nightmare interrupted by a telephone call.

After one of his wild, orgiastic parties, playboy Peter Crane (Mario Siciliano) is woken by a phone call from a beautiful French woman named Yvonne Chevrel (Lone Fleming), whose dead husband warned her that Cray would kill her. Despite the warning, Yvonne meets with Peter, and - surprise, surprise - is strangled by the lothario (but only after he has made out with her).

Unable to recall what happened, Peter visits his psychiatrist Dr. Stone (Richard Conte), but is unable to find the answer to his problem. He does, however, come away with a date with the doc's sexy assistant Sarah Turner (Pilar Velázquez), so the visit isn't a total waste of time.

Anyway, to cut a long and very confusing story short, Peter is unsure whether he is really a killer or if he's going mad. And he's not the only one: I defy anyone to come to a satisfactory conclusion, given the strangeness that occurs. The freaky nightmares continue, Peter gets mysterious phone calls from someone who says he saw what he did, inanimate objects come to life, a crane load of building blocks fall and crush a woman (whose body disappears), a cop keeps losing his hearing, and Crane's servant Walter (Eduardo Fajardo) coughs up a frog.

Still, as perplexing as the whole thing is, I can't say I was bored, which must count for something I suppose.

4.5/10, rounded up to 5 for Peter's bold double-denim outfit (bleached denim flares and matching jacket).
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8/10
A compellingly offbeat and unsettling European horror thriller oddity
Woodyanders8 July 2007
Warning: Spoilers
Hunky, blithely decadent wealthy swinging playboy Peter Crane (an engaging performance by handsome and brawny Mexican super star and sex symbol Jorge Rivero) has horrific visions of killing folks and freaky naked shrieking people. Kindly psychiatrist Dr. Stone (veteran character actor Richard Conte; mob capo Emilio Barzini in "The Godfather") places Paul in a hospital for observation. But the ghastly murders and disturbing visions continue. Is Paul responsible for the brutal mayhem? Or is something more sinister going on? Director Mario Siciliano, who also helmed a bunch of spaghetti Westerns and hardcore porno pictures, starts this intriguingly bizarre Spanish/Italian/Mexican horror thriller opus on a slow and spooky note, gradually developing an eerie and mysterious nightmarish oddball atmosphere that reaches a really intense and harrowing fever pitch in the gloriously off the wall final third. Stelvio Capriani's groovy score neatly alternates between smooth funky lounge music and wonky flesh-crawling creepiness. Vicente Minaya's crude, unpolished cinematography likewise adds considerably to the overall outré tone. Nice supporting performances by the lovely Pilar Velasquez as sweet, charming, fetching shrink Dr. Sarah Turner, Anthony Steffen as a hard-nosed police detective, Luis Latorre as Paul's fellow party hearty rich pal Robert, and Daniela Giordano as beautiful blonde babe Tanya. An engrossing and often unsettling fright flick oddity.
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5/10
"No doctor on earth can cure you of being a killer"
lost-in-limbo4 October 2010
Warning: Spoilers
Strange, sleazy and psychedelic 70s Euro-horror with Giallo staples and a supernatural current, but what comes together it totally uneven and a complete muddle with an ending that can be best explained as an ultimate cop out. Although it has its moments with some atmospherically surreal images and a capable lead performance by Jorge Rivero (truly in playboy character) who keeps you watching to see how it will eventually unfold… but it's a disappointing outcome.

Peter Crane is a wealthy Italian playboy who's suffering from nightmares, which has him committing murders. However are these nightmares or hallucinations, as for Peter they seem real. So he seeks help from his doctor, but there's seems to be nothing wrong with him. However the murders are still happening and Peter believes he's blanking out and committing them. To throw another spanner in the mix he gets an anonymous call claiming that they seen him doing the crime.

The creaky premise's concept isn't bad, but the focus is all over the place and plotting is elaborated. It doesn't entirely gel and the abrupt editing of random (sometimes hokey) sequences doesn't help. The interesting aspect was the angle of Crane being used as a pawn (possessed medium) for the spirit world to seek vengeance from beyond the grave. Never does it really go in to why he's chosen, but those scenes of the phenomenal activity and Crane coming the under influence are well done. An acceptable Anthony Steffen plays the detective who's on the trail of the killer and he starts experiencing strange spells like the eerie high pitch noises that keep coming and going. Also there's stunning bunch of ladies to fill the cast; like Pilar Velázquez and Daniela Giordano. Eduardo Fajardo is quite memorable as the butler with ulterior motives. Director Mario Siciliano doesn't hold back (leering camera-work, stirring music score and ham-fisted shocks), but that is his Achilles heal too.
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2/10
Copycat EXORCIST is Ripe With Inanities
jfrentzen-942-2042111 February 2024
This Italian-made copycat EXORCIST mixes in a bit of "Oedipus Rex."

"Satan is present and active in the world," a narrator intones in the opening shots, as the camera travels through a group of blank-faced extras gathered near a nameless Italian square. The action moves without explanation to a Black Mass ceremony in a cave, where a robed disciple declares in a badly-dubbed voice, "Fill thy hearts with violence and perversion," inciting his followers to gambol in an R-rated orgy.

When the story proper begins, Peter, a young archaeology student, finds an evil medallion that burns his skin at the touch, but he wears it anyway. Gradually, his complexion and eyes change color, and he begins acting bedeviled.

Director Pannaccio adds what he can to the tired devil-possession plot. For example, during a disco sequence Peter's girlfriend is gorily killed on the dance floor by unseen hands, while at the same time Peter is off killing one of the females seen earlier in the Black Mass sequence. After Peter torments and murders his mother (Francoise Prevost), his nun sister summons a priest (Richard Conte) for exorcist duties. In the inane non-ending, the nun takes the medallion and jumps to her death.

Recommended only for devil-movie completists, EVIL EYE contains some diverting nonsense -- a possessed dart board, actors staring into space while the soundtrack blares spooky music, and an insane asylum sequence that looks pilfered from another movie.

A very uncomfortable looking Conte probably wished he were back in THE BROTHERS RICO or THE GODFATHER. This quickie was also shown in U. S. theaters as NAKED EXORCISM.
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