Strange Shadows in an Empty Room (1976) Poster

User Reviews

Review this title
34 Reviews
Sort by:
Filter by Rating:
7/10
The Curse of the Curling Iron
radiobirdma17 April 2016
Until rugged cop Stuart Whitman makes full use of his Dirty Harry tool, you've got to wait until the very end of the movie. Along the way, you get your money's worth – a lineup of veteran Hollywood actors having fun poliziottesco style, a sex shop scene high on the 70s sleaze-o- meter, karate killer transvestites, Mia Farrow's sister as a blind girl, the stunning beauty of H'wood actress Gayle Hunnicutt, the admirable tits of Québécois Adjani lookalike Carole Laure, the creative use of a curling iron, plus a quite spectacular car chase in the streets of Montreal, expertly executed by legendary stunt coordinator Rémy Julienne (The Italian Job, six Bond movies, a dozen Belmondo action flicks). Of course Blazing Magnum is just a ripoff, but a highly entertaining one, in its molto-trasho-appeal unquestionably superior to each and every 70s Clint Eastwood vigilante vehicle. Gritty six stars, the seventh being for Armando Trovaioli's groovster soundtrack: That ain't Montreal, it's Funkytown.
9 out of 10 found this helpful. Was this review helpful? Sign in to vote.
Permalink
7/10
Ultimately successful combination of action and mystery
gridoon202411 November 2010
Warning: Spoilers
The first 30 or so minutes of "Shadows In An Empty Room" (or whichever title you see it under!) are nothing special, and with a tired-looking Stuart Whitman in the lead, I was preparing myself to give this a middling-to-negative review. Luckily, it finds its footing after a while (as bizarre as it sounds, the turning point is probably Whitman's fight with a bunch of transvestites!), and it ends up as an overall success. The second half contains a very long, expertly done car chase (supervised by the veteran at this sort of thing Remy Julienne) which, if this movie was better known, would be regarded as a classic on a par with "Bullitt", as well as a fun foot chase in a subway station. Whitman may look tired in this movie, but he's alert enough for the action scenes. The mystery plot also picks up its pace, as it heads towards its twisted and downbeat resolution which cleverly fools the viewer, especially by showing how a seemingly innocent victim was not so innocent after all. There are also some tense, giallo-like scenes, mostly involving a blind woman, terrifically played by Mia Farrow's lovely sister, Tisa. Just stick with the film through its mediocre first half-hour, and you will be rewarded. *** out of 4.
5 out of 5 found this helpful. Was this review helpful? Sign in to vote.
Permalink
7/10
Pretty decent
willandcharlenebrown28 February 2020
Decent story line Great car chase action Twist at the end Great casting and acting Dirty Harry meets Murder on the Nile
3 out of 3 found this helpful. Was this review helpful? Sign in to vote.
Permalink
Supremely fun all the way
hamburger14 August 2001
With a great cast featuring Stuart Whitman, John Saxon, Martin Landau, AND Tisa Farrow this film glides with the greatest of ease. STRANGE SHADOWS IN AN EMPTY ROOM is sort of a cross between the Italian crime/police potboiler and your average giallo thriller. An interesting and fun blend it is. I'd rather not give too much of the film away since it's better going into it knowing next to nothing. Let's just say there's murder, mystery, car chases, blood, funky 70s music, karate-kicking drag queens, and of course your all-star cast! Have fun.
21 out of 22 found this helpful. Was this review helpful? Sign in to vote.
Permalink
7/10
Hard edged thriller is compelling even when it gets silly. It also has one of the best unsung chase scenes in movie history
dbborroughs4 August 2008
Warning: Spoilers
Stuart Whitman is a police Captain who's sister (played by Tisha Farrow who looks more like his daughter) dies under mysterious circumstances. Whitman suspects murder and begins to investigate leading him down the road to violence and unwanted revelations.

An odd mix of hardcore police action and gaillo thrillers this plays like a macho cop drama where the "hero" prefers to beat up people to get even the simplest of answers while the killer remains hidden and stalking his victims. Its so arch as to be laughable as Whitman abuses person after person in order to get at the truth. Don't get me wrong the action is really well done but its the type of thing where it seems that just saying hello is going to get someone punched in the face. Its the sort of movie they don't make any more (and only did for a brief time in the early to mid 1970's) because they almost instantly became over the top and clichéd.

Don't get me wrong this is a good little thriller. Its got a hard edge to it thats nicely violent and lurid in an entertaining way. Frankly even if the film wasn't good on its own, it possesses a chase scene about an hour into the movie that is truly amazing. Clearly they were trying to one up Bullit, French Connection or the Seven Ups. And while its not quite the nail biter of those films it is a damn fine chase scene that has been unjustly forgotten by the ages.(and yes the end of the chase is a hoot).

If there is any real problem, aside from the macho to the point of silliness, its that there seems to be only one piece of music for the film thats played over and over again in every action scene. Its so wrong for the scenes to start with, but its constant repetition just makes everything sillier (not to mention it grates on ones nerves) Worth a look if you find it in the bargain bin.
5 out of 6 found this helpful. Was this review helpful? Sign in to vote.
Permalink
6/10
Not-bad European action marketed as horror-thriller
fs319 November 2000
When this briefly played in the U.S. in 76-7, American International marketed it more in the line of a horror thriller than the shoot-em-up it leaned toward. Six capable perfomers, most of whom were accustomed to making the most out of low-budget material, appeared to varying degrees of success. DeMartino was a workmanlike director who, like most of his Italian contemporaries of the era, made his way around all of the heavily produced genres from western and superhero to crime and horror.
5 out of 8 found this helpful. Was this review helpful? Sign in to vote.
Permalink
6/10
Poliziottesco and Giallo film co-produced by Italy and Canada with very good cast
ma-cortes22 September 2021
A thrilling and bizarre film in which a two-fisted Ottawa police captain (Stuart Whitman) , -helped by a Sergeant (John Saxon)- searches for the person who poisoned his sister , who was attending the university in Montreal, Canada . So desperate is he for vendetta , as he starts using his own violent methods to discover the murderer . There are various suspicious people , as a doctor (Martin Landau) , a teacher (Gayle Hunnicut) ...who's the killer ? Soon he finds out that not everything is what he thought it was . Walk with her if you dare...for every step will bring you closer, closer, closer to the meaning of fear! Enter at your own risk ... for there is no such thing as a truly empty room

Poliziesco/Giallo movie with decent production design as well as budget enough , it contains intriguing events , breathtaking scenes , noisy action , vicious killers , and spectacular car pursuits with subsequent crashes . It is a passable actioner with some moving scenes , a straightforward story with lots of shootouts , robbing , fights , twists and turns . The film benefits itself of an interesting issue and disconcerting premise , the strange murder at an University boarding house of a girl who results to be sister of the starring , a tough policeman , and the latter then searching for a merciless revenge by discovering a real series killer . Displaying a great number of red herrings , thrills , plot twists , and suspenseful events . In spite of some flaws and gaps , action keeps breathless, thanks to tension and intrigue . Notable widescreen scenes , which will suffer on TV small screen and including some zooms , as usual . It belongs to Poliziesco subgenre adding some Giallo elements . As a subgenre, the poliziesco (literally, "tough cop") has its beginnings in the late 1960s with films such as Lizzani's Bandiits in Milan (1968), but finds its greatest influence in the American policemen of the early 1970s in the Dirty Harry films (from 71 to 88), William Friedkin's French Connection (1971) or Sidney Lumet's Serpico (1973). Here stars Stuart Whitman as a tough Ottawa police inspector who seeks the killer who poisoned his sister and giving a notable acting . He's well accompanied by a nice cast , such as John Saxon , Martin Landau , Mia's sister : Tisa Farrow , Carole Laure , Jean LeClerc and Gayle Hunnicutt.

It has a tense and attractive musical score by Armando Trovajoli. As well as atmospheric cinematography by cameraman , later famous director, Joe D'Amato , in Technicolor Techniscope , though a perfect remastering being absolutely necessary. The motion picture titled Una magnum Special per Tony Saitta (Italy) or Strange Shadows in an Empty Room or Spécial magnum or Blazing Magnums was professionally directed by Alberto De Martino, though with a sense of disunity between cast and filmmaking , having some shortfalls and failures. This Italian filmmaker was a good artisan who wrote and directed a lot of films of all kinds of genres and exploitation movies , as well as various straight Rip-offs with less attention to plot detail . He usually shot films to cash in on other hugely boxoffice successes as The "Exorcist" Martino made "Anti Christ" and " The Omen" he filmed this " Holocaust 2000" . As Alberto De Martino shot Peplum or Sword and Sandals genre : ¨Spartan Gladiators¨ , ¨Invincible Gladiator¨ , ¨Seven Spartans¨, ¨Valley of Stone Men¨, ¨Secret Seven¨ . Spaghetti Western sub-genre : ¨Django shoots first¨, ¨Providence¨ , ¨Charge of Seven Cavalry¨ . Europe Spy subgenre : ¨OK Connery¨ , ¨Operation Lady Chaplin¨ and Terror : ¨The AntiChrist¨, ¨Miami Golem¨, ¨Horror¨ , ¨Holocaust 2000¨ and several others .
3 out of 4 found this helpful. Was this review helpful? Sign in to vote.
Permalink
5/10
Outrageous plot contrivances between a few memorable scenes ......
merklekranz26 April 2012
"Strange Shadows in an Empty Room" is not a good film. It is an outrageous murder mystery with some totally unbelievable plot contrivances. The flimsy, almost incomprehensible story is held together by a few memorable scenes, including one of the best and longest car chases ever. Stuart Whitman is investigating the murder of his sister, while being aided by fellow policeman, John Saxon. Martin Landau plays the prime suspect. This film throws almost every oddity imaginable at the audience. If you are into sex toy shops, transvestite fist fights, and newborns being threatened with a knife, this is your movie. Unfortunately you also better be into lousy music, because the pounding piano and elevator tunes are an almost constant annoyance. - MERK
3 out of 8 found this helpful. Was this review helpful? Sign in to vote.
Permalink
8/10
Give me one more chase please!!!!!
nirelizov24 February 2007
There are 2 respected movies in the euro police movies that always shine above all the other great ones, the first one is in Fernando De Leo "La Mala Ordina", Part of his Milan trilogy films, with his extreme and fast paced chase that never let go and just keeps on going till the last brutal finish. The second one is blazing magnum's, which can be a very good lesson to all the action directors out there planing to do a one good chase sequence. There are 2 chases here, one in the beginning which is short but very efficient , and the second at the end, which you must see to believe, it got everything in it and more. I do urge you, the fans of this type of cinema to grab Blazing Magnumes if only for the chases that prove that you can do a bad acting movie with a simple thriller script, that still got some hard hitting sequences that shine overall. I can't finish without mentioning that the music is also a masterpiece in itself and it is always there at the right moment. If only Dark Sky/NoShame/Blue Underground or any other respected label will do us a favor and release a collector edition DVD, that would be fantastic!
10 out of 10 found this helpful. Was this review helpful? Sign in to vote.
Permalink
6/10
Fun, if not too believable...
Flixer195719 July 2004
Warning: Spoilers
**POSSIBLE SPOILERS**

In one of his livelier roles, Stuart Whitman plays an enraged detective who goes to Montreal to track down his sister's killer. He tears apart half the city but nobody seems to care. John Saxon, Martin Landau, Tisa Farrow and Gayle Hunnicutt co-star. There are also several chase scenes, a nude scene, many creepy characters including a dwarf gangster, a few gory murders and a ground-up corpse in a rock crusher. In the film's arguable highlight, Whitman gets into hand-to-hand combat with a gang of drag queens. The harrowing finale takes place in a hospital. With all this, there's still time for a convoluted if not too plausible plot that holds a few surprises. Retitled in different territories to rope in various fans, this AIP release hit the Albany NY drive-ins in 1978. It may not have been a real masterpiece but there were worse ways to spend a Saturday night.
3 out of 4 found this helpful. Was this review helpful? Sign in to vote.
Permalink
8/10
De Martino nails it at last!
Bezenby31 July 2018
Now this is more like it! An Italian/Canadian 'joint' that isn't dubbed, starts with the feel of a seventies TV movie but then veers madly in tone as the film goes on, and has the distinction of being on of the few De Martino films that doesn't drag. At all!

On the campus of a Montreal college, a young man watches as his ex-girlfriend has a very public argument with her lecturer and possible lover, Martin Landau. Scheming with her, the young man and the girl later play a prank on Landau when the girl (Carol, her name is Carol) fakes being ill during a party. When she non-prankingly dies after being administered medicine by Landau, he becomes suspect number one. Unluckily for him Carol's brother is hard-ass actor Stuart Whitman, and he's a cop to boot, with John Saxon as his icy-eyed partner.

De Martino scores a winner here because he's been clever enough to have a giallo (murder, many suspects, photograph clue etc) with all the elements of a Euro-crime film thrown in for good measure. For example, when we first meet Whitman, he's too busy blowing away bad guys to answer an important call from Carol, and when he approaches the transvestite community to merely ask them if they knew any transgender mates that have been missing, it turns into a huge, random, over the top battle where people are punched through glass windows, Whitman himself nearly falls off a building, and a transvestite gets a pair of straighteners up the arse for his/her trouble!

Not content with that, De Martino also throws in a random car chase that lasts for ages too, and this time he only wanted to show a guy a photo! These two scenes make the film a lot more fun than it would have been as a straight giallo, some I'm grateful they're there.

Tisa Farrow, who would go on to some real Italian exploitation highs in a few years after this film (Zombie Flesh Eaters, The Last Hunter and Anthropophagus), gets the best scenes as the blind piano tutor who is unlucky enough to have quite a bit of the film's action take place in her apartment. This might actually be my favourite De Martino film. Well done mate!
9 out of 9 found this helpful. Was this review helpful? Sign in to vote.
Permalink
6/10
An awesome police/giallo mash up!
BandSAboutMovies17 February 2020
Warning: Spoilers
Known in Italy as Una Magnum Special per Tony Saitta (A Magnum Special for Tony Saitta) and Blazing Magnum in the UK, this movie caught my attention with Stuart Whitman as a "Dirty Harry" type detective named - you guessed it - Tony Saitta solving the giallo-esque murder of his sister.

She was played by Carole Laure, a Quebec singer whose first major acting role in Sweet Movie nearly ended her career. She plays a Miss Canada who is married off to a milk tycoon on the basis of her virginity. The film has coprophilia, emetophilia, implied child molestation and footage of remains of the Polish Katyn Massacre victims. And Laure left the production after growing increasingly upset over what was required of her, especially after a scene where she had to give a handjob. Ah, art! At least she'd go on to be in the Pele, Michael Caine and Sylvester Stallone movie Victory.

Well, she doesn't last too long in this movie. At a party where people are faking their deaths to get a reaction, she ends up getting poisoned and really dying at the hands of Dr. George Tracer (Martin Landau!). Working with Ned Matthews (John Saxon!), Tony's on the case of his sister's death. And damn anyone who gets in his way.

If you've ever wanted to see Stuart Whitman get thrown out a plate glass window by a karate-kicking transvestite, good news. This movie was made for you. And me. Because man, it's absolutely bonkers.

Seriously, this entire scene is insane. But let's go back a little bit.

After University of Montreal student - and Tony's sister - Louise (Laure) gets in a battle with her married lover Dr. Tracer (Landau), she tries to call her brother but he's in the middle of a busy case. So she turns to her ex-boyfriend Fred and they come up with a scheme to get back at the perhaps not-so-good doctor.

That night, as everyone parties at the home of Professor Margie Cohn (Gayle Hunnicutt, The Legend of Hell House), Louise becomes sick and Tracer is frantically called. He gives her a stimulant and everyone laughs when she reveals she was faking. But soon, after a heart attack, no one is laughing.

Tony comes in from Ottawa for the funeral and despite being 200 kilometers (124 miles) from home, Detective Ned Matthews (Saxon) just decides to let him do whatever he wants, which includes the aforementioned transvestite party fistfight, which starts with one of their number saying, "Cinderella, answer the door," before Tony beats one into oblivion and announces that everyone needs to settle down. Spoiler: They don't, tossing him out a window before he violates another with a hot curling iron and throwing the surviving ladyman into a swimming pool. This scene is incredibly baffling, perhaps because I'm viewing it through the lens of 2020 films.

Blind university music teacher Julie Foster (Tisa Farrow!) is the only person who may have a clue as to what's going on, but there's also a little person crime boss, several car chases, a graphic stabbing, the aforementioned Ms. Farrow wandering down the street blind through traffic and so much more.

This movie was written by Vincenzo Mannino (Phantom of Death, Murder Rock, The Last Shark) and Gianfranco Clerici (Don't Torture A Duckling, The New York Ripper, Cannibal Holocaust), so you know that there's no way that this movie isn't going to involve depravity and mayhem.

It was directed by Alberto De Martino, who also was behind Operation Kid Brother, The Antichrist, Holocaust 2000, The Pumaman and Miami Golem, a movie I keep meaning to get to.

This is a movie devoted to entertaining you by any means necessary. It's all wood-paneled 1970's, mixing the Canadian tax shelter magic with some of that good old fashioned Italian blood and guts. What a recipe!
3 out of 5 found this helpful. Was this review helpful? Sign in to vote.
Permalink
One of the all-time-great car chases!
Hup234!22 September 1999
If you as a 1970s filmmaker wanted to spike your latest release, you'd add a wild street chase with all the trimmings, all of which have since become cliches - extras jumping out of the way, close calls with baby buggies, speeding through alleys, ramming stacks of boxes, weaving around stopped buses, becoming airborne on downgrades - but 25 years ago, this was high melodrama, and including such a sequence was sure to sell tickets. And I too sat spellbound through the "Bullitt" and "The French Connection" street-action scenes. But this much-lesser-known film ranks right up there in masterful car-crash choreography. The chase scenes are absolutely stunning.....though the rest of the whodunit plot is rather ordinary, almost like a made-for-television film. (An unforgettable title, though!) If you dig the action genre, seek out "Strange Shadows in an Empty Room".
10 out of 11 found this helpful. Was this review helpful? Sign in to vote.
Permalink
6/10
I remember that there was a good car chase sequence.
jazzyjase25 January 2008
This movie was broadcast on TV in the UK sometime during the mid 80's under the title of "Blazing Magnum". I was a very young teenager at the time and recorded it onto good old fashioned VHS (probably because it was on too late for me to watch). I watched it at least a dozen times over a couple of years and it was still on tape until my parents parted and my stepfather took all the tapes as part of the divorce. I always wished I could have got that tape back (among others), as this movie has never been shown on TV since. I really enjoyed it at the time because I didn't really watch a lot of movies. I seem to remember that it was filmed in a similar way to the Dirty Harry films, which my stepfather and I enjoyed together and this was probably why I found it appealing. I think it should be released on some format as there are actually a few well known(ish) actors in this movie. It has been thirty years, after all.
1 out of 1 found this helpful. Was this review helpful? Sign in to vote.
Permalink
6/10
Lots of action, not much else
Zbigniew_Krycsiwiki29 February 2012
A middle-aged Canadian policeman chases clues and leads, beats various people (including a group of transvestites!) and, in the film's most memorable scene, instigates a 20-minutes long car chase through Montrael whilst attempting to solve the sudden and mysterious death of his kid sister at a party she was attending. Plenty of action to hold the audience's attention, but it gets a bit too violent at times, Stuart Whitman was too old to play this Dirty Harry-wannabe character, and the plot is unconvincing in its resolution (She was into transvestites and was killed over a plastic necklace?) A bit of a sense of humour would have helped the film also, as Whitman's character is too unlikeable to elicit any sympathy.
2 out of 6 found this helpful. Was this review helpful? Sign in to vote.
Permalink
6/10
The ones closest to us are the ones we know the least.
Hey_Sweden22 March 2024
Warning: Spoilers
Stuart Whitman ("The Mark") plays tough Ottawa police captain Tony Saitta, who receives an urgent message from his kid sister Louise (Carole Laure, "Victory"). Soon she is dead from poisoning, and Tony is determined to find out who did it and why.

"Shadows in an Empty Room" has an interesting pedigree. This very 70s crime film / mystery was not only shot in and *set* in Canada, but it was directed by Italian filmmaker Alberto De Martino ("Scenes from a Murder", "The Antichrist", "Holocaust 2000", etc.). It does have an entertaining, twisty plot, with no shortage of suspects, and some showcase action scenes that are pretty rousing. Violent without being particularly gory, it benefits from an excellent cast of familiar faces (John Saxon ("Enter the Dragon"), Martin Landau ("Ed Wood"), Tisa Farrow ("Zombi 2"), Jean Leclerc ('All My Children'), Gayle Hunnicutt ("The Legend of Hell House"), etc.).

The music score by Armando Trovajoli is inconsistent - sometimes it works, sometimes it doesn't. Location work in Ottawa is very good. The pacing is just right, and the story, while not exactly that unpredictable, at least keeps you on your toes and not focused on just one suspect.

All in all, this is decent entertainment, with some memorable elements here and there. In the end, Tony has to face the fact that his beloved sibling was not the innocent he always believed her to be.

Six out of 10.
0 out of 0 found this helpful. Was this review helpful? Sign in to vote.
Permalink
8/10
Overlooked 1970's Crime Classic
sol121810 October 2003
****SPOILER ALERT**** Canadian whodunit that was overlooked back in 1976 here in the USA as one of many "Dirty Harry" clones that were released at that time is being rediscovered as one of the best crime as well as police action dramas of the 1970's. The movie includes two great chase scenes one on foot and the other on wheels the former exciting and the latter simply amazing rivaling the chase sequences of "Bullitt" and "The French Connection". At the start of the film we see Louise Saitta arguing with her collage professor Dr.George Tracer, just out of ear shot of the theater audience, on the Montreal University campus. Louise goes to a pay phone to call her brother Tony who's a captain on the Ottawa police force and is told that Capt. Saitta is out on assignment. Later that evening Louise partying with some friends at the campus falls sick and Dr. Tracer, who is also Louise's personal physician, is called to help. After giving her a mild stimulant Louise gets up and starts to dance with one of her friends at the party. Dr. Tracer, stunned at Louise's amazing recovery at first, realizes that Louise had played a joke to get even with him over the argument that they had earlier that afternoon. Later at the party after Louise sips some wine she suddenly collapses again and loses conciseness but this time it's no joke, it's real and despite the best efforts by Dr. Tracer to revive her Louise dies. At Louise's funeral her brother Capt. Saitta meets some of Louise's friends, Margi Cohn and her brother Terri and also Julie a blind music teacher at the collage and Louise's best friend. After the funeral at Julie's room in the college dorm Saitta is told by Julie that Louise was very depressed and despondent the week before she died. Capt. Saitta begins to suspect that there was foul play involved in his sister's death. He also notices that there's a number of photos of Louise on Julie's desk and asks Julie if he can have them. Julie tells Saitta that it would be only right for him to have the photos since Louise was his sister. From all the facts that he can gather Capt. Saitta thinks that Louise was poisoned by Dr.Tracer. There were rumors all around the collage campus that Tracer was having an affair with Louise and was afraid that she was going to go public with it because Dr. Tracer wanted it ended. The revelations of the affair would not only destroy Dr. Tracer's marriage but also his professional career. Capt Saitta and the police pay Tracer a visit at his home and ask to see the doctors bag where he has the stimulant that he gave Louise the night she died and To Tracer's surprise the bottle was missing. Capt. Saitta thinks that Dr. Tracer gave Louise a poison and later got rid of the bottle to cover up his crime. Tracer is arrested for suspicion in Louise's murder and Capt. Saitta thinks that his sister's death has been solved. Some time later a woman is found murdered and her body dumped in a junk yard. The police pathologist finds that the woman was really a man dressed in drag and is identified as Terri Cohn, a friend of Louise and one of the people that Capt. Saitta met at Louise's funeral. In Terri's handbag was a cropped photo of a women's neck wearing a blue necklace. Checking the photos Saitta thinks that the necklace photo looks very familiar and sees that it's one of the photos given to him by Julie of Louise, also found on Terri was a key to what turned out to be a locker at a Montreal bus station. It's then when Capt. Saitta went to the bus depot, to check out what was in the locker, he finds that it contained the blue necklace that was on the photo. Capt Saitta starts to realize that the necklace may be the reason for his sister's death. Saitta meets Margi about Louise's tie-in with Terri, in regard to the necklace, and gets into an argument with her over her brother Terri about why his sister would get involved with someone "like him". Margi, defending her brother tells Saitta that he shouldn't say anything bad about her dead brother when he knows so little about his sweet and innocent little sister Louise. Checking out all the leads about the mysterious blue necklace Saitta finds out that the necklace was stolen from a rich society woman , Mrs. Wilkerson, from Toronto who was savagely murdered some time ago.Saitta also finds that whoever had the necklace was trying to fence it off for a huge amount of cash but there were no takers the necklace was just too hot to handle! So how did Louise come into possession of that necklace? It now finally begins to dawn on Capt.Saitta that his sister was in some way involved in that murder in Toronto of Mrs. Wilkerson. Great thriller with a great and effective music score and top-notch acting from Stuart Whitman on down makes "Strange shadows in an empty room" head and shoulders above the many "Dirty Harry" imitations of it's day. In fact it has a much deeper plot and far less violence then the "Dirty Harry" films were noted for making it a much more effective film. With the exception of the exciting chase scene, there was a far better one later in the movie, and bank shoot-out at the beginning of the film I counted five deaths in the entire movie and that included Louise Saitta who was poisoned and another person who died of an apparent suicide off camera. What makes "Strange shadows in an empty room" so effective is that it not only makes you think while your watching the movie but also long after it's over.
17 out of 19 found this helpful. Was this review helpful? Sign in to vote.
Permalink
7/10
Italian Giallo Thriller with Stuart WHITMAN and John SAXON
ZeddaZogenau22 March 2024
A hot curling iron for Tony Saitta: bizarre giallo crime thriller with Stuart Whitman and John Saxon

This strange cross between a giallo and a police film was shot by Alberto De Martino in Ottawa and Montreal. The film was produced by Edmondo Amati. The film was released in West German cinemas in April 1978.

After a macabre joke, the beautiful student Louise Saitta (Carole Laure) collapses dead in Montreal. Poison! Her older brother Tony Saitta (Stuart Whitman), a tough cop, arrives from Ottawa. At the funeral, the tough cowboy guy meets his late sister's friends and the investigating inspector Ned Matthews (John Saxon). Tony soon realizes that a lot has changed in his little sister's life. The beautiful Louise had long since ditched her athletic boyfriend Fred (Jean Leclerc). For this she shared with her university professor. Dr. George Tracer (Martin Landau) the mattress warehouse. His son Robert (Anthony Forrest) sleeps with his attractive teacher Margie Cohn (Gayle Hunnicutt).

Frustrated by the slow pace of the investigation, Tony takes matters into his own hands. It goes without saying that he doesn't do it squeamishly. Tony prefers to strike first before asking his questions. During his investigation he also meets three transvestites with whom he has a fight that lasts for several minutes. It only ends when Tony rams a hot curling iron into the bottom of one of the three. OUCH! Meanwhile, further attacks occur. Louise's blind roommate Julie Foster (Tisa Farrow) seems to be the killer's focus...

There's a lot going on in this film, also known as "Death in College": Giallo, Poliziottescho and Whodunit all in one! Constantly in action, Stuart Whitman (1928-2020), who received an ACADEMY AWARD nomination for his performance alongside Maria Schell in THE MARK (1961), weaves his way through a turbulent and never boring plot. GOLDEN GLOBE winner John Saxon gets a little less screen presence. Martin Landau (1928-2017) was awarded an ACADEMY AWARD in 1995 for "Ed Wood". Gayle Hunnicutt is also known as J. R.'s old flame Vanessa Beaumont from the television series DALLAS. And Tisa Farrow is Mia's little sister. So the cast is impressive. And this brutal mix also ensures good entertainment.
0 out of 0 found this helpful. Was this review helpful? Sign in to vote.
Permalink
10/10
Magnum Force.
morrison-dylan-fan22 January 2014
Warning: Spoilers
April 2011:

After a family friend kindly allowed me to borrow a DVD of the Dario Argento film The Bird with the Crystal Plumage,I began to talk to him about other titles in the Giallo movie sub-genre.With also having recently heard of another movie sub- genre called Italian Crime,I was thrilled to hear that there was a movie which combined both sub- genres,which had had trouble in the UK,with the BBFC never allowing for an uncut version to come out,due to there being a scene involving a psycho holding a razor blade near a baby.

2011-2012:

With discovering that the movie has not been brought out on DVD,I was disappointed to find that the only 2 bits of material that were around for the movie,was a leaflet about the Italian Crime sub-genre that was named after the movie,and a heavily cut,pre-cert UK Video,that was selling on some sites for outrageous amounts .

Late 2013:

Since having given up almost a year ago on ever seeing the film,I decided to search around late one night for any info related to the title.Originally expecting nothing more than some stills to appear,I was instead happily caught by surprise,when I stumbled upon an uncut DVD of the movie,which led to me excitingly getting ready to find out how blazing this magnum really is.

The plot:

Prepairing to go on a night out with his wife,Dr George Tracer's plans are interrupted,when his secret girlfriend Louise Saitta phones him up,and ask if he can rush over to her student hall to revive a student who has mysteriously fainted.

Changing his plans at the last minute,George rushes to the hall,gets Louise a drink to help calm her nerves,and then begins to attempting to revive the student.Catching everyone by surprise,the "ill" student suddenly jumps up,and reveals that she was just playing some fun and games.As Tracer tries to make sense of what is taking place,Saitta suddenly becomes extremely ill and falls to the ground,dead.

Ringing up the cops,George is greeted by the sight of Sgt Ned Matthew,and Louise's brother,Capt.Tony Saitta.Finding Louise to have been poisoned,Tony & Ned push Tracer around to find out why he would want to poison her.Relising that George is as shaken up by Louise death as he is,Tony vows to take what ever steps necessary to uncover the less than innocent world that his beloved sister lived in.

View on the film:

Being one of the few Italian movies from the period to feature an original soundtrack, (until the late 80s,most Italian titles were filmed silent,with the audio dubbed on in post-production)the screenplay by Vincenzo Mannino and Gianfranco Clerici has an eerie Giallo edge which acts as the perfect complement to the more bombastic Italian Crime side of the film,with the writer's using a character's blindness to create a real sense of menace,and to also reveal that the blind character is the only person who's "seen" the real life of Tony Saitta's sister.

Jumping off from a cliff right from the start,the writers make the Italian Crime side of the movie as delightfully deranged as possible,with Tony's attempts at tracking down his sister,being interrupted by a wonderfully vicious fight against a gang of transvestites,and a wild car chase,which leads to him getting the bare ,minimu of evidence!

Kicking down doors right from the start,Stuart Whitman gives a great gruff performance as Tony Saitta,with Whitman making Tony's relationship with Louise (played by the pretty Carole Laure) feel more dad/daughter,than the brother/sister one that its made out to be.Along with showing a gruffness in the hunt for his sisters killer,Whitman shows a real glee in his eyes,as he jumps into each of the overly exaggerated action scenes with a real relish.Giving the movie some sense of calm,Martin Landau gives a softly spoken,quiet performance as George Tracer,with Landau creating a real sense of intimacy between Tracer and Louise.

Showing no fear in not just taking on 1,but 2 sub-genre's,director Alberto De Martino packs every corner of the film with a number of stunning set-pieces,as Martino goes from smashing every piece of glass in Tony's battle with a gang of deadly transvestites,to placing a brilliantly animated 10 minute (!) long car chase scene at the centre,as Martino reveals that he is going to send this film out,all guns blazing.
7 out of 7 found this helpful. Was this review helpful? Sign in to vote.
Permalink
7/10
Every movie genre trope in the book
chrislawuk5 March 2024
Warning: Spoilers
From the first fight scene where Whitman decides to go around and beat up a house full of transvestites for no other good reason than he is angry because his sister got murdered, you know your in for something special. Certainly outdated, and in many ways comes across as a comedy in the spirit of Naked Gun movies, except back in 76 this was a serious affair.

The fact he has taken on the case of his sisters murder, would be seen as a massive conflict of interest today, but back in 76 this was seemingly, again, not an issue.

It's very corny and predictable for the most part, but has all the signatures of various genres from this period we have come to love, such as poliziotteschi and giallo. Also a direct Dirty Harry rip-off to boot.

To finish things off Whitman single handily lures the suspect to a hospital where he nearly gets a patient the murderer already tried to kill, killed a second time. He then proceeds in endangering the entire hospital, including surgical procedures and a neonatal intensive care unit- before topping it off by blowing the suspect up in a helicopter over the hospital grounds with his 45 magnum.

If you were going to remake it, would you have it made any other way?
0 out of 0 found this helpful. Was this review helpful? Sign in to vote.
Permalink
An ultra-violent and Shakespearian "Thriller" + "Poliziotti"
falmoury16 September 2004
I agree with Sol2118's commentary : the chase car is close in effectiveness with those of Friedkin and Peter Yates'titles that he mentioned, and I would add also the amazing one in THE SEVEN UP [Police pursuance 7] (USA 1973) directed by Philip d'Antoni with Roy Scheider and Tony Lo Bianco. Besides, this Shakespearian plot including a murdered T.V. as "dea/deus ex machine" is directly connected with the great tradition of Film Noir. And it is Alberto de Martino under the pen-name of Martin Herbert who have done it ! In Canada, starring an incredible cast. This is enough to understand that this movie is mixing the best of both worlds : Italian "poliziotti" thriller and U.S. thrillers, at their most violent and deep backgrounds. The bank attack is amazing regarding the art of graphic cut - editing work - of violence on the screen. The final is also extraordinary. The rhythm itself of the movie is very strange and original : quite onirical sometimes and not only because there is a "flash-back" sequence shot as a nightmare. Between 44 magnum caliber and TV gang hardboiled encounter, Stuart Whitman plays a cool & sad character, a quite tragic one since it is a brother looking for his sister's murderer and learning that his sister was not at all an Angel sister (as Lautréamont said about Man in LES CHANTS DE MALDOROR), finally unveiling the darker from the dark. And as usual, of such a little masterpiece, no VHS and no DVD available worldwide except maybe the French VHS titled BLAZING MAGNUM in spite of the fact that the movie was released in France under the exploitation title of SPECIAL MAGNUM. And I agree also with the latest comment : there was, for sure, lower show on theaters than that one when it was released ! DVD soon : please !!
14 out of 18 found this helpful. Was this review helpful? Sign in to vote.
Permalink
7/10
those giallo moments are really good
christopher-underwood17 September 2023
What an odd one this is. Italian but made in Ottawa and most of the stars from America like Stuart Whitman who has made many films but hardly noted and seems to overact in this one. Indeed Alberto De Martino seems to be happy that he seems to want him fighting everyone and especially some transvestites and only mentioned his badge eventually. John Saxon is so laid back that he hardly gets a look in, when he's out his car that Whitman is already fighting. Martin Landau and Tisa Farrow are okay but don't have really great roles. Gayle Hunnicutt doesn't get much in this although she really has her moments and looks great. This very odd one is really like a giallo at the beginning and as well towards the end but in the middle, maybe they run out of a story and the car chases make it as if more like a poliziottesco. It is not wonderful but there is just enough that keeps us awake and those giallo moments are rather good.
0 out of 0 found this helpful. Was this review helpful? Sign in to vote.
Permalink
7/10
Stunning Italian-Canadian co-production mixing Giallo-Poliziotteco!!
elo-equipamentos20 March 2024
Aiming for increasing the Canadian cinema industry, they offer 100% of tax income for those filmmakers that decide make a movie there, insofar they hire native actors and the whole production should be made at Canadian ground, fulfilled all requirements it will be fully sponsored by them, it was a perfect environment for Italian filmmakers that was suffering in those years due the Spaghetti genre was in declining process, instead the Poliziottesco genre is growing up.

So a few Hollywoodian stars as Stuart Whitman, Martin Landau and Gayle Hannicutt, also the Italian John Saxon together a Canadian casting by this Giallo-Poliziottesco took place a pristine Montreal nearby Olympic games, about a poisoned girl brother of Capt. Tonny Saitta (Whitman) who playing a sort of Dirty Harry's character trying find out the serial-killer due aftermaths some witness has been murder one by one, the highlights is a breathtaking and endless car chase on Montreal's streets and several spots outskirts of the city.

The thriller is absorbent, a true legacy of Canadian-Italian co-production, even dismissing the tax revenue upon a possible profits, although as long it lasted on late seventies, hereinafter Canada decreased the tax allowance to 50% only, overall a fine entertainment indeed.

Thanks for reading.

Resume:

First watch: 2024 / How many:13 / Source: DVD / Rating: 7.25.
0 out of 0 found this helpful. Was this review helpful? Sign in to vote.
Permalink
6/10
Blazing Magnum
MovieJunkie19762 June 2017
Warning: Spoilers
In dark reaches of back rooms where people like me who still own functioning beta tape players lurk , arose a conversation over car chase sequences in action films. Of course this gem was talked on. Having been sober enough to remember it and having found it On a format other than beta I screened it.

So in the midst of foiling an armed robbery our hero police captain Is unaware of a looming tragedy , namely the death of his sister. The police duo including the captain's partner (Jon Saxon) first suspect that the communities beloved doctor (Martin Landau) is to blame.

Things are not what they seem. We follow a predictable plot line that was well thought out And discover the real story behind the captain's sister.

Average thriller. Clearly a french Canadian stylized dirty harry. A little more wit a little less .44 . The big win is of course as eluded the car chase , which when one discovers was the product of Remy Julienne and his crack driving team should be of no surprise.
0 out of 0 found this helpful. Was this review helpful? Sign in to vote.
Permalink
9/10
A monstrously entertaining, bullet-paced, scumbag-tracking Poliziottesco classic!
Weirdling_Wolf23 January 2014
'Blazing Magnum' is an exhausting, bullet-paced, garotte-taut, blissfully bellicose Euro-crime classic! A barnstorming B-movie with remarkably assured, bravura filmmaking from the dynamic director, Alberto De Martino. Set within a grim-looking Montréal, the quintessentially hard-nosed, nimble-fisted, short-fused, Magnum-wielding cop, Tony Siatta, (Stuart Whitman) and the ever-svelte, super charismatic genre movie hunk, John Saxon relentlessly pursue an especially brutal, opportunistic killer in this consistently thrilling, street tough, righteously redlining crime thriller from the knuckle-dusting heyday of PC-baiting action cinema!

Alberto De Martino's histrionic 'Blazing Magnum' remains one of the more visceral, gallopingly gonzo examples of the populist Euro-crime actioner so ubiquitous in the gleefully exploitative grindhouse era of 1970s! Riotously replete with all the wantonly wig-splitting ultra-violence, hard-boiled dialogue and locomotive car-nage one might ever hope to see; including a well-documented, tarmac thrashing, calamitously kinetic car chase that, perhaps, usurps many others! This monstrously entertaining, pistol-packing, scumbag-tracking 70s thriller is among the very best the joyously blood n' thunder genre has to offer, and noisily yields utterly essential, palm-sweatingly primal Poliziotteschi excitement! The ferociously funky score by that unheralded groove-genius, Armando Trovajoli is arguably one of the genre's very best; gritty, adrenaline-spiking urban crime funk that ranks alongside the very best pile-driving, gonzoid wah-wah funk the godlike soundtrack duo Guido & Maurizio de Angelis have to offer!
6 out of 7 found this helpful. Was this review helpful? Sign in to vote.
Permalink
An error has occured. Please try again.

See also

Awards | FAQ | User Ratings | External Reviews | Metacritic Reviews


Recently Viewed