For me, going back to Macumba Sexual is going back to my Jess
Franco origins, as it was the second Jess Franco film I ever saw, the
first being Mansion of the Living Dead (1982). I came across both Severin
DVDs of these films at a video store in 2007 and took a chance with Mansion
first even though I was expecting it to be terrible (I had heard of Jess
Franco and a not so revered zombie movie by the name of Oasis of
the Zombies (1982)). At the time, I was desperate for something new, and I
was sort of fascinated by the cheap looking blind dead Templar rip-offs on the DVD
cover (Diet Tombs of the Blind Dead?). My expectations were low, but it turned
out to be a funny, sexy, ultra-weird, and surprisingly atmospheric horror movie
with a captivating lead actress, Lina Romay (born Rosa Maria Almirall). I shortly went
back to the store for Macumba Sexual and, despite some frustrations,
have been hooked on Jess Franco ever since (thanks Severin!).
Tuesday, August 6, 2019
Macumba Sexual (1983)
Labels:
Ajita Wilson,
Antonio Mayans,
Erotic,
Jess Franco,
Lina Romay,
Spanish Horror
Tuesday, June 11, 2019
Evil Eye / Malocchio (1975)
Evil Eye is that kind of movie that
gracefully tries to do it all but ends up not really knowing what to do with
itself afterwards. When looking at the film as a whole, it feels like a nice
recap of the enduring motifs of the giallo, occult, gothic horror, and erotica
film, and for that it will surely find a place in the hearts of Eurocult fans (it
certainly has for me), but it’s hard to tell if it is a work of genius, a
mistake of a masterpiece, or just an empty, routine cash-in. Is it great or not-great? I honestly have referred to
it as both.
The Spanish, Italian, Mexican co-production Evil Eye (aka Mal de ojo in Spain, Malocchio and Eroticofollia in Italy, and Más allá del exorcismo in Mexico) is directed and co-written by Mario Siciliano. It was also co-written by Spanish writers Julio Buchs and Federico De Urrutia. Interestingly, Buchs and De Urrutia have several co-writing credits together, such as Alta tension (1972) and A Bullet for Sandoval (1969), many of which Buchs directed. Evil Eye seems to be the very last film either writer worked on. Julio Buchs died in 1973 before the film was released.
The Spanish, Italian, Mexican co-production Evil Eye (aka Mal de ojo in Spain, Malocchio and Eroticofollia in Italy, and Más allá del exorcismo in Mexico) is directed and co-written by Mario Siciliano. It was also co-written by Spanish writers Julio Buchs and Federico De Urrutia. Interestingly, Buchs and De Urrutia have several co-writing credits together, such as Alta tension (1972) and A Bullet for Sandoval (1969), many of which Buchs directed. Evil Eye seems to be the very last film either writer worked on. Julio Buchs died in 1973 before the film was released.
Sunday, April 14, 2019
The Sex of Angels / Il sesso degli angeli (1968)
This wicked looking poster for the nominally X-rated
Italian/German drama The Sex of Angels
and the Google plot synopsis, which reads “young women steal a yacht and kidnap
a young man and spend a weekend having sex and doing drugs,” really aren’t all
that misleading, although there’s a lot more to the story. The poster also
exaggerates the situation, as what is depicted is rather the result of a
conundrum brought on by irresponsibility followed by an even more irresponsible
course of action.
The setup to The Sex of Angels is, of course, an appealing one to the male fancy. Being seized by three beautiful modern-day angels and taken on a boat ride into the endless summer of ’68? Why not? It sounds like a good time, and for the most part it is, but in trying to postulate what the film might be trying to say with its outcome, I can’t help but put it in the context of ‘60s youth counter culture and the sexual revolution and see it as a cautionary tale of seduction and widespread use of LSD and what I thought was a kind of critical impression of the behaviors of the “sexually liberated.”
The setup to The Sex of Angels is, of course, an appealing one to the male fancy. Being seized by three beautiful modern-day angels and taken on a boat ride into the endless summer of ’68? Why not? It sounds like a good time, and for the most part it is, but in trying to postulate what the film might be trying to say with its outcome, I can’t help but put it in the context of ‘60s youth counter culture and the sexual revolution and see it as a cautionary tale of seduction and widespread use of LSD and what I thought was a kind of critical impression of the behaviors of the “sexually liberated.”
Saturday, February 16, 2019
Alice or the Last Escapade / Alice ou la dernière fugue (1977)
I’ve been a fan of Alice
in Wonderland since I was a kid, although I didn’t read Lewis Carroll’s Alice books until I was an
adult, which was prompted by my first viewing of Jan Svankmajer’s Alice
(1988), and ever since reading them I’ve been pretty enthusiastic about keeping
an eye out for films inspired by or adapted from the books, which was what
attracted me to the French surrealist film Alice
or the Last Escapade in the first place. I thought the film did a pretty
good job at creating an interesting new take on Alice in Wonderland (without actually being about Alice in Wonderland) while also being a
bit derivative and having an ending that viewers will no doubt have seen before
that I still thought was beautifully executed. It’s also very much of the ‘70s
Eurocult sensibility and a product of its time, but it feels like there’s also a
little something here for everyone, including the curious Alice in wonderland fan (who doesn’t mind a lightly inspired
non-adaptation), and even the surreal, the arthouse, or even the gothic horror
fan.
Friday, December 21, 2018
House of the Damned / La loba y la Paloma (1974)
House
of the Damned is that generically titled, sort of
misleading, pleasant delight that reminds me of why I still enjoy exploring
near-forgotten Eurocult films from decades past with the word “House” in
their titles. It’s far from the traditional haunted house horror and is more of
a peculiar seaside murder drama that still hits a lot of the right notes for Spanish
horror fans. The translation of the Spanish title is something like The She Wolf and the Dove, which I
think is referring to Sandra and Maria (played by Carmen Sevilla and Muriel
Catalá), the two main female characters who are also featured on the different
regional title posters.
Which one of them is supposed to be the wolf and which
one is the dove?
Wednesday, October 17, 2018
The Dunwich Horror (1970)
Before AIP’s The
Dunwich Horror, a 1970 film adaptation of H.P.
Lovecraft’s horror novella The Dunwich Horror from 1929, not a whole lot had
been done yet to try and bring Lovecraft
to the screen. The Haunted Palace from
1963 is partially based on The Case
of Charles Dexter Ward; Die, Monster,
Die! from 1965 is a loose adaptation of The Color out of Space; The Shuttered Room from 1967 is an adaptation of August Derleth's story of the same name that was inspired by Lovecraft, and The
Crimson Cult from 1969 only takes mild inspiration from Dreams in the Witch House. As far as I
can tell, The Dunwich Horror is the
first film to be a faithful attempt at a direct title adaptation of an HP Lovecraft story. Not surprisingly some
liberties were taken with this film, such as updating it for the late '60s, early '70s, but that’s always to be expected. I do
think the The Dunwich Horror movie, for
its era, does do Lovecraft justice,
even if it doesn’t quite live up to the novella.
It was filmed in Mendocino California, a small coastal community that kind of passes for a New England looking town. I don’t think there was any kind of ocean near Dunwich in the original story, but the seaside connection is suitably Lovecraftian and serves the film well, as it’s usually filmed at night to look dark and ominous with unseen horrors.
The stylish occult and satanic animated intro credits set to the classical and catchy main theme by Les Baxter is a great start that gets you into both a ‘70s and a Lovecraft mood. It has a cartoony and imaginative way of painting the ceremonial birth of the main character Wilbur Whateley on Sentinel Hill. Even the film's detractors agree that this animated segment is terrific.
It was filmed in Mendocino California, a small coastal community that kind of passes for a New England looking town. I don’t think there was any kind of ocean near Dunwich in the original story, but the seaside connection is suitably Lovecraftian and serves the film well, as it’s usually filmed at night to look dark and ominous with unseen horrors.
The stylish occult and satanic animated intro credits set to the classical and catchy main theme by Les Baxter is a great start that gets you into both a ‘70s and a Lovecraft mood. It has a cartoony and imaginative way of painting the ceremonial birth of the main character Wilbur Whateley on Sentinel Hill. Even the film's detractors agree that this animated segment is terrific.
Sunday, August 19, 2018
Sex of the Devil / Il sesso del diavolo - Trittico (1971)
How could any Eurocult horror fan resist being attracted to
a movie with a poster like this and a title like Sex of the Devil? Whether or not the movie delivers what it
promises on the cover is another matter, but when beholding such an epic, suggestively
satanic, occult, and erotic poster like this one (centering on what I thought
looked a little like a possessed Mia
farrow), a spectacular fantasy of a movie is birthed in the mind of the
observer, one that is often very different from the movie in reality, for
better or worse. I admit to initially being attracted and baited in to this
film based solely on this poster. Sex of
the Devil not surprisingly turned out to be something other than I had
imagined, and if it weren’t for that advertisement I may have never found it. So
basically, the movie poster did its job, and I slowly fell in love with another
movie.
Despite not being what I expected and bearing the usual pacing and plot resolution issues, Sex of the Devil still delivered the goods, and, in the end, it ended up delivering what it promised on the poster as well.
Despite not being what I expected and bearing the usual pacing and plot resolution issues, Sex of the Devil still delivered the goods, and, in the end, it ended up delivering what it promised on the poster as well.
Tuesday, June 26, 2018
A Whisper in the Dark / Un sussurro nel buio (1976)
A
Whisper in the Dark is a personal favorite of mine. It has been
referred to as the Italian The Turn of
the Screw (1898) and is a subtle take on the haunted family category of storytelling,
focusing on a wealthy family living in a gorgeous and at times spooky villa
that’s like a hotel resort (probably because it was filmed at a hotel, the
five-star Hotel Villa Condulmer near Venice). It’s got that gothic horror
aesthetic but downplays the horror in favor of exploring family dynamics with
shades of the supernatural that are symbolic of unresolved family problems. The
supernatural is always kept ambiguous; almost everything strange that happens
can be explained, but the circumstances do leave a lot to the imagination. As
is usually the case, the ambiguity is the film’s strength and its weakness.
The cinematography by Claudio Cirillo is really the main attraction, and with Marcello Aliprandi’s direction, the visuals, coupled with Pino Donaggio’s sweet and melancholic score, end up being the stuff of fairytales, comprising some of the most majestic locations and set pieces. The villa and its somber exterior and grounds, dating back to the sixteenth century, have a deep, haunting presence, a rich sense of past generations emanating from it. And the children’s ball is an enchanting segment, with costumes and constantly falling confetti, which concludes with a phantasmagoric night time burning of an effigy floating on the river. According to Cirillo the different weather conditions, such as the foggy atmosphere seen during the opening credits, were by chance. Listening to Cirillo vibrantly talk about his craft on the NoShame DVD interview, you can tell the man is an artist.
The cinematography by Claudio Cirillo is really the main attraction, and with Marcello Aliprandi’s direction, the visuals, coupled with Pino Donaggio’s sweet and melancholic score, end up being the stuff of fairytales, comprising some of the most majestic locations and set pieces. The villa and its somber exterior and grounds, dating back to the sixteenth century, have a deep, haunting presence, a rich sense of past generations emanating from it. And the children’s ball is an enchanting segment, with costumes and constantly falling confetti, which concludes with a phantasmagoric night time burning of an effigy floating on the river. According to Cirillo the different weather conditions, such as the foggy atmosphere seen during the opening credits, were by chance. Listening to Cirillo vibrantly talk about his craft on the NoShame DVD interview, you can tell the man is an artist.
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