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This was just great. My first Bava experience--hopefully I'll eventually take in his entire oeuvre.
Black Sunday is a black and white gothic horror film focused on the revenge plot of an executed plot and the people trying to stop her. The plot itself is fine. It's nothing extra special, but it facilitates the movie well enough. The characters and many of the other general building blocks of the film are also fine. So why is this movie worth watching? Well, the director, Mario Bava, does a stellar job of setting the scene. The soundtrack to the movie is spectacular. The black and white really aides to the atmosphere, as does the cinematography. The cinematography, in particular, is outstanding. The film relies on a wonderful selection of long shots. There are many shots where the length doesn't particularly add to the story, but it certainly adds to the atmosphere and overall creepiness of the movie. The film also includes some fairly gruesome scenes, nothing quite like a splatter film, though. The scenes are well placed and add to the experience rather than become the focus themselves. All in all, if you're after a great atmospheric horror film and don't care much about a plot or characters, you may find yourself enjoying Black Sunday.
A diabolical witch and her partner who were executed 200 years ago return from the grave to possess the body of her identical descendent. How exactly does one begin a review on such a seminal horror classic as Black Sunday? Mario Bava’s directorial debut also serves as his masterpiece, and helped initiate his legacy as one of the greatest directors of horror films in history. Bava had of course had extensive experience prior to this influential film with a couple documentaries and shorts in addition to completing a handful of films for other directors; including Riccardo Freda’s I Vampiri, which is widely considered to be the first Italian horror film. Having a hand in kickstarting a genre is certainly no small feat, and is testament to Bava’s extraordinary talent and vision. Black Sunday opens with a witch trial where a group of hooded inquisitors are preparing to punish the evil witch Katia Vajda (Barbara Steele; Curse of the Crimson Altar, Castle of Blood) for being in league with the devil. Standard practice is of course to tie her to a tree and light her on fire. Witch Disposal 101, right? Fuck no. Apparently Katia was so badass in league with the Prince of Darkness that the only fitting punishment after branding her with a nice big “S” on her back is to take the Mask of Satan (an iron mask in the devil’s visage lined with nasty spikes on the inside) and literally HAMMERING it into her face as an eternal reminder of her diabolical misdeeds. Right then and there you know you’re in for a pretty wild ride as Black Sunday pulls absolutely no punches. Cut to 200 years later and Katia and Igor are resurrected and begin to prowl about as a vampires eager to possess the youth and beauty of the young Asa who lives in the castle nearby. Considering it came out in 1960 the graphic violence in the film fuelled much controversy, getting it banned in England until 1968. In the far more liberal US the gore was censored before it was unleashed onto audiences theatrically. Even by today’s standards the violence is inventive and quite gruesome, being filmed in black and white in addition to Bava’s brilliant cinematography skills bringing these scenes to life with an eerie realism. Gore aside, Black Sunday Is an absolute feast for the eyes from the very first frame. When I say Bava was a master cinematographer one just needs to take a look at the way his scenes are painstakingly assembled; everything is so meticulously placed – every shadow, every cobweb is completely deliberate and makes for a final product that is so far beyond what most other directors were churning out that they can’t even compare. From the long sweeping shots of the countryside to the dark gaping maw leading to the tomb of Katia Vajda, the contrast between light and dark, the creepy mist filled tombs… these elements are almost characters unto themselves; providing more atmosphere than a hundred lesser films could muster up together. The scenes where Katia is resurrecting herself in her stone coffin are absolutely brilliant, and will remain unrivalled ad infinitum. I for one couldn’t believe the grisly imagery Bava packed into these scenes while still managing to preserve their gothic feel rather than allowing them to cheapen the film. Bava’s take on the vampire mythology here is both refreshing and clever in that the vampires are dispatched via a stake to the eye (in yet another wonderfully nasty scene). There’s not a single moment in Black Sunday that doesn’t have a powerful presence. The film has a dark, gloomy, and foreboding feel to it and there is so much to take in that the film downright demands repeated viewings. Needless to say the film’s reputation is well deserved. The film has influenced countless films since its inception including the bizarre Mexican monster flick The Brainiac, the excellent Bloody Pit of Horror, and Francis Ford Coppola’s cinematic abortion Bram Stoker’s Dracula which goes as far as attempting to recreate entire scenes from Bava’s masterwork. It’s comes as no surprise that Barbara Steele is magnificent as both the evil witch Katia Vajda as well as her current-generation doppelgänger Princess Asa Vajda. Her ability to be completely sinister and frightening as the former and then turning around and playing the innocent young victim is tell of a talent that certainly solidifies her a place in horror history. John Richardson (One Million Years B.C., Torso) as Dr. Andre Gorobec, Andrea Checchi (Erik the Conqueror, A Bullet For the General) as his mentor Dr. Thomas Kruvajan, and Arturo Dominici (Castle of Blood, Investigation of a Citizen Above Suspicion) as Igor Javutich, Katia’s evil cohort are also equally excellent in their respective roles. Interestingly, in the Italian language version of the film it is alluded to that Katia and Igor are brother and sister thus suggesting an incestuous relationship between the two. This element is absent from the English dubbed versions. I don’t care what you’re into, what you’ve seen or haven’t seen. Black Sunday is absolute essential viewing. The cinematography, story and performances are absolutely breathtaking. If you have even the slightest passing interest in film or not, I implore you to sit down and watch this work of genius. It will change your view on what cinema is capable of being.
The Prince of Darkness casts his undead shadow once more over the cursed village of Kleinenberg when his ashes are splashed with bat's blood and Dracula is resurrected. And two innocent victims search for a missing loved one... loved to death by Dracula's mistress. But after they discover his blood-drained corpse in Dracula's castle necropolis, the Vampire Lord's lustful vengeance begins.
In a contemporary New York City, members of a dysfunctional family of vampires are trying to come to terms with each other, in the wake of their father's death. Meanwhile, they are being hunted by Dr. Van Helsing and his hapless nephew. As in all good vampire movies, forces of love are pitted against forces of destruction.
Two fraternity pledges go to a sleazy bar in search of a stripper for their college friends, unaware it is occupied by vampires.
Fosco, a 300 year old vampire, lives in a beautiful mansion with his wife Sabina and their son Dimitri. Their lives are a non-stop lust orgy where anything goes and always does! Until, Fauna, a naive young woman, and her boyfriend, Micah, show up and turn the ecstasy-driven clan into murderous back-stabbers, hell-bent on revenge and power.
X-ray images were invented in 1895, the same year in which the Lumière brothers presented their respective invention in what today is considered to be the first cinema screening. Thus, both cinema and radiography fall within the scopic regime inaugurated by modernity. The use of X-rays on two sculptures from the Bilbao Fine Arts Museum generates images that reveal certain elements of them that would otherwise be invisible to our eyes. These images, despite being generally created for technical or scientific purposes, seem to produce a certain form of 'photogénie': they lend the radiographed objects a new appearance that lies somewhere between the material and the ethereal, endowing them with a vaporous and spectral quality. It is not by chance that physics and phantasmagoria share the term 'spectrum' in their vocabulary.
Serbia, in the year 1910: Milena Strasek has lived with her 12-year-old son Stefan in a small village since the father abandoned the family shortly after Stefan was born. Many years of uncertainty concerning the man’s whereabouts have taken their toll: Milena Strasek falls seriously ill and dies, leaving her son alone in the empty house. The father appears the following night. He has come to take his son, but Stefan refuses to go with him. It is a fateful encounter, changing Stefan for the rest of his life.
In 17th century New England, witch hunter Giles Redferne captures an evil warlock, but the conjurer eludes death with supernatural help. Flung into the future, the warlock winds up in the 1980s and plans to bring about the end of the world. Redferne follows the enchanter into the modern era and continues his mission, but runs into trouble in such unfamiliar surroundings. With the help of a young woman, can Redferne finally defeat the warlock?
On a farm owned by Eve Trent and her sister Mary, young archaeologist Angus Flint discovers a large and inexplicable skull, which he soon deduces belonged to the D'Ampton Worm, a mythical beast supposedly slain generations ago by the ancestor of the current Lord D'Ampton. The predatory Lady Sylvia Marsh soon takes an interest in both Flint and the virginal Eve, hinting that the vicious D'Ampton Worm may still live.
Three tales from Sacramento's lurid past. The Vampire of Sacramento, The Batgirl and Palm Sundae.
A vengeful spirit has taken the form of the Tooth Fairy to exact vengeance on the town that lynched her 150 years earlier. Her only opposition is the only child, now grown up, who has survived her before.