Archive for the ‘Cinema Fantascienza’ Category


The Snow Devils

May 29th, 2010 | article by | No Comments »
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aka: La Morte Viene dal Pianeta Aytin
(lit. Death Comes From Planet Aytin)
I Diavoli dello Spazio (lit. The Space Devils)
company: Mercury Film International,
Southern Cross Films and Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer
year: 1967
runtime: 90′
director: Antonio Margheriti
cast: Giacomo Rossi-Stuart, Ombretta Colli,
Enzo Fiermonte, Halina Zalewska,
Goffredo Unger, Renato Baldini,
Wilbert Bradley, Furio Meniconi,
writers: Renato Moretti and Ivan Reiner
cinematography: Riccardo Pallottini
music: Angelo Francesco Lavagnino
not available on home video

This concluding entry in the Gamma One franchise, a series of four low budget Italian / American co-productions that spawned the swinging cult masterpiece Wild, Wild Planet, is, in a word, forgettable. Whatever funding had existed for the earlier Wild, Wild Planet and War of the Planets had dried up by the time of The Snow Devils production, along with director Antonio Margheriti’s enthusiasm for the increasingly formulaic material. Though the credited director for the project, Margheriti was busy preparing another film when shooting for Devils was underway, leaving his assistant director Ruggero Deodato (Cannibal Holocaust, appearing just as disinterested in the material as Margheriti had become) to pick up the bulk of his directorial duties. There is a minimum of fun to be had with Devils, the lack of imagination and dearth of action leaving it feeling like a pile of second unit footage with no real movie to fall back on.

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Battaglie negli Spazi Stellari

November 15th, 2009 | article by | 3 Comments »
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postera.k.a. Cosmo 2000
companies: Nais Film and
La Cinematografie Internazionali Associate
year: 1977
runtime: 92′
country: Italy
director: Alfonso Brescia
cast: John Richardson, Yanti Somer,
Walter Maestosi, Massimo de Cecco,
Gisela Hahn, West Buchanan, Malisa Longo
writers: Giacomo Mazzocchi
and Massimo Lo Jacono
not on home video in the USA

Plot: The giant robot ruler of a distant asteroid attempts to conquer the Earth with a fleet of flying saucers and an army of human-duplicating space zombies.

This is either the first or second of Alfonso Brescia’s pentalogy of STAR WARS-inspired space adventures, and I’m not sure it really matters which.  Brescia seems to have filmed it side by side with ANNO ZERO: GUERRA NELLO SPAZIO / COSMOS: WAR OF THE PLANETS, with which it is often confused (including at the IMDB), and the two share not only special effects, costumes, and props, but a good deal of cast and crew as well.  Like LA BESTIA NELLO SPAZIO / THE BEAST IN SPACE three years later, BATTAGLIE NEGLI SPAZI STELLARI was never picked up for any sort of distribution in the United States and has since become the most obscure entry in the series.

A shame really, as BATTAGLIE is one of the better of Brescia’s tightly budgeted inepics.  The screenplay by Giacomo Mazzocchi and Massimo Lo Jacono [STAR ODYSSEY] has more in common with one of Antonio Margheriti’s hip Gamma I films than with George Lucas’ budding franchise, and focuses less on fantastical interstellar combat and more on Earthbound dramatics.  Brescia’s budget simply wouldn’t allow for anything approaching Lucas’ brand of special effects action, though he and his effects team do pull out all the stops in the end and allow for a final, brief flying saucer invasion of Earth.

The story concerns a space captain named Mike, played by COSMOS: WAR OF THE PLANETS star John Richardson [BLACK SUNDAY], who is called into service, along with his girlfriend (Yanti Somer), after a ship is destroyed by flying saucers while investigating an asteroid rich in rare elements.  Mike joins forces with mysterious yet friendly alien visitor Irk (Walter Maestosi) and his child companion (who carries and, more importantly, uses a silver ball capable of disintigrating people) against the huge robotic ruler of the asteroid and his collection of mummy-wrapped and maggot-ridden space zombies.  Things become more complicated when it is discovered that some of those zombies have been made to look, sound, and act like important members of Earth’s space force!

It’s odd to think that Brescia may have, for once, been ahead of the curve with this film, considering that the walking dead wouldn’t become a fixture of contemporary Italian genre cinema until George Romero’s DAWN OF THE DEAD and Lucio Fulci’s ZOMBI 2 were released there two years later.  The zombies in this case only reveal their true form sporadically and are seen either wearing masks or imitating the living for most of their time on screen.  In the rare instances that we do see them for what they are they’re pretty nasty, their pulsing faces wriggling with fly larvae and covered in a bloody mush.  They may never eat people in the tradition of their more famous counterparts, but these space zombie manage to kill plenty of hapless Earthlings all the same.

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From a production standpoint BATTAGLIE NEGLI SPAZI STELLARI is a few steps ahead of the rest of the entries in the series, and benefits from a few outdoor location shoots and some fine costume design by Elena de Cupis.  Marcello Giombini’s electronic score makes for fine accompaniment throughout, particularly when the bizarrely catchy theme song We are not Alone here in Space kicks in over the opening and closing credits.  Filled with loopy lyrics about “new UFOs” and “super human men” and sung by a chorus of men for whom English is obviously not a first language, the song (recycled for COSMOS: WAR OF THE PLANETS) must be heard to be believed.

Also moderately impressive are the special effects, handled by a variety of people and organizations (including animation house Studio H and Biamonte Cinegroup).  Many of them, especially vistas of Earth ships sailing through the stars, already look off color and duped here, while some look positively pristine.  Original to this production are a number of angles showing UFOs tracking along in groups of various sizes, most of which would be recycled in LA GUERRA DEI ROBOT / THE WAR OF THE ROBOTS and SETTE UOMINI D’ORO NELLO SPAZIO / STAR ODYSSEY.  Fun as the effects can be, we see far too much of them.  Shots are repeated over and over again, often multiple times in a single scene, and then looped through again on the view screens seen in sets for spaceship interiors and the Earth control center.

Brescia’s direction is as inept as ever here, though that’s really part of the fun.  It’s certainly reasonable enough for the material at hand, with its weird drama (Richardson and Somer are introduced via a comedic fishing trip) and pages of ludicrous techno-babble.  Editor Carlo Reali makes the most of the footage available to him, repeating some takes three and four times to stretch the length of scenes for which additional footage was obviously never shot.

004It’s a minor miracle that BATTAGLIE NEGLI SPAZI STELLARI is as entertaining as it is with all of its technical and budgetary shortcomings.  It’s a far cry from the Antonio Margheriti science fantasies that came before and will look dated even when compared to its contemporaries from elsewhere in the world, but it’s great fun all the same.  I can only hope that someone like Mya Communications or Severin Films will take to giving this a proper English friendly release at some point in the future, but for now it remains unavailable on home video.  Available or not, this one gets my recommendation.



The Beast in Space

November 9th, 2009 | article by | 3 Comments »
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poster

This locandina for THE BEAST IN SPACE is, in accordance with the film itself, rather derivative. Not only does the artwork rip-off that commissioned for the release of John Boorman's ZARDOZ, but the still images included are from the earlier Brescia space film STAR ODYSSEY.

a.k.a. La Bestia nello Spazio
companies: LU. MA. FIN and S.I.G.M.A. E. CO.
year: 1980
runtime: 92′
country: Italy
director: Alfonso Brescia
cast: Sirpa Lane, Vassili Karis,
Venantino Venantini, Lucio Rosato,
Robert Hundar, Marina Hedman
dvd company: Severin Films
release date: April 29, 2008
retail price: $29.95
disc details: Region 1 / Single Layer
order this film from Amazon.com:
unrated version
| xxx version
reviewed from a screener provided
by Severin Films, LLC

Plot: A group of astronauts are sent deep into space to a planet rich in the rare metal Antalium.  Once there they discover a world ruled by a megalomaniacal robot sex fiend, his groovy beast-man servant and an army of blond android warriors.

The first STAR WARS revolutionized the sci-fi fantasy genre in any number of ways, namely by placing a renewed emphasis on action and expensive special effects.  It’s runaway success ensured that imitators would be riffing on its formula for decades to come, and none of these imitators seem to have been so prolific as the low-end Italian exploitation director Alfonso Brescia.  In the span of three years between 1977 and 1980, Brescia managed to co-write and direct a tersely connected pentalogy of such knock-offs (along with a host of unrelated efforts).

His production ethic was simple and cost effective – create a single laundry list of props, sets, and special effects takes, and then write scripts for which they could be utilized time and time again.  After three serious efforts (BATTAGLIE NEGLI SPAZI STELLARI,  ANNO ZERO: GUERRA NELLO SPAZIO / COSMOS: WAR OF THE PLANETS and LA GUERRA DEI ROBOT / THE WAR OF THE ROBOTS) and one outright spoof  (1979′s SETTE UOMINI D’ORO NELLO SPAZIO /  STAR ODYSSEY), the well was running quite dry.  What were money-hungry Italian producers to do?

Why, rip off another popular film from the time period, steal its star, and dust off those props, sets, and effects for one more go.  One has to give the film makers credit for shear absurdity in this department as they found that inspiration in, of all places, Walerian Borowczyk’s bizarre erotic opus LA BETE from five years earlier.  Simply adding graphic sexual content to their space picture was obviously deemed too mundane, and THE BEAST IN SPACE opts to focus instead on the Borowczyk film’s most infamous moment – the rape of a young and prudish aristocrat by a randy and hugely endowed anthropomorphic beast.  A family friendly space adventure this was certainly not to be.

70′s sex icon Sirpa Lane (THE SECRET NIGHTS OF LUCREZIA BORGIA) was attached to be BEAST’s star attraction and doomed to a far less glamourous fate than in the Borowczyk production – falling victim to the lustful intentions of a lascivious man-beast and a world-dominating super-robot and a cocky starship captain named Larry who likes to compare the wonders of space to animal asses.  Needless to say, Lane’s professional career had seen better days, and its a pity to see her used here as nothing but an admissions booster.  Director Brescia approaches her (as well as the other) erotic moments with the same aesthetic barbary that renders the drama that surrounds them so lifeless and ineffectual.  There is certainly sex to be had here, though it’ll prove of little interest to even the most devoted of skin aficianados.

Aside from its adults-only classification and a handful of sleazy and salacious moments, THE BEAST IN SPACE is par for the course as far as Brescia’s science fiction efforts are concerned.  Characters sit around spouting all manner of ludicrous dialogue (“Sector two damaged.  The bastard hit the module!”) while the editor unspools reems of stock effects in a ramshackle fashion about them.  Many of these effects shots are rather well accomplished, with considerable attention paid in making them as believable as the budget would allow, though their presence in three previous films has exponentially lessened their novelty value.

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Those trademarks of the previous Nais Film produced Brescia space pictures are all present and accounted for, including hordes of blond-wigged silver-suited android fighting men with clunky glowing swords, though that company’s name is nowhere to be found in the credits scroll.  Scripting (by Brescia and Aldo Crudo) is at least as convoluted and incoherent as in the rest of those films, and the effort is rendered even harder to follow by one of the most incongruous Itailian overdubs I’ve yet encountered.  That’s not to say that this low-tech patchwork of disparate genres is without its bizarre charms (the sight of women in space suits becoming hot and bothered by anamorphic stock footage of horses copulating is perversely hilarious), but you’ll need an unflinching adoration for cinematic awfulness to appreciate them.

The shaky distribution rights to Brescia’s previous space operas have fallen by the wayside, leaving us with nothing but shoddy bargain-bin releases of them to choose from.  Not so with the previously unreleased THE BEAST IN SPACE, which only recently received its stateside debut thanks to the due diligence and possible insanity of cult DVD distributor Severin Films.  The company has shown a remarkable dedication to the title, presenting audiences with not one but two separate releases of it – including one of the obscure hardcore cut of the picture.

The feature presentations for both discs, triple-x inserts and gigantic rubber man-beast penis aside, are pretty much identical.  BEAST is presented in 16:9 enhanced and progressive scan widescreen transfer that, in spite of frequent speckling and other damage, puts the digital representations of Brescia’s other space films to shame.  Colors and contrast are both well represented and the grainy image presents with good detail when the cinematography (frequently intentionally blurry and diffused) allows for it.  Audio is represented by a suitable Dolby Digital monophonic Italian track, augmented with English subtitles that, barring a few typos, are well translated.  An interview with actor and artist Venantino Venantini is included on the unrated disc, while the xxx edition gets just over two minutes of hardcore outtakes.  Both discs come with a  trailer, the sexual explicitness of which varies in accordance with which cut of the film is represented.

Severin Films is to be commended for finally giving this, undoubtedly the strangest of Italy’s science fiction offerings, a proper release on digital, though the high retail price will probably deter most casual buyers.  In this case that’s probably not so bad a thing, as THE BEAST IN SPACE is definitely not for everyone.  Its off-kilter blend of outer space antics and sleazy sex was enough to keep the Wtf-filmer in me casually entertained, but your mileage will definitely vary.



Yeti – Giant of the 20th Century

June 27th, 2009 | article by | No Comments »
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a.k.a. Yeti – il Gigante del 20 Secolo
Stefano Film [1977] 118′ / 96′
country: Italy
director: GIANFRANCO PAROLINI [as Frank Kramer]
cast: ANTONELLA INTERLENGHI, MIMMO CRAIG,
cast: JIM SULLIVAN, TONY KENDALL, EDOARDO FAIETA

Oh Dino de Laurentiis, what hath ye wrought? Throughout 1976, the world was bombarded with pre-release advertising for his multi-million dollar remake of KING KONG – so much so that exploitation entrepreneurs couldn’t help but try and take advantage of it. The results were mostly boring and terrible affairs, as exemplified by the U.S / Korean co-production A*P*E [which beat the de Laurentiis production to theaters by nearly three months, and in 3-D no less]. Not to be upstaged, a small consortium of Italian producers / screenwriters concocted this bizarre yarn, which is the only true giant monster film ever to have been produced in the country as far as I am aware.

YETI begins with several shots of ice exploding, a glimpse of a boat in the Arctic, and a fly-over of Toronto, all while a musical derivation on the John Barry theme to KING KONG and [more oddly] Carl Orf’s “O Fortuna” blurps in the background. This can only mean one thing – that an absolutely gigantic yeti has been discovered by a greedy corporate head in the icy north of Canada. That greedy corporate head is Hunnicut [Faieta], and he tasks his ‘paleonthonologist’ [gotta love those English dubs!] buddy Wassermann with waking the beast up for reasons unknown. Wasserman, with the aid of a helicopter, a huge gas chamber, and an armory’s worth of flamethrowers, does just that while Hunnicut’s grandchildren – the mute Herbie [Sullivan] and hottie Jane [Interlenghi] – look on.

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Caltiki – The Immortal Monster

May 6th, 2009 | article by | No Comments »
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a.k.a. Caltiki – il Mostro Immortale
company: Climax Pictures
year: 1959
runtime: 76′
country: Italy
directors: Ricardo Freda
and Mario Bava

cast: John Merivale, Didi Perago,
Gerard Herter, Daniela Rocca
not on home video in the USA

It’s Cinco de Mayo here at Wtf-Film [and, presumably, elsewhere], and I’m celebrating the only way I know how – by honoring the cinema fantastico. Now CALTIKI may be set in Mexico, but it’s really 100% pure cinema fantascienza – produced in Italy by a man who, though he received no on-screen credit, would go on to become the most recognized name in Italian horror.

CALTIKI follows a group of archaeologists – led by Dr. Fielding [Merivale] and his associate Max [Herter] – as they investigate the Mayan ruins at Tikal. When two men descend into the ruins and only one returns – and out of his mind, to boot – the research team switches gears in an effort to find out why. Max and Fielding descend into the cave where the archaeologist disappeared and discover that a massive previously undiscovered chamber has been uncovered. Once inside they find a large pool and, more interesting to some of the team than what happened to their friends, a wealth of treasure that once served as sacrifice to the Mayan goddess Caltiki.

Unfortunately for the would-be treasure hunters, Caltiki turns out to be much more real than they imagined. After killing one party member as he dives for treasure, Caltiki – an amorphous and all-consuming mass of amoebic glop – rises from the pool to threaten the rest of the team. The greedy Max tries to salvage some of the treasure, but wanders too closely to the monster with disastrous results. Only the quick thinking of Dr. Fielding, who hacks off a piece of Caltiki and frees Max, saves him. With the monster dispatched by a conveniently placed gasoline-loaded truck and Max in serious condition, the team returns to Mexico City.

Once there, surgeons remove the festering bit of Caltiki from Max’s arm and leave him to recover while Dr. Fielding investigates the nature of the monster. Carbon dating reveals that Caltiki, found to be a massive unicellular organism, is no fewer than 20 million years old – confirming the Mayan legend about the agelessness of the god. But the legend also mentions the rebirth of Caltiki at a time when her mate appears in the sky. Dr. Fielding puts two and two together when a comet on a 1300 year cycle, which last appeared at the time the Mayan’s disappeared, appears in the sky once more. The Caltiki specimens begin to grow . . . and grow . . .

To make matters worse, a poisonous compound released by Caltiki when it attacked Max has effectively driven the man insane. His obsessive desire to have Dr. Fielding’s wife as his own leads him to the Doctor’s home, where Fielding’s personal Caltiki specimen is itching to escape, and to feed . . .

CALTIKI was obviously intended to capitalize on the surge in blob-oriented horrors towards the end of the fifties. While most would readily cite THE BLOB as inspiration, CALTIKI has far more in common with the first two Quatermass films and the Hammer spin-off X: THE UNKNOWN than with that Irvin Yeaworth production, which may or may not have even seen release in Italy by the time CALTIKI was in production. Filippo Sanjust’s competent screenwriting references THE QUATERMASS XPERIMENT explicitly at times, such as when the maddened and deformed Max is wandering the countryside or when the fate of the lost archaeologist is related through ‘found footage’. The first major shock scene, in which a diver’s face is shown to have been stripped clean by Caltiki, is very reminiscent of the image of a doctor’s melting face seen in X: THE UNKOWN.

Though it takes cues from any number of past efforts, Sanjust’s scripting manages some moments of inspired originality, namely its combination of the supernatural and the scientific. Having the Caltiki mythology not only confirmed but rendered newly relevant by the appearance of a comet is a brilliant twist that reminds of Nigel Kneale at his best. The dramatic aspects, revolving around Dr. Fielding’s marital strife and Max’s attempts to capitalize on it, are relatively flat and uninspired, but tie in very well with the more lurid and horrific elements – its only a pity that there is no Brian Donlevey or Dean Jagger to arise and take charge of the situation once CALTIKI comes to a head.

Thanks to credited director Riccardo Freda’s faith in brilliant cinematographer Mario Bava, we will never have to sit back and wonder at what CALTIKI might have become in less capable hands. As it stands, Bava’s involvement is enough to render a few gross lapses in logic [the all too conveniently parked gasoline truck, Dr. Fielding being allowed to keep a pet Caltiki at home] moot – overridden by the shock payoffs they allow for. Bava not only directed the majority of the picture and handled the cinematography, but also designed the effects – including a wonderful on-set volcano that eliminated the need for expensive process shots. It is only with the frequent miniatures that Bava begins to show his lack of funds. While many are effective enough, several are not – a huge statue of Caltiki glimpsed several times in the caves is obviously only a foot or so tall and the scale model tanks that do battle with the Godzilla-sized Caltiki at the conclusion look just like the toys they are.

Still, there are more than enough riveting effects moments to be had in CALTIKI’s brief running time to keep its lesser moments from spoiling things. Indeed, in Bava’s capable hands even a few of those are well utilized – a blurry light that fades in and out of a star-scape is what passes for a comet, but seen in conjunction with the pulsing, growing, and multiplying Caltikis, the image achieves a sort of surreal efficacy. Bava would make a name for himself on his own terms the following year with the production of the Gothic horror masterpiece BLACK SUNDAY [LA MASCHERA DEL DEMONIO], but CALTIKI remains an important step in his evolution from talented cinematographer and effects man to director.

CALTIKI looks to have been at least a moderate success both at home and abroad, and moments of it seem to have inspired much more modern productions – it’s hard not to think of the revelation of Aaron Eckhart’s extensive facial injuries in THE DARK KNIGHT when Dr. Fielding visits Max in the hospital, and DEEP IMPACT owes one of its more important plot devices to an astronomer’s fiery demise here. I can’t help but be a little surprised that, especially with all the hub-bub propagating around a Mayan-inspired 2012 apocalypse, no one seems to have realized CALTIKI’s remake potential. Perhaps that is all for the best.

It’s a pity that, as of this writing, no official Region 1 DVD release of CALTIKI has been made – the images that accompany this review are sourced from an awful bootleg VHS I snatched from eBay years ago. NoShame released it to Region 2 in Italy with a fine anamorphic transfer and both the original Italian and dubbed English audio available, but offered no subtitles on either the feature or supplements. A recent French disc is less satisfying, with no English audio option or subtitles and a vertically stretched image. Bootlegs are still abundant, but Wtf-Film really wishes some enterprising company would give CALTIKI the English-friendly release it deserves.

I find myself respecting CALTIKI more and more as the years go by, and realizing what a fine suspense experience it must have been when it first saw theatrical release. Its brand of fantascienza shocks and scares is certainly not for all tastes, but fans of monster cinema and Mario Bava are definitely encouraged to indulge. Wtf-Film recommends.



Cozzilla

September 14th, 2008 | article by | No Comments »
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a.k.a. Godzilla / Godzilla il re dei mostri
company: Cozzilla S.R.L.
year: 1977
runtime: 88′ / 106′
country: Italy
director: Luigi Cozzi
cast: Raymond Burr, Takeshi Shimura,
Akira Takarada, Momoko Kochi,
Akira Takarada, Akihiko Hirata
special effects: Armando Valcauda
Not on home video

The year nineteen seventy seven is all but immortal in the eyes of this site’s curator – it will be forever remembered as the year when dinosaurs rose to attack vacationers around Mt. Fuji, school girls were devoured by home accents, and the world was introduced for the first (though, sadly, not the last) time to the bloated mythology of STAR WARS. Indeed, in this viewers mind, there is no year more important to the history of bizarre film than those absurdly bountiful 365 days.

But when shuffling through 1977′s mountainous shrine of the strange, one title alone rises above the rest as a near-forgotten testament to just how weird the film world can get. I speak not of the ridiculous LEGEND OF THE DINOSAURS AND MONSTER BIRDS, the surreal HOUSE, or the derivatively entertaining STAR WARS, but of the Japanese cum American cum Italian (twice!) epic best known as COZZILLA.

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