Posts Tagged ‘Spiders’


Murder Obsession

April 26th, 2012 | article by | 1 Comment »
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dir. Riccardo Freda
1981 / Dionysio Cinematografica / 97′
written by Riccardo Freda, Antonio Cesare Corti, Simon Mizrahi, and Fabio Piccioni
director of photography Christiano Pogany
original music by Franco Mannino
starring Stefano Patrizi, Martine Brochard, Henri Garcin, Laura Gemser, John Richardson, Anita Strindberg, Silvia Dionisio, and Frabrizio Maroni
Murder Obsession is out on Blu-ray (reviewed here) and DVD from Raro Video USA, and is available through Amazon.com or Raro Video directly.

Co-produced by Italy and France as a means of cashing in on the popularity of the burgeoning American slasher, esteemed director Riccardo Freda’s last stand (he would be fired from his only subsequent directing job) is ultimately far, far stranger than its body count pedigree might suggest. A horror in the broadest since of the word, Murder Obsession bucks categorization by synthesizing practically every familiar genre motif imaginable into an unwieldy and confoundedly contrived cine-monstrosity that must be seen to be believed.

The plot, such as it can be described, concerns young actor Michael, who as a child murdered his famed conductor father after witnessing him beating his mother. Ostensibly cured of the violent impulses that drove him to kill, Michael grows into a seemingly normal human being and a successful film actor to boot. But when one of his roles calls for him to strangle his co-star he takes the stunt too far, nearly killing the poor woman instead. After the incident Michael begins to wonder whether his compulsion to kill has been cured or not, and finds himself compelled to visit his ailing mother and the family mansion where the original murder took place. His girlfriend and a few close friends join him for the trip, expecting a bit of deep-country high-life fun, and who can blame them – what could possibly go wrong on a vacation to the isolated Gothic family mansion of an admitted ex-murderer?

Dramatically Murder Obsession is only so interesting as its dull protagonist, a decidedly vacant Stefano Patrizi (The Cassandra Crossing), and its similarly disinterested writing (credited to four screenwriters, including director Freda himself) allows. This is slow, dry going for the first half hour or so, with no effort at all put into ratcheting suspense from the dynamite situation. With Michael appearing so indifferent about his own potential insanity and non-threatening besides, it’s difficult for the audience to buy him as anything but the film’s most obvious red-herring. His lack of conversational manners is amusing, at least – “In case you hadn’t heard, I killed my dad,” he blandly interjects at one point. The rest of the cast fair about as well, both in performance and scripting, from Sylvia Dionisio (Blood for Dracula) as Michael’s girlfriend and D’Amato muse Laura Gemser (Black Emanuelle) as his unfortunate co-star to John Richardson (Bava’s Black Sunday) as the obligatory creepy groundskeeper.

Fortunately for us director Freda and his collaborators seem to have lost all interest in what they had been doing at roughly the half hour mark, at which point Murder Obsession takes a sharp turn into the nonsensically bizarre and never really recovers. Groundskeeper Richardson stares blankly into the abyss as muddy footprints are left on the mansion’s floor by invisible feet. Gemser is nearly strangled to death – again. Girlfriend Dionisio lapses into a hysterical nightmare, in which she wanders endless tunnels full of screeching rubber bats and enormous spider webs and neath forest bows full of blood-dripping skulls before finding herself strapped to a sacrificial cross and embroiled in a Satanic ceremony that raises a giant and rape-hungry hell-spider from beyond. As familiar as I’ve become with the twists and turns that permeate Italian genre cinema I was honestly surprised by the sudden developments here. After thirty minutes of mind-grinding monotony I couldn’t help but wonder what right Murder Obsession suddenly had to kick ass.

While the giant and rape-hungry hell-spider from beyond is definitely the high point of the proceedings (and what a high!) Murder Obsession thankfully never again settles into its earlier groove, instead opting to channel the gialli of the decade before by way of the slashers that were in the process of transforming so many American drive-in screens into clearing houses for disposable teenagers. As Michael-and-company wander the mansion grounds a leather-gloved killer stalks them down, chewing through their bored and worthless humanity with a hunting knife, an axe, and, most dramatically, a chain saw. While the pretense of mystery is upheld throughout (practically everyone in the film owns leather gloves, inviting a bit of ‘whodunnit’ pondering) Murder Obsession doesn’t seem too concerned with it, and takes more pleasure in whittling down its cast to the point that the responsible party is obvious. In contrast to its early slog the latter two thirds of the story move at a fever pitch, as the film hemorrhages blood and sense on its way to a ludicrous conclusion that may just be cinema’s greatest bastardization of Michelangelo’s Pietà (those sensitive to sacrilege need not apply).

To say that Murder Obsession is a good film would be a gross overstatement, but it’s certainly different, and just the sort of strange, nonsense achievement that I’m happy to have cluttering up my video shelves. Still, a recommendation is tough. Those whose eyes twinkled and hearts leapt at the words giant rape-hungry hell-spider from beyond likely already know where they’re going to stand on this one, and I’ll not deter them from seeking it out. They must, for it is in their blood. The rest of you would probably do best to stick with more respectable genre diversions.

I’ve yet to cover The Fernando Di Leo Crime Collection, the only other Raro Video USA Blu-ray release I own and a real mixed bag in terms of both transfers and encodes. Murder Obsession (which was released to DVD by the same label just a few months ago as an English-only edition) marks a substantial improvement over that release in pretty much every regard – the quality of the film itself excepted.

Presented in 1080p at slightly pictureboxed 1.85:1, Murder Obsession looks pretty good if not quite right on Blu-ray from Raro. Though uncredited as such this is undoubtedly another of LVR’s transfer jobs, as it exhibits precisely the same qualities as those previously known to have been done by them. No, this transfer doesn’t look like film. There’s a somewhat smudgy and DVNR-ish quality to the motion of the image, and while there is plenty of noise to be found there is not a speck of identifiable film grain in evidence. All that aside Murder Obsession retains a certain capacity to impress, offering tight contrast and vivid color where the photography allows for it. There is suspicious softness in places, and an undeniable waxiness to the image at times, but there are also moments of robust detail that are indeed impressive. While I’ve no doubt that a proper transfer from a less problematic post house could have resulted in an overall better image, I’m not sure Murder Obsession really demands it. For home video this looks just fine, and I can’t say that I’m disappointed.

The technical backing really squandered the potential of Raro’s Di Leo collection (granting a piddly 14.8 Mbps average video bitrate to a classic like Milano Calibro 9 is just shameful), and the specifications here have thankfully been beefed up substantially. Murder Obsession is actually available in two separate Mpeg-4 AVC encodes, one for the 92 minute English language cut and another for the 97 minute Italian (each is culled from the same transfer). The shorter cut receives less support, an average bitrate of 21.6 Mbps, and looks a tad softer for the trouble, with more artifacts to be found amongst the transfer’s noise. The Italian cut is, by contrast, quite strong, with its average bitrate of 28.6 Mbps supporting the visuals very well. There are still minor artifacts lurking, but nothing that distracted me in motion. Audio for each version receives a lossless DTS-HD MA 2.0 encode, with the English sounding substantially rougher all around (it sounds to be sourced from tape). The Italian arrives with optional newly-translated English subtitles.

Aside from the bonus English cut of the film the rest of the supplements proved of little interest to this reviewer. The best of the bunch is a 10 minute interview with effects man Sergio Stivaletti, who cut his teeth assisting fx artist Angelo Mattei on the film. Otherwise there’s a longer (22′) interview with Claudio Simonetti on the music of genre cinema, and a shorter (8′) interview with director Gabriele Albanesi (Ubaldo Terzani Horror Show) on the subject of Riccardo Freda. Rounding out the disc is a (very) brief tape-sourced deleted scene and a list of Blu-ray credits. The package is wonderfully designed, from the disc menu up, and comes with an 11 page booklet featuring a synopsis, an essay on the film by Fangoria editor Chris Alexander, and a short biography of writer / director Riccardo Freda.

And that’s it, I think. Murder Obsession receives an imperfect, but perfectly acceptable release from Raro Video USA. At the low price it currently commands ($15.99 shipped from Raro directly, or a dollar more through Amazon) those interested in the film are encouraged to indulge.

The Blu-ray screenshots in this article were taken as full resolution .png in Totem Movie Player, then compressed to .jpg format at a quality setting of 97% using the ImageMagick command line tool. All screenshots are from the more robustly encoded Italian cut of the film.



Out now and upcoming . . .

January 27th, 2010 | article by | No Comments »
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This past weekend UK outfit Eureka! released under their Masters of Cinema label what is already one of the most exciting foreign language DVD releases of the year – Nobuhiko Obayashi’s bizarre fantasy horror House / Hausu, arguably the best coming of age story ever to revolve around a house that eats people.  The disc includes a new anamorphic widescreen transfer, a 90-minute collection of interviews about the film featuring the director, cast, and crew, a theatrical trailer, and an extensive booklet.  The disc is highly recommended for stateside fans who just can’t wait for the eventual Criterion Collection offering (as of yet still unannounced), and is currently offered at 39% below retail at Amazon.co.uk.

Out on the 19th of the month was another fine offering from Shout! Factory, a lavish DVD re-release of Kingdom of the Spiders, previously only available as an expensive German or pathetic Goodtimes release.  The new special edition includes a restored 1.77:1 anamorphic transfer, a commentary featuring director Bud Cardos and many of the crew, a new interview with star William Shatner, and a slew of other featurettes.  The disc is currently available at a savings of 25% from Amazon.com.

And last but not least among notable new releases is a new multi-film collection from Warner, the 4 Film Favorites: Urban Action Collection, released with absolutely zero fanfare on the 14th of January.  The four film collection includes Three the Hard Way, Hot Potatoe, and Black Samson, but the big news of the packages has to be the DVD debut of Jim Kelly’s Black Belt Jones.  While budget in price the transfers are great, and the package can be had for $14.99 at Amazon.com (note: you may be able to find a better deal at your local retailers, so shop around).

Upcoming is the just announced Forbidden Planet, slated for Blu-ray release from Warner on September 7th.  No word on extras as of yet, but I imagine that (in line with previous Warner hi-def offerings) that the package will more or less mimic the special edition DVD from 2006.  Even if it was an unlikely bare-bones release, Wtf-Film would still love to add this classic to his high-def collection.



Tarantula!

January 25th, 2010 | article by | 1 Comment »
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rating:
company:
Universal International
year: 1955
runtime: 80′
country: United States
director: Jack Arnold
cast: John Agar, Mara Corday,
Leo G. Carroll, Nestor Paiva,
Ross Elliot, Edwin Rand,
Raymond Bailey, Hank Patterson
writers: Robert M. Fresco,
Martin Berkeley, and Jack Arnold
cinematographer: George Robinson
music: Joseph Gershenson (supervisor)
special effects: David S. Horsley,
Clifford Stine and Wah Chang (puppet creator)
dvd company: Universal Studios Home Entertainment
release date: January 2, 2007 / May 13, 2008
retail price: $19.99 / $59.98
disc details: Region 1 / NTSC / dual layer
video: 4:3 open matte / progressive
audio: English (Dolby Digital 2.0 monophonic)
subtitles: English SDH, French
order this film from Amazon.com
OOP 2007 collection | 2008 Ultimate Collection

Plot: A scientist investigating a new growth serum in the Arizona desert inadvertently lets an ever-growing tarantula loose on the countryside.  It’s up to a country doctor, local law enforcement, and the air force to stop the beast.

Tarantula! is the prototypical ’50s monster picture, and one in a long line in which the creeping unknown descends upon small-town America.  Throughout the decade the Rockwellian fantasy would be invaded by fifty foot women, perverse space brains, blobs, and even an econonomy-sized crystal garden.  Tarantula! also fits well into the cold war atomic paranoia of the time, and while the bomb doesn’t play a role in the titular creature’s creation (the closest we get is an isotope that holds the good scientist’s growth formula together) the idea of science creating an unstoppable and inhumanly huge force of destruction is of obvious inspiration.

Made just a few years before Universal International’s science fiction cycle would descend into low-budget idiocy (I’m looking at you, Monster on the Campus), Tarantula! is a solid production with a name cast and memorable iconography.  The sight of the title creature cresting hills and progressing with all deliberate speed across the desert landscapes, devouring cattle and people and downing power lines along the way, is hard to forget.

Typical for the genre, Tarantula! plays as a mystery – that the audience is in on the solution ten minutes in is of little consequence.  Dr. Matt Hastings (John Agar) is called in when a horribly disfigured man is found dead of unknown causes in the desert.  Hastings determines that the man died of complications from acromagaly (a syndrome caused by an excess of growth hormone), a diagnosis confirmed when Professor Deemer (Leo G. Carroll) arrives in town to identify the body.  The man turns out to have been Deemer’s assistant, his acromagaly having appeared and progressed to life threatening proportions in just a few short days.

Hasting, knowing that acromagaly is a condition that takes years to develop, senses that something is amiss and, with the help of Deemer’s newly arrived assistant Steve (Mara Corday), starts an investigation into the matter.  Steve lets Hastings in on what Deemer is working on in his laboratory outside town – an artificial nutrient he hopes will help alleviate the food shortages of the future.  Injected into test animals, like mice, guinea pigs, and rabbits, the nutrient results in spectacular growth, with the test subjects reaching maturity in a matter of hours.



Meanwhile, strange things are happening outside of town.  A rancher finds the bones of part of his cattle herd lying in a field, a truck is mysteriously thrown tens of yards off the road, and a pair of prospectors go missing.  The only evidence connecting the incidents are the large puddles of liquid left behind at each – liquid that, when tested, reveals itself to be a kind of venom . . .

There is certainly silliness afoot in Tarantula! – take the acromagaly subplot that links the cast together, for instance.  The cause of the condition seems to be “instability” in the nutrient, which Deemer’s assistant had been injected with for dubious scientific reasons.  Why would men inject themselves with a nutrient that causes uncontrollable growth in test animals and, for that matter, what are they doing injecting something like a tarantula with it?  Methinks that if Deemer and company had settled on something quick-growing and harmless like fruit flies as test subjects then this whole mess could have been avoided.  Then again, a title like Fruit Flies! doesn’t offer quite the number of horrifying possibilities that Tarantula! does.

Of course silliness in a film like Tarantula! is obligatory, and Jack Arnold’s Them!-inspired yarn is more than competent enough in its dramatics to keep things from diving headlong into self-parody (a la Beginning of the End).  John Agar and Mara Corday make a fine leading couple even if the script offers them little of substance.  Corday’s working girl is more typical of the genre here than in the later The Giant Claw (as she tells Deemer before heading into town, “Science is science, but a girl must get her hair done”), though she’s still far from the usual scream queen, only reduced to hysterics when giant spiderlegs are tapping at her window.  The supporting cast are familiar faces – Ross Elliot (Monster on Campus, The Indestructible Man) as Joe the reporter, Nestor Paiva (The Mole People) as the town sheriff, and bit actor and Bert I. Gordon regular Hank Patterson (Earth vs. the Spider, Beginning of the End, Attack of the Puppet People, etc.) as Josh, the nosy desk clerk.

Leo G. Carroll as the not-mad scientist Professor Deemer is the most recognizable actor on board, lending much-needed believability to the part of the noble scientist gone wrong.  The Hitchcock regular (Suspicion, Spellbound, Strangers on a Train, North by Northwest) was immortalized forever for his involvement in Tarantula!, his part one of many of classic sci-fi-dom evoked in the “Science Fiction/Double Feature” number from The Rocky Horror Show.  Carroll takes the role in stride, even when donning his own ridiculous acromagaly prosthetics and tangling with a life-sized tarantula limb.



The real star of the show is, of course, the tarantula, actually several directed around white plaster molds of filmed landscapes with compressed air.  Veteran Universal effects man David S. Horsley (Bride of Frankenstein, Werewolf of London, This Island Earth) and the accomplished Clifford Stine (King Kong, Gunga Din, This Island Earth) get away with a fare share of flubs, like the spider’s legs suddenly disappearing behind invisible matte lines and the occasional transparency of the menace, by virtue of how often their techniques simply work.  The visages of the monster creeping down hillsides, growing ever larger as it stalks its prey, are impressive in their dimensionality and even creepy.  Wah Chang’s scale puppet, plastered all over the advertising for the film, is wisely avoided, but is seen briefly leering (as salaciously as a spider reasonably can) at future Playmate Corday through a gigantic bedroom window (a scene copied outright for 1957′s The Deadly Mantis).

Universal Studios Home Entertainment took its sweet time bringing Tarantula! to DVD domestically, finally releasing it in the boxed set Classic Sci-Fi Ultimate Collection Volume 1 in 2007, alongside The Mole People, The Incredible Shrinking Man, The Monolith Monsters, and Monster on the Campus.  That Best Buy exclusive release went out-of-print in short order and was fetching ridiculous prices through third party sellers (this reviewer made a pretty penny offing his in preparation for the repackaged release) before Universal repackaged it, along with the second installment (including Dr. Cyclops, Cult of the Cobra, The Land Unknown, The Deadly Mantis, and The Leech Woman), as The Classic Sci-Fi Ultimate Collection Volumes 1 & 2 in May of 2008.  The film is not currently available in the States as an individual release.

Tarantula! comes paired with The Mole People on a dual layered DVD (oddly the only disc of the first set not to feature an image of Mara Corday), and the ostensibly single layer transfer greatly improves upon the previously available laserdisc and VHS editions.  The progressive image sports healthy grain, detail, and contrast, but is unfortunately presented open matte.  While the film still plays well full screen, those with widescreen televisions will find that it crops perfectly to a 16:9 set (I’ve cropped the images for this review to 1.78:1 give a representation of the originally intended framing).  Damage is present throughout but not terribly invasive, limited to light dirt and speckling in most instances.  Audio is presented in a nice Dolby Digital 2.0 monophonic track in the original English.  The older recording still retains some nice punch, particularly when the Henry Mancini cues from This Island Earth come into play.  Both English SDH and French subtitles are available.

The only extra to be had on the disc is a trailer in rough shape, but don’t let that deter you as the 10 film The Classic Sci-Fi Ultimate Collection Volumes 1 & 2 is still a great buy for fans (it can be had new for around $4.50 per film on Amazon.com).  As both an old-school genre fanatic and a long-time tarantula keeper, Tarantula! is nothing short of a minor classic for me in spite of its frequent silliness, and as an archetypal example of the B-budget monster opus it’s hard to beat.  Highly recommended.