Aus den geheimen Polizeiakten einer europäischen Hauptstadt
- 1972
- 1 Std. 27 Min.
Vier junge Leute werden Zeuge einer schwarzen Messe auf einem abgelegenen englischen Landgut und geraten in Angst und Schrecken, während sie versuchen, sich einen Reim auf das Erlebte zu mac... Alles lesenVier junge Leute werden Zeuge einer schwarzen Messe auf einem abgelegenen englischen Landgut und geraten in Angst und Schrecken, während sie versuchen, sich einen Reim auf das Erlebte zu machen.Vier junge Leute werden Zeuge einer schwarzen Messe auf einem abgelegenen englischen Landgut und geraten in Angst und Schrecken, während sie versuchen, sich einen Reim auf das Erlebte zu machen.
- Regie
- Drehbuch
- Hauptbesetzung
- Woman Playing Piano
- (as Ambra Mascarello)
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btw stay away from the SHAROMA DVD, a useless murky pan& scan edition which kills of what could be a good visual experience.
Probably it ranks as the second-best of her Italian-era appearances. Her icy beauty and blank expression are suited to her largely passive role.
The plot falls into the Old Dark House genre, with four fashionable and well-off young people becoming stranded at a mansion on a stormy night. Sort of like a straight non-musical version of Rocky Horror.
Black magic and other supernatural events follow, with logic going out the window. The supernatural elements keep this from really being considered as classical giallo.
But there is a fair bit of detective work and violent crime, so some people still put under the giallo banner. It's not apparent in the costumes and locations, but the action is supposed to be in the UK as Scotland Yard is mentioned.
Overall, it is a bit of a generic mix of Gothic horror and police motifs that never reaches its full potential.
Made a year after his rough Giallo "L'Iguana Dalla Lingua di Fuoco" (see also my comment on that), the title suggests yet another Giallo (it means "Taken From the Secret Police Files of a European Capital" and fits perfectly into typical over long and wonderful Giallo titles like "Il Tuo Vizio e una Stanza Chiusa e Solo Io ne ho la Chiave" of the same year). But, in fact, this film is not a Giallo at all - but a Gothic horror story about a cursed pearl necklace and a strange Satan's Cult which gets confronted by a hippie quartet on a day out. The story sounds unique, and the film is it, too.
Made on a very low budget, Freda made more than the best out of it and created a strange movie with all the classic Gothic elements, and also boosts a handful of astonishing gore effects that echo the rude sequences of his Giallo a year before.
The cast is lead by Camille Keaton of "I Spit on Your Grave" fame, while Luigi Pistilli ("Reazione a Catena") delivers another neat performance as the leader of the strange Cult. The soundtrack is composed by Stelvio Cipriani and is cool as usual. A film worth looking for despite its rarity.
Rather slow to start, and awfully talky at times, "Tragic Ceremony" is a standard tale in some ways (complete with the use of the "old dark house" and "stormy night" tropes), and delivers no big surprises, but it walks an interesting line between suspense and spectacle. The four main characters are set up as basically engaging people who are easy enough to watch, and the supporting cast is strong. (The great Paul Muller turns up at the very end as a doctor whose job is to provide a final bit of exposition.) Keaton, the memorable star of the infamous exploitation-revenge-thriller "I Spit on Your Grave", is a compelling, striking beauty from whom you can't take your eyes. The music (by the talented Stelvio Cipriani) is good, as well as the location shooting. But what really makes sitting through this somewhat obscure Italian genre flick worth it is the massacre that occurs at approximately the midway point. You can tell that the filmmakers were pleased with their "sword cutting into a guy's head" effect (the FX were by Carlo Rambaldi): we see it a total of five times before the film is over!
Director Riccardo Freda apparently resented the job of guiding this particular film, but the results on screen are still pretty effective. At least it doesn't play out in a *completely* predictable way; the films' second half makes it worth sitting through the first half.
Six out of 10.
The first half is filled with the slow building dread of the occult. There is a wonderful and unexpected climax that I won't spoil.
Then, the second half begins. And it kind of devolves into a mini-slasher story. The film recovers in the final scene which ties back to the first half.
It's def worth checking out for the fan who has already seen everything and likes genre bending.. even if it's only partially successful.
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- WissenswertesRiccardo Freda always resented directing the movie.
- PatzerNo explanation why the dune buggy that breaks down at the Alexanders's and has given so much trouble is fixed and ready for a quick getaway from "The Tragic Ceremony".
- Zitate
News Reporter: According to the latest findings, it would seem like this gruesome massacre, strangely reminiscent of Sharon Tate's murder, could be linked to a small group of hippies in the villa.
- Alternative VersionenThe Spanish prints are shorter than the Italian version. In Spain, portions of the scene where Camille Keaton takes a bath are cut - in fact, all shots with nudity are edited out - and the whole "explanation" by Paul Muller at the very end of the movie is missing. Spanish prints include an end title where the Italian print have the title song on a black screen.
- SoundtracksLa Vita
Music written and performed by Stelvio Cipriani
Lyrics by Riccardo Freda
Sung by Ernesto Brancucci
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- Laufzeit1 Stunde 27 Minuten
- Sound-Mix
- Seitenverhältnis
- 1.85 : 1