IMDb-BEWERTUNG
4,7/10
1191
IHRE BEWERTUNG
Füge eine Handlung in deiner Sprache hinzuNuns become possessed by the Devil and lust after the abbot!Nuns become possessed by the Devil and lust after the abbot!Nuns become possessed by the Devil and lust after the abbot!
Susanna Forgione
- Sister Rosaria
- (as Susan Forget)
Franco Garofalo
- Boris
- (as Frank Garfeeld)
Ornella Picozzi
- Catatonic Nun
- (as Sandy Samuel)
Andrea Aureli
- Father Inardo
- (as Andrew Ray)
Adriana Bruno
- Nun
- (Nicht genannt)
Dolores Calò
- Nun
- (Nicht genannt)
Tom Felleghy
- The Bishop
- (Nicht genannt)
Valentina Fragasso
- Newborn Elisa
- (Nicht genannt)
Alba Maiolini
- Sister Fiorenza
- (Nicht genannt)
Simone Mattioli
- Priest
- (Nicht genannt)
Giovanna Sanfilippo
- Creepy Nun
- (Nicht genannt)
Pupita Lea Scuderoni
- Nun
- (Nicht genannt)
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When I think of Bruno Mattei, great horror films don't usually spring to mind; and The Other Hell does nothing to change that opinion of him. Much like his Video Nasty zombie flick, Hell of the Living Dead, The Other Hell is highly derivative of other, and better, genre films and came along some time after it's genre hit it's 'golden period'. Nunsploitation is most famous for sexually repressed nuns and tons of nudity, but this one adheres more closely to the Anita Ekberg vehicle 'The Killer Nun', as it features a Giallo style plot that puts most of its focus on murder and more or less completely ignores sex and nudity. This definitely does harm the film, and it's made no better by the fact that the mystery presented is hardly fascinating. The film follows a couple of murders in a convent. The Mother Superior believes that the nuns have become possessed by the devil, and a priest is dispatched to try and get to the bottom of the mystery (they'd have been better off with a detective...). Are the nuns really under the power of Satan, or is that what the Mother Superior wants everyone to believe?
Not only is Bruno Mattei one of the less talented Italian filmmakers, he also has a rather annoying penchant for ripping off the better ones. The film features a score from Goblin, which the director has ripped off from Joe D'Amato's masterpiece 'Beyond the Darkness' (he also ripped off Goblin scores for Hell of the Living Dead), and he took D'Amato's lead actress from Beyond the Darkness, Franca Stoppi. Some of the sequences in the film are very well shot, however, and although it's obvious that Mattei was taking influence from masters such as Dario Argento and Mario Bava, it's only fair to give credit where credit is due. The cinematography is crisp and clear, although the locations often leave a lot to be desired as unlike other films in the nunsploitation tradition; the convent is pretty bare. The plot gets lost sometimes, and it has to be said that a fair proportion of this movie is rather boring; but it just about comes together at the end, and while the reasons for the murders are obvious all the way through; the ending itself isn't bad. Overall, I would recommend this to die-hard nunsploitation fans, but everyone else can feel free to skip it.
Not only is Bruno Mattei one of the less talented Italian filmmakers, he also has a rather annoying penchant for ripping off the better ones. The film features a score from Goblin, which the director has ripped off from Joe D'Amato's masterpiece 'Beyond the Darkness' (he also ripped off Goblin scores for Hell of the Living Dead), and he took D'Amato's lead actress from Beyond the Darkness, Franca Stoppi. Some of the sequences in the film are very well shot, however, and although it's obvious that Mattei was taking influence from masters such as Dario Argento and Mario Bava, it's only fair to give credit where credit is due. The cinematography is crisp and clear, although the locations often leave a lot to be desired as unlike other films in the nunsploitation tradition; the convent is pretty bare. The plot gets lost sometimes, and it has to be said that a fair proportion of this movie is rather boring; but it just about comes together at the end, and while the reasons for the murders are obvious all the way through; the ending itself isn't bad. Overall, I would recommend this to die-hard nunsploitation fans, but everyone else can feel free to skip it.
Jean-Paul Satre once said "The Other Hell is a half-arsed Bruno Mattei film." He was wrong, because all Bruno Mattei films are half-arsed, but most are entertaining. The Other Hell doesn't even FEEL like a half-arsed Bruno Mattei film, and that's where it doesn't quite work.
In an unspecified year that starts of like its the middle ages but slowly becomes clear its the 20th Century, a badly-acting nun is working on the corpse of another nun and gibbering about how the genitals are the gateway to the devil to another, more sane nun. The crazy nun then stabs the corpse in the fanny and removes said sinful genitals before going nuts and killing the other nun.
For some reason this doesn't go down too well with the local bishop (Tom Felleghy), so he sends a priest out there to the convent to check out what's happening. His answer to things is to exorcise the entire building, but the shifty Mother Superior won't let him in the attic, where a masked nun dwells. This priest's methods of 'having a good old pray' don't seem to work as weird stuff keeps happening, so the bishop then brings in a young hip priest (Carlo De Mejo) to sort things out.
Carlo is a modern priest who claims God's greatest gift to man was a brain, and he therefore is looking for a logical reason why things are a bit mad in the old nunnery. What can he find logical in bibles going on fire, nuns suffering from stigmata, and the murders of various nuns? When the other priest gets turned into a tandoori dish by a fireplace, Carlo grabs his trusty video camera and seeks to find out the truth...
You'd think a supernatural nunsploitation film made by Bruno Mattei would be a blast, but I swear the first half of the film limps all over the place before settling on some sort of plot. There's all sort of demonic goings on from Franco Garofolo being attacked by dogs to a baby being thrown in a boiling pot of water, it's just a shame that there's no real concrete backdrop to hang all these images on. The acting is truly atrocious from all and sundry, except maybe Garofolo, who could give Klaus Kinski as run for his money in the googly eye department.
I didn't hate the film, I just feel that it could have been much more than it was. Not sure what went wrong here. I read somewhere that actor Garofolo refused to kill a chicken for a certain scene, and Mattei had to do it himself. How many chickens have died in the name of devil worship films?
In an unspecified year that starts of like its the middle ages but slowly becomes clear its the 20th Century, a badly-acting nun is working on the corpse of another nun and gibbering about how the genitals are the gateway to the devil to another, more sane nun. The crazy nun then stabs the corpse in the fanny and removes said sinful genitals before going nuts and killing the other nun.
For some reason this doesn't go down too well with the local bishop (Tom Felleghy), so he sends a priest out there to the convent to check out what's happening. His answer to things is to exorcise the entire building, but the shifty Mother Superior won't let him in the attic, where a masked nun dwells. This priest's methods of 'having a good old pray' don't seem to work as weird stuff keeps happening, so the bishop then brings in a young hip priest (Carlo De Mejo) to sort things out.
Carlo is a modern priest who claims God's greatest gift to man was a brain, and he therefore is looking for a logical reason why things are a bit mad in the old nunnery. What can he find logical in bibles going on fire, nuns suffering from stigmata, and the murders of various nuns? When the other priest gets turned into a tandoori dish by a fireplace, Carlo grabs his trusty video camera and seeks to find out the truth...
You'd think a supernatural nunsploitation film made by Bruno Mattei would be a blast, but I swear the first half of the film limps all over the place before settling on some sort of plot. There's all sort of demonic goings on from Franco Garofolo being attacked by dogs to a baby being thrown in a boiling pot of water, it's just a shame that there's no real concrete backdrop to hang all these images on. The acting is truly atrocious from all and sundry, except maybe Garofolo, who could give Klaus Kinski as run for his money in the googly eye department.
I didn't hate the film, I just feel that it could have been much more than it was. Not sure what went wrong here. I read somewhere that actor Garofolo refused to kill a chicken for a certain scene, and Mattei had to do it himself. How many chickens have died in the name of devil worship films?
A priest is sent to a convent to investigate the sheer lunacy of a bunch of nun's gone nuts performing acts of lust and depravity. But the closer he looks into the situation the more supernatural it becomes. Does the devil roam the halls terrorizing the nuns or is it something a bit more sinister.
I'll get Mattei credit; he tries to inject a little something more in your average, ordinary (nunsploitation storyline (if there is such a thing). It's not entirely successful in that regard but never-the-less he manages to pull off this entertaining but a little slow and the bit of a Stephen King twist to the ending helps it out.
I'll get Mattei credit; he tries to inject a little something more in your average, ordinary (nunsploitation storyline (if there is such a thing). It's not entirely successful in that regard but never-the-less he manages to pull off this entertaining but a little slow and the bit of a Stephen King twist to the ending helps it out.
THE OTHER HELL (1980) *** Franca Stoppi, Carlo De Mejo. In this Bruno Mattei film, a young priest (De Mejo), is sent to a convent to investigate a series of bizarre and brutal murders. The nuns think Satan is to blame; the priest thinks the murders are the work of a psychopath. The truth turns out to be something in between. Stylish direction by Mattei, a stunning performance by Stoppi (who was even more brilliant in Joe D'Amato's Beyond the Darkness), and a pulse-pounding score by Goblin combine to make this a solid offering. Recommended.
From its dark opening in a catacomb filled with stacked bones and skulls, to the gruesome autopsy in the lab -complete with bubbling green chemicals!- it's apparent that THE OTHER HELL is one of the more ghoulish of the nun exploitation films.
Indeed, the devil is loose in the convent, causing madness and bloody murder to reign.
Director Bruno Mattei fills his movie with gore and macabre trappings bathed in red and green light. If Bava or Argento had made this sort of movie, it would probably look a lot like this.
Far more serious and grim than most such epics, this movie plays up the horror aspects as much as the exploitative. Dreadful images and set pieces help to conjure up a bleak atmosphere of doom. Yes, nuns do go wild, but in a demonic frenzy, as opposed to the usual lustful abandon.
Religious symbols are used to great effect, adding the perfect backdrop for the satanic assault. Animals are also employed, along with hideous imagery. Watch for the cat, the owl, the bat, and the faceless nun. Never has a nunnery been more terrifying!
To be fair, this movie has its share of clunky moments, but it still works as one of the best examples of its sub-genre.
A wickedly good time...
Indeed, the devil is loose in the convent, causing madness and bloody murder to reign.
Director Bruno Mattei fills his movie with gore and macabre trappings bathed in red and green light. If Bava or Argento had made this sort of movie, it would probably look a lot like this.
Far more serious and grim than most such epics, this movie plays up the horror aspects as much as the exploitative. Dreadful images and set pieces help to conjure up a bleak atmosphere of doom. Yes, nuns do go wild, but in a demonic frenzy, as opposed to the usual lustful abandon.
Religious symbols are used to great effect, adding the perfect backdrop for the satanic assault. Animals are also employed, along with hideous imagery. Watch for the cat, the owl, the bat, and the faceless nun. Never has a nunnery been more terrifying!
To be fair, this movie has its share of clunky moments, but it still works as one of the best examples of its sub-genre.
A wickedly good time...
Wusstest du schon
- WissenswertesAccording to director Bruno Mattei, the convent the movie was shot in (the "Convento di Santa Priscilla" in Rome) was back then owned by FIAT, but belongs now to the Secret Service.
- PatzerThe character of Elisa is shown to have scar tissue around her mouth and chin and nowhere else on her body. The rest of her head and limbs have no scar tissue. However, it's shown that as a baby she was dunked into a large pot with boiling water. Thus, she should have been burned everywhere and not just around her mouth and chin.
- Zitate
Mother Vincenza: The genitals are the door to evil! The vagina, the uterus, the womb; the labyrinth that leads to hell; the devil's tools!
- Alternative VersionenUK cinema and video versions were cut by 19 secs by the BBFC to edit a scene of a woman removing a dead nun's genitals and a closeup of a knife being twisted into a stab wound.
- VerbindungenFeatured in The Omega Woman (2017)
- SoundtracksDottor Frankenstein
Written by Massimo Morante (as Morante), Claudio Simonetti (as Simonetti), Fabio Pignatelli (as Pignatelli), Maurizio Guarini (as Guarini)
Based on LP "Roller"
Top-Auswahl
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- How long is The Other Hell?Powered by Alexa
Details
- Laufzeit
- 1 Std. 28 Min.(88 min)
- Sound-Mix
- Seitenverhältnis
- 1.66 : 1
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