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IMDbPro

La notte dei diavoli

  • 1972
  • Not Rated
  • 1h 31min
CALIFICACIÓN DE IMDb
6.5/10
1.8 k
TU CALIFICACIÓN
Cinzia De Carolis, Gianni Garko, Teresa Gimpera, and Roberto Maldera in La notte dei diavoli (1972)
GialloMisterioTerrorThriller

El patriarca de una familia adinerada teme aparecer algún día en forma de vampiro.El patriarca de una familia adinerada teme aparecer algún día en forma de vampiro.El patriarca de una familia adinerada teme aparecer algún día en forma de vampiro.

  • Dirección
    • Giorgio Ferroni
  • Guionistas
    • Eduardo Manzanos
    • Romano Migliorini
    • Gianbattista Mussetto
  • Elenco
    • Gianni Garko
    • Agostina Belli
    • Roberto Maldera
  • Ver la información de producción en IMDbPro
  • CALIFICACIÓN DE IMDb
    6.5/10
    1.8 k
    TU CALIFICACIÓN
    • Dirección
      • Giorgio Ferroni
    • Guionistas
      • Eduardo Manzanos
      • Romano Migliorini
      • Gianbattista Mussetto
    • Elenco
      • Gianni Garko
      • Agostina Belli
      • Roberto Maldera
    • 29Opiniones de los usuarios
    • 45Opiniones de los críticos
  • Ver la información de producción en IMDbPro
  • Ver la información de producción en IMDbPro
  • Fotos57

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    Elenco principal15

    Editar
    Gianni Garko
    Gianni Garko
    • Nicola
    Agostina Belli
    Agostina Belli
    • Sdenka
    Roberto Maldera
    Roberto Maldera
    • Jovan
    • (as Mark Roberts)
    Cinzia De Carolis
    Cinzia De Carolis
    • Irina
    Teresa Gimpera
    Teresa Gimpera
    • Elena
    Bill Vanders
    • Gorca Ciuvelak
    • (as William Vanders)
    Umberto Raho
    Umberto Raho
    • Dr. Tosi
    Luis Suárez
    • Vlado
    Sabrina Tamborra
    Sabrina Tamborra
    • Mira
    Rosita Torosh
    Rosita Torosh
    • Nurse
    • (as Rosa Toros)
    Stefano Oppedisano
    • Male Nurse
    Maria Monti
    • The Witch
    John Bartha
    John Bartha
    • Sawmill Owner
    • (sin créditos)
    Tom Felleghy
    • Police Commissioner
    • (sin créditos)
    Renato Turi
    • Il Detective In Pensione
    • (sin créditos)
    • Dirección
      • Giorgio Ferroni
    • Guionistas
      • Eduardo Manzanos
      • Romano Migliorini
      • Gianbattista Mussetto
    • Todo el elenco y el equipo
    • Producción, taquilla y más en IMDbPro

    Opiniones de usuarios29

    6.51.7K
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    Opiniones destacadas

    Dethcharm

    "Don't Ever Open The Window At Night!"...

    NIGHT OF THE DEVILS opens with a wandering man named Nicola (Gianni Garko) being taken to a mental institution after a traumatic event. From his hospital bed, Nicola recalls what happened to him through flashbacks.

    After almost hitting someone, Nicola leaves his damaged car, only to stumble upon a house in the forest. Upon meeting the family that lives there, he spends the night, unaware of the horrors to come.

    Loaded with grim, foreboding atmosphere and ghoulish goings-on, the superstitious dread is palpable. There are some genuinely chilling moments, along with wonderful, practical gore effects! The characters are memorable, especially the lovely Sdenka (Agostina Belli), her stolid brother Jovan (Mark Roberts), and the mysterious witch (Maria Monti). Whatever you do, don't miss the truly unsettling, blood-soaked finale! One of the best movies of its kind...
    7Bunuel1976

    THE NIGHT OF THE DEVILS (Giorgio Ferroni, 1972) ***

    Considering that I only acquired a major affinity for "Euro-Cult" fare following my attendance of the "Italian Kings Of The B" retrospective first held during the 2004 Venice Film Festival, it is small wonder that I had been largely underwhelmed by what I sampled from this particular fount of movie lore beforehand; curiously enough, among these had been two distinct adaptations of Tolstoy's "The Wurdulak", namely an episode in Mario Bava's omnibus BLACK SABBATH (1963) and the picture under review!

    Being about to revisit the former on account of Bava's recent centenary, I opted to re-acquaint myself with Ferroni's feature-length version as well – having already done similar duty with two films based on the same tale (also Russian in origin) which had inspired Bava's BLACK Sunday (1960). Incidentally, in my comments relating to the Maestro's take on "I Wurdulak", I had surmised about how padded Ferroni's rendition would be in comparison: however, he works around this factor, so to speak, admirably by updating the plot to our times (while retaining the essential Gothic feel and, thus, accentuating its inherent eeriness!) and bookending it with scenes inside a clinic, to where the disoriented protagonist (in this case, Gianni Garko) had been taken after barely escaping with his life from the clutches of the undead family unit at the core of the narrative.

    There is no doubt that Ferroni had watched Bava's version – as its numerous shots of characters peering ominously through windows can attest – yet he opts to dilate what is perhaps its most chilling moment (the 'afflicted' child pleading with his mother to be sheltered from the cold, dark night and the woman being unable to resist her instincts lets him in, despite knowing full well that her offspring had just been laid down into the ground!) by having the mother merely go out to look for her in this case!! Other elements which tend not to work here are: the personification of the witch (who is the cause of the hero's getting stranded in the quasi-deserted Yugoslavian village to begin with!) and her face-off with the patriarch (himself – though reasonably authoritative – clearly no match for horror icon Boris Karloff, his counterpart in BLACK SABBATH) whose resolution is, thankfully, still left ambiguous; also, the fact that the family members get all giggly when, as vampires, they descend en masse upon the beleaguered Garko. That said, his somewhat hysterical characterization is poles apart from that of Mark Damon in the original – who remains decidedly (and, perhaps, unrealistically) cool throughout his ordeal! Even so, while there is a poignancy to Garko's murder of Agostina Belli – who he had thought had joined the vampiric ranks and was now seeking to add the hero to their fold in view of her feelings towards him (and suggesting how psychologically scarred he had been by the whole experience) – the sequence is rather clumsily handled overall, as the girl should have made it immediately apparent to him that she had not 'turned'!

    The passage of nearly a decade between versions allowed for greater emphasis this time around on gory make-up effects; indeed, I recall having counted the film's entire ghoulish vibe (appropriate though it may be) as a drawback upon first viewing! Incidentally, even if I had long bemoaned my erasing of that preliminary copy, I realize now – via a side-by-side comparison of two prints floating about (another one, which I also own, is English-dubbed, subtitled in Japanese and has its few moments of nudity digitally-covered!) – that it was missing a surreal nightmare sequence at the very start!! By the way, director Ferroni – whose penultimate work this proved to be and whom I learned, from the accompanying Gianni Garko interview, was virtually deaf! – had previously helmed a key entry in the Italian Gothic Horror canon, i.e. MILL OF THE STONE WOMEN (1960). Interestingly, too, he died on my 5th birthday (17th August) in 1981…a date also shared by the original Italian release of BLACK SABBATH itself!
    7meddlecore

    Sometimes Simple Is Better...

    An amnesiac man, haunted by memories of torture, is undergoing a rigorous psychiatric assessment after he was found wandering, dishevelled, close to the Italian border.

    The medical team are trying to figure out who this man is, and what exactly happened to him. When suddenly, a mysterious woman shows up claiming the man's name is Nicola and that he works as a lumber importer. She says she hardly knows him, but when she confronts the man...he freaks out...before she seemingly disappears without a trace.

    The memories of the man start to seep back to him in a flashback. It turns out he isn't an amnesiac at all. Rather, someone who has had an experience so traumatic, that all prior memories have become repressed- causing him to slip into a state of madness. Though, one that just may be warranted in his particular case...

    He recalls taking a short cut through the woods and getting his car stuck on a stump after crashing it in an attempt to avoid a woman- who also just disappears after.

    In an attempt to find help, he recalls wandering through the woods, where he happens upon a family of backwoods hick-types. They agree to help him...but not until the morning. They invite him inside, before proceeding to tightly bar all doors and windows...to protect themselves from what lurks outside at night.

    It turns out that the family is being tormented by a cursed witch- actually a varadluk (or vampire). This woman had recently targeted the head of the family's brother- forcing them to euthanize him with a wooden stake to the heart.

    Nicola has a hard time believing what he is being confronted with, but has- by this point- fallen deeply in love with one of the young women in the family- Sdenka.

    After witnessing the disappearance and murder of more family members (while still suffering from cognitive dissonance), Nicola decides to flee for help- asking Sdenka to join him. But she cannot leave her family behind under the circumstances, so she requests that he return for her...and not go to the police, in the meantime.

    He quickly discovers that the local townspeople are of no help (they suggest he forget about it). So, he returns to fetch Sdenka. Only to discover it's too late. So late, in fact...he has to fight and flee just to escape with his own life! An experience which has rendered him into his current psychological state.

    Apparently Sdenka is the mysterious woman who suddenly shows up at the hospital, requesting to see him. Hence why he goes all crazy in her presence...knowing she has come back for the one she loves...him.

    But is he truly a victim of a supernatural reality? Or is it all in his head?

    While relatively basically constructed, this is a rather enjoyable vampire flick. The atmosphere is quite mysterious. And I love how the writers exploit a loophole in the legend to propagate the curse. The vampires- while simple- are quite freaky...particularly the children. There are some great traditional special effects thrown in there too. Older vampire films are so much better than the modern incarnations because simple just works better sometimes. As this film is a testament to.

    6.5 out of 10
    7Bezenby

    Garko's scared of the Darko

    Never heard of this one! Gianni Garko, scratched, bloody, and having crazy visions, stumbles out of the woods and collapses. He is found and taken to the nearest nut house, where Dr Umberto Raho starts performing tests on him. Gianni is unresponsive and doesn't even seem to know his name, and only comes alive at night, where the darkness makes him really nervous. He REALLY comes alive when a mysterious woman shows up at the hospital, causing him to go completely insane and ends up wearing a nice comfy straightjacket while we witness a lengthy flashback.

    You see Gianni was merely driving through the Yugoslavian countryside when a freak accident forced his car off the road. He eventually finds his way to a country house (not noticing the two men burying a corpse in a bloodied sheet), and finds himself in the company of a very frightened family indeed.

    What we have here is another Italian film version of the Tosltoy novella The Family of the Vourdalak, and despite the other version being directed by Mario Bava and being great, this version holds it's own too. Basically there's a witch running around the woods who has turned that guy they just buried into a vampire and now the head of the family must go out and kill her. He warns everyone that if he returns after six o'clock, he must be killed on the spot, so naturally he comes back at that time...and all hell breaks loose in the family household.

    This version takes its time to get to the chills, but still manages to convey the tension and horror that's needed. Those creepy kids help too, as does Gianni's mounting terror of what's unfolding around him. There's a thick atmosphere about the film too, with the animal skulls lying around and the reluctance of the family to explain to Gianni what's going on.

    There's also a nice ambiguous ending too, just for kicks. Some gore and boobs for those that thought that was missing from Bava's version. Melting faces too, and who can hate a film where someone's face explodes?

    Not I....not....I...
    7BA_Harrison

    Beware the Wurdulac.

    Based on a book I've never read (Aleksei Tolstoy's The Family of the Vourdalak), Night of the Devils deals with the supernatural creature known as the wurdulac (also spelled wurdalak, vourdalak or verdilak), a type of Eastern European vampire that is compelled to drink the blood of its loved ones, thereby converting the whole family.

    Lumber importer Nicolas (Gianni Garko) encounters such monsters in a Yugoslavian forest. After pranging his car, he sets off on foot to find help, eventually meeting a family who live in a house in the woods, where he is invited to stay the night. Nicolas is intrigued when his hosts barricade all of the doors and windows at nightfall; he eventually discovers that the family is plagued by a wurdulac that comes a-calling once it is dark.

    With a very measured pace, this isn't going to be for everyone, but fans of atmospheric Euro-horror will be delighted by the creepy vibe throughout and some genuinely tense moments, the best being Nicola's frantic escape from the woods in his car (attacked by wurdulacs and mocked by ghoulish wurdulac children), and the gripping finalé, which packs a neat downbeat twist.

    Meanwhile, those who enjoy a spot of gore and nudity will be pleased to know that are some juicy moments of splatter (a woman's face exploding, a beating heart removed from a body, severed fingers, and several bloody stakings, all courtesy of FX man Carlo Rambaldi) and a fair amount of T&A (ravishing Agostina Belli, as Nicola's love interest Sdenka, sheds all for her art, while Teresa Gimpera has her top torn open by one of the vampiric kids).

    N.B. The wurdulac also appears in Mario Bava's classic horror compendium Black Sabbath, a film I've yet to see (I know, I know... and I call myself a horror fan).

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    • Trivia
      Based on a novella by Aleksey Konstantinovich Tolstoy, second cousin to Leo Tolstoy of "War and Peace" fame. This novella was also the basis of one of the stories in Mario Bava's I tre volti della paura (1963).
    • Conexiones
      Featured in Folk Horror: Bosques sombríos y días de embrujo (2021)

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    Preguntas Frecuentes15

    • How long is Night of the Devils?Con tecnología de Alexa
    • What are the differences between the Spanish Version and the International Version?

    Detalles

    Editar
    • Fecha de lanzamiento
      • 29 de abril de 1972 (Italia)
    • Países de origen
      • Italia
      • España
    • Idioma
      • Italiano
    • También se conoce como
      • Night of the Devils
    • Locaciones de filmación
      • Dear Studios, Roma, Lacio, Italia
    • Productoras
      • Filmes Cinematografica
      • Due Emme Cinematografica
      • Copercines, Cooperativa Cinematográfica
    • Ver más créditos de la compañía en IMDbPro

    Especificaciones técnicas

    Editar
    • Tiempo de ejecución
      1 hora 31 minutos
    • Color
      • Color
    • Mezcla de sonido
      • Mono
    • Relación de aspecto
      • 2.35 : 1

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