CALIFICACIÓN DE IMDb
6.6/10
27 k
TU CALIFICACIÓN
Una joven hereda un hotel en Luisiana y descubre tras una serie de eventos supernaturales que fue construido sobre una entrada al Infierno.Una joven hereda un hotel en Luisiana y descubre tras una serie de eventos supernaturales que fue construido sobre una entrada al Infierno.Una joven hereda un hotel en Luisiana y descubre tras una serie de eventos supernaturales que fue construido sobre una entrada al Infierno.
- Dirección
- Guionistas
- Elenco
Catriona MacColl
- Liza Merril
- (as Katherine MacColl)
Cinzia Monreale
- Emily
- (as Sarah Keller)
Fernando Arcangeli
- Hospital Zombie in the Body Bag
- (sin créditos)
Calogero Azzaretto
- Zombie at Hospital
- (sin créditos)
Pino Colizzi
- Voce dell'aldilà
- (sin créditos)
Ottaviano Dell'Acqua
- Zombie at Hospital
- (sin créditos)
Roberto Dell'Acqua
- Glass-Smashing Zombie
- (sin créditos)
Lucio Fulci
- Town Clerk
- (sin créditos)
Opiniones destacadas
The Beyond is one of Fulci's best films. The film takes place in modern day Louisiana as a woman oversees the the renevation of an hotel that she inherits. Strange and gory things start to happen and poof the hotel just happens to be over one of the 7 doors to hell. Very bloody with a slightly incoherent plot the film is a lot of fun and I suspect that no Fulci fan should be without their copy. Visually I think this is Fulci's best film (that I've seen) and the acting is what you'd expect. 7 / 10: FULCI LIVES
This film has great atmosphere. There are some great moments and elements here.
I like it's approach to horror. To me it inspires the imagination.
It holds up as a gory film, even today. Which is an accomplishment.
However this film is not for everyone. You have to be able to appreciate older movies. And have a little open mindedness. But it does hold up well.
With movies like this, with giallo in particular, it won't be appreciated by some close-minded modern viewers.
Because this film works on inspiring the imagination.
With movies like this, it taps into that sense of wonder connected with fear and mystery.
A capacity for wonder is sorely lacking in our day.
Why this film works well is that it taps into wonder, fear and mystery. It implies more than it shows.
In usual Fulci style, it zooms up and focuses on the gore instead of cutting away from it, or whatever. Which I really appreciate.
But if you truly understand this movie, the impact comes not from gore but from what is implied in the story. And the atmosphere.
The film has a great ending which really makes the film for me.
Now it is a little bit of a slow burn. But even in that there is death and gore happening so it certainly shouldn't be considered boring.
But it takes time to build into the crescendo of the final act.
Some might consider it dated but in actually it has that charm of time. It has this late 70s horror vibe that can be really enjoyable for a genre fan.
(Yes, I know it was made in '81)
Ultimately, an objectively great film.
But I would only recommend it to open minded, perceptive viewers who can appreciate it like it deserves.
I like it's approach to horror. To me it inspires the imagination.
It holds up as a gory film, even today. Which is an accomplishment.
However this film is not for everyone. You have to be able to appreciate older movies. And have a little open mindedness. But it does hold up well.
With movies like this, with giallo in particular, it won't be appreciated by some close-minded modern viewers.
Because this film works on inspiring the imagination.
With movies like this, it taps into that sense of wonder connected with fear and mystery.
A capacity for wonder is sorely lacking in our day.
Why this film works well is that it taps into wonder, fear and mystery. It implies more than it shows.
In usual Fulci style, it zooms up and focuses on the gore instead of cutting away from it, or whatever. Which I really appreciate.
But if you truly understand this movie, the impact comes not from gore but from what is implied in the story. And the atmosphere.
The film has a great ending which really makes the film for me.
Now it is a little bit of a slow burn. But even in that there is death and gore happening so it certainly shouldn't be considered boring.
But it takes time to build into the crescendo of the final act.
Some might consider it dated but in actually it has that charm of time. It has this late 70s horror vibe that can be really enjoyable for a genre fan.
(Yes, I know it was made in '81)
Ultimately, an objectively great film.
But I would only recommend it to open minded, perceptive viewers who can appreciate it like it deserves.
If you think Dario Argento doesn't give a damn about coherent plots, check out Lucio Fulci! 'The Beyond' does have a (Lovecraftian) plot as such - a woman inherits a hotel in Louisiana that contains one of the doorways to Hell - but that is basically an excuse for Fulci to string together a series of fantastic and frequently gory images. These include zombie attacks, eye gougings, a better dog attack scene than 'Suspiria', the crucifixion of a Satanist, and a sequence involving tarantulas which has to be one of the high points of horror, anywhere, anytime.
'The Beyond' is sensational and a bona fide modern horror classic. Absolutely essential viewing!
'The Beyond' is sensational and a bona fide modern horror classic. Absolutely essential viewing!
I guess I must have been in a bad mood when I first watched this as I really didn't like it. Now I've watched it again (simply because I'd forgotten I'd even watched it, I really enjoyed it - like I've done so with many (so-bad-they're-good) Italian horror films of the eighties. It's about a hotel in Louisiana which is basically a 'hell-mouth' and, seeing as Buffy probably wasn't born when this was made, it's up to a woman who wants to refurbish it and a doctor who can only shoot a zombie in the head every three shots (I counted!).
It's a bit weird where there are some secondary characters who just wander around talking badly. Yes, it's dubbed in many places - I noticed that severely when I first watched it and it's still as overly-dramatic now. In typical Italian horror movie style, it's almost deliberately all over the place and the sharp edits which give the film a truly disconcerting atmosphere. Plus there are some scenes which are almost funny while being bizarre - like when a woman seems to freak out because a beaker of water overturns in slow motion (and she then comes off worse, believe it or not).
And there's the gore - which was damn gool if you're into 'claret' and generally want to see a hundred and one different ways of inflicting pain on eyeballs. Back in the eighties (before every 'head-shot' was computer generated) film-makers had to come up with new and interesting ways of doing gore on the cheap. And, to be fair, that's one area where The Beyond succeeded. The gore wasn't just gore, but also pretty inventive, providing me with more than a few moments of on-screen horror that I've never seen before.
I'm glad I've given this film another go as - this time - I found it really entertaining and it's an example that you clearly need to be in the right mood for the right film.
It's a bit weird where there are some secondary characters who just wander around talking badly. Yes, it's dubbed in many places - I noticed that severely when I first watched it and it's still as overly-dramatic now. In typical Italian horror movie style, it's almost deliberately all over the place and the sharp edits which give the film a truly disconcerting atmosphere. Plus there are some scenes which are almost funny while being bizarre - like when a woman seems to freak out because a beaker of water overturns in slow motion (and she then comes off worse, believe it or not).
And there's the gore - which was damn gool if you're into 'claret' and generally want to see a hundred and one different ways of inflicting pain on eyeballs. Back in the eighties (before every 'head-shot' was computer generated) film-makers had to come up with new and interesting ways of doing gore on the cheap. And, to be fair, that's one area where The Beyond succeeded. The gore wasn't just gore, but also pretty inventive, providing me with more than a few moments of on-screen horror that I've never seen before.
I'm glad I've given this film another go as - this time - I found it really entertaining and it's an example that you clearly need to be in the right mood for the right film.
Director Lucio Fulci's THE BEYOND opens with a flashback to 1927 Louisiana, where townsfolk take the law into their own hands, killing a man in hideous, grisly fashion. This is also when we are told of the seven gates of hell.
Fast forward to 1981, and Liza Merrill (Catriona MacColl) has inherited the very same hotel where the aforementioned death occurred. Within seconds, unfortunate "accidents" begin to take place. Liza just wants to fix the place up, unaware that occult terror and unspeakable doom await!
Another entry in Fulci's wonderful horror cycle, this is one dreadfully dreary, flesh-crawler of a movie! In spite of ridiculous dubbing, goofy characters, and the infamously questionable "tarantula scene" (Why mix fake spiders in with real ones?), the Director somehow manages to keep it so utterly bleak, that all is forgiven! Ms. MacColl is even better here than she was in CITY OF THE LIVING DEAD! David Warbeck is also good as the dauntless Dr. John McCabe. Of course, stealing the show is Cinzia Monreale as the enigmatic, blind, yet supernaturally sighted, Emily. Her intro is unforgettable!
Obviously, a zombie uprising is in the cards, and these are some memorable, shambling dead! There are several classic set pieces, showing Fulci at his finest. Gorehounds will be in ecstatic bliss, since Fulci pours on the gore by the bathtub-full!
EXTRA POINTS FOR: The devastating denouement that drains us of all remaining hope!
P.S.- For added enjoyment, count how many times you have to yell at Dr. McCabe to "Stop wasting bullets and aim for the head!"...
Fast forward to 1981, and Liza Merrill (Catriona MacColl) has inherited the very same hotel where the aforementioned death occurred. Within seconds, unfortunate "accidents" begin to take place. Liza just wants to fix the place up, unaware that occult terror and unspeakable doom await!
Another entry in Fulci's wonderful horror cycle, this is one dreadfully dreary, flesh-crawler of a movie! In spite of ridiculous dubbing, goofy characters, and the infamously questionable "tarantula scene" (Why mix fake spiders in with real ones?), the Director somehow manages to keep it so utterly bleak, that all is forgiven! Ms. MacColl is even better here than she was in CITY OF THE LIVING DEAD! David Warbeck is also good as the dauntless Dr. John McCabe. Of course, stealing the show is Cinzia Monreale as the enigmatic, blind, yet supernaturally sighted, Emily. Her intro is unforgettable!
Obviously, a zombie uprising is in the cards, and these are some memorable, shambling dead! There are several classic set pieces, showing Fulci at his finest. Gorehounds will be in ecstatic bliss, since Fulci pours on the gore by the bathtub-full!
EXTRA POINTS FOR: The devastating denouement that drains us of all remaining hope!
P.S.- For added enjoyment, count how many times you have to yell at Dr. McCabe to "Stop wasting bullets and aim for the head!"...
¿Sabías que…?
- TriviaThe DVD commentary by actors Catriona MacColl and David Warbeck was recorded two weeks before Warbeck's death from cancer. In the commentary he talks about his illness.
- Errores(at around 26 mins) Sign outside the morgue reads "Do Not Entry".
- Citas
[last lines]
Narrator: And you will face the sea of darkness, and all therein that may be explored.
- Créditos curiososThe end titles of the U.S. version, "7 Doors of Death" are full of incorrect billings.
David Warbeck's character John McCabe is billed as "Doc." Antonie Saint-John (here called Tony Saint-John) is billed as Joe the Plumber. He actually played Schweick. Veronica Lazar is billed as playing the little girl, Jill. She was Martha, the housekeeper. Jill was played by Maria Pia Marsala. Someone named "Philip Ostrow" is billed as playing Arthur, Martha's son. He was played by Giampaolo Saccarola. Martha is billed as being played by someone named Margaret Lund. She was played by Veronica Lazar. Mary-Ann (billed here as "Joe's Wife") is billed as being played by someone named Helen Pierce. She was played by Laura De Marchi. Schweick (billed here as "Sweik") is billed as being played by someone named Robert Leahy. He was played by Antoine Saint-John. Dr. Harris is billed as being played by someone named Jim Barrett. He was played by Al Cliver.
If you count Catriona MacColl and Cinzia Monreale's real names not being used, every single cast listing in the "7 Doors of Death" version is wrong in some way or another.
- Versiones alternativasThe German DVD released by Astro in 2001 contains both the color and b/w pre-credit sequence (selectable via menu). This release is also completely uncut.
- ConexionesEdited into Through Eyes of the Dead (1999)
- Bandas sonorasEmily's Theme
Piano solo performed by Michael Valenti
[Appears only in the US version]
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- How long is The Beyond?Con tecnología de Alexa
Detalles
Taquilla
- Presupuesto
- USD 400,000 (estimado)
- Total en EE. UU. y Canadá
- USD 123,843
- Fin de semana de estreno en EE. UU. y Canadá
- USD 18,148
- 14 jun 1998
- Total a nivel mundial
- USD 123,843
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