Ajouter une intrigue dans votre langueJosé, a young mechanic, arrives in Madrid to make it big. After being conned he loses his savings, and is taken in by Elisa, a photographer. She introduces him to Pablo and Laura. Laura make... Tout lireJosé, a young mechanic, arrives in Madrid to make it big. After being conned he loses his savings, and is taken in by Elisa, a photographer. She introduces him to Pablo and Laura. Laura makes him an offer he can't refuse and then his troubles really begin.José, a young mechanic, arrives in Madrid to make it big. After being conned he loses his savings, and is taken in by Elisa, a photographer. She introduces him to Pablo and Laura. Laura makes him an offer he can't refuse and then his troubles really begin.
- Party guest
- (as María Begoña)
- Passport model
- (as Loli Tovar)
Avis en vedette
There's even more in store in this psychological (or "bloodless") giallo worthy of the corkers churned out in the late '60s by Umberto Lenzi & Carroll Baker. The giallo's unsung queen, exotic Marisa Mell, is the kind of femme fatale made famous by DOUBLE INDEMNITY's Phyllis Dietrichson and HIGH VOLTAGE reinforces the Italian horror sub-genre's relationship to the American film noir with its James M. Cain-like story of an amoral sap getting far more than he bargained for after being seduced into killing a wicked woman's husband. HIGH VOLTAGE (live wires actually figure into the story) is also a neat little treatise on the decadent rich and the poor fools who aspire to be like them. This may or may not have been intentional but the lack of nudity was typical of Franco-era Spain which, unfortunately, prevents the film from becoming the "high voltage" erotic thriller it should have been. On the plus side, however, the body count gets respectable towards the end and duplicity runs rampant. There were also some genuinely suspenseful moments to go with the off-the-wall ending and the garish colors, decor, and fashions are pure '70s. So is the sexy Helga Liné, who pops up near the end as a jaded party guest, come to think of it. A groovy 8/10
The "Jack of Hearts" is José (Juan Luis Galiardo, Due Maschi per Alexa), a young playboy adventurer out of a poor background who wants to become rich very quickly. He comes in Madrid to make his pile and meets here Felipe (Manuel Alexandre, Assassination in Rome), a distant relative, who promptly crooks him with a false tricked bet in Basque pelota. Without anything left, José is welcomed by Elisa (Patrizia Adiutori, Ragazza tutta nuda assassinata nel parco), a young fashion photographer who falls attracted by his charm, and they share a romance.
But Elisa happens to be the mistress of Pablo (Gabriele Ferzetti, A Ciascuno il suo), count of Moncada, the "King of Hearts", and José suffers from his humiliation. And when Elisa sets up her new exhibition, he sees there the occasion to enter in this bright society which he longs to belong to. Here he meets Pablo's wife Laura (Marisa Mell, Sette Orchidee macchiate di rosso), the "Queen of Hearts", and he founds her very attractive. And when he tries to get close to her, she indeed gives herself to him, but through one condition: he must kill her husband.
And José becomes trapped like a puppet in the hatred game of the unscrupulous and cruel couple, whom each part seeks to manipulate him. He gets aware of their corrupted mores, during a hunting party or a strip-roulette game with their guests, among whom Choni (Helga Liné, Cosi Dolce Cosi Perversa) and Carlo (Jacinto San Emeterio, Ipnosi). José would rather like to get away from this noxious mood and start again his life while from now "taking time", as his former garage manager (José María Caffarel, Tristana) once advised him. But isn't it too late, as he gets deeply compromised with who happen to be rather a Queen and a King of Spades? And he is urged to kill with a silencer, with Al Capone's gun "which always targets the heart", and finally by trapping an iron table with a High Voltage cable... (Viewed in an Italian 1h21 version.)
A passable and attractive dramatic thriller with a surprising premise, plot twists, being competently paced and made in Gialloesque style . A psychological giallo from Spain that can compete with the best representatives of American Film Noir in terms of setting, slickness and elegance and not by chance has many parallels and bears remarkable resemblance with "Double Indemnity", the classic by Billy Wilder. "High Tension" shows the master's perfect skill especially in a brilliantly arranged dream sequence. Dealing with a naive, ambitious but very prone to being deceived young - very well played by Juan Luis Galiardo- who after being conned he loses his savings, and is taken in by photographer Elisa -Patrizia Adiutori- who introduces him to Pablo -Gabriele Ferzetti- , an elderly wealthy man, and his wife Laura -Marisa Mell- who sets her sights on him . Stars Marisa Mell who is really gorgeous as the suspect woman who first seduces an old man and subsequently attempts to get rid of him. When she's not filling the screen with her eruptive passion, she's cool, regal, calculating. A precision performance as captivating as in "Una sull'altra" , "Marta", "Pena de muerte" or "La encadenada". Furthermore, she wears a snappy wardrobe that fits perfectly into the contemporary Southern European of yesteryear. Due to the censorship-induced chastity of the Franco dictatorship, the eroticism in "High Tension" remains fairly discreet, though in some of the versions broadcasting around, there's nudism enough, which is certainly good for the film as a whole, but may not be so pleasant for die-hard giallo fans. In any case, the erotic tension between Galiardo and Mell is excellently balanced and creates an uplifting crackling atmosphere from the first moment they meet. The quartet of main characters is completed by Gabriele Ferzetti as the aging man, who plays the cunning Moncada with his characteristic indifference and ambiguity, and Patrizia Adiutori, the only uninterrupted positive character in the film. They are well accompanied by a fine Spanish support cast with plenty of familar faces, giving brief but enjoyable acting, such as : Helga Liné, Manuel Alexandre, Jacinto San Emeterio, Gogó Rojo, José María Caffarel, Mary Begoña, Eduardo Calvo, Juan Amigo, José Riesgo, Luis Gaspar, Loreta Tovar, among others.
Shot in Madrid and Castilla y León, and adequately photographed by cameraman Mario Montuori. The motion picture written by Federico de Urrutia and based on an idea by José Luis Martínez Mollá, was competently directed Julio Buchs , including some gaps and shortcomings . Julio was a fine artisan who wrote and directed some thrillers, comedies and Paella Westerns until his early death of a heart attack on January 20, 1973, ten days before his father, in his apartment in Madrid at only 46 years old.forty six years old. The was son of the legendary silent film master José Buchs. All of his twelve works as a director were characterized by care, style, verve and a certain professionality on the staging. Although most of them were B movies like thrillers as ¨Alta tension¨, " Las trompetas del Apocalipsis" ór ¨El salario del crimen¨. In 1975, the horror film »Malocchio« (directed by Mario Siciliano) was made posthumously, for which Buchs had written the script with his favorite co-writer Federico De Urrutia. He also made religious dramas as ¨Encrucijada para una monja¨or ¨Crossroads for a Nun" (1967) . Paella westerns as ¨Mestizo¨, ¨Los desesperados¨or ¨The Despaired" (1969, with Ernest Borgnine), ¨El hombre que mato Billy the Kid¨. And comedies as ¨El apartamento de la tentacion¨, ¨Una señora llamada Andres¨ and ¨Cuidado con las señoras¨. Outside of Spain and Italy, the thriller "High tension" was not shown anywhere, however today it is a film to discover and enjoy, it's visually an almost lost gem: it's a mystery how this good film could have been so forgotten. Watch it at whatever cost. Rating : 6.5/10 .
Le saviez-vous
- AnecdotesThe line "Laura, I'm scared." translates in the Italian as "Laura, ho paura," which rhymes.
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Détails
- Durée1 heure 31 minutes
- Mixage
- Rapport de forme
- 2.35 : 1