NOTE IMDb
5,7/10
626
MA NOTE
Ajouter une intrigue dans votre langueA nurse tries to bring her own style of relief to miserable people, or ones condemned to die. Her identity is a mystery, and she may not be quite what she seems.A nurse tries to bring her own style of relief to miserable people, or ones condemned to die. Her identity is a mystery, and she may not be quite what she seems.A nurse tries to bring her own style of relief to miserable people, or ones condemned to die. Her identity is a mystery, and she may not be quite what she seems.
- Réalisation
- Scénario
- Casting principal
Christopher Mitchum
- David
- (as Chris Mitchum)
Ramón Pons
- Tony
- (as Ramon Pons)
Ramón Fernández Tejela
- Nicola
- (as Ramon Tejela)
Fernando Hilbeck
- Marido
- (as Fernando Hilberck)
Fernando Sánchez Polack
- Rehabilitado 1
- (as Fernando Sanchez Polack)
Manuel Guitián
- Señor Frans, anciano en hospital
- (as Manuel Guitian)
Jean Degrave
- Director del hospital
- (as Jean Degrass)
María Moreno
- Esposa
- (as Maria Moreno)
Avis à la une
Very watchable and stylish if somewhat lacking of a coherent plot. But hey, French Spanish co-production this may be but there is just a whiff of giallo about it, so be prepared for anything. At first this looks as if it is going to be a rip off of the Kubrick classic. A bunch of orange helmeted youths invade a chic dwelling and start to smash it up whilst one of their number asks the lady of the house to lead him to the bedroom. Then just as soon as we reckon we know where this is going, another of their number takes hold of hubby and without so much a lisp asks him to similarly accompany him to the same room. Stylish, as I say, some humour, a rather wasted Jean Sorel and a much over used Sue Lyon. Nevertheless the director does not miss the opportunity of alluding to another Kubrick classic with the aforementioned lass. Fun and frolics with some precise violence and a delirious ending.
When I picked up "Una gota de sangre para morir amando" (called "Murder in a Blue World" in English), I think that the box loosely said something about it being a Spanish "Clockwork Orange". It turns out that the movie is a total rip-off of "A Clockwork Orange" (to the point where they even mention "ACO" in a scene right before a motorcycle gang attacks). The main plot has young nurse Sue Lyon luring men to their dooms...just for the hell of it, apparently. What makes this world so blue?! Aside from the plot, the other Kubrick connection is "Lolita". There's of course the ex-nymphet Sue Lyon, but one scene even shows a person holding Vladimir Nabokov's novel! For the most part, it wouldn't be fair to compare this movie to any of Kubrick's movies. It's an OK way to pass time. The only real downside is that Sue Lyon doesn't do any full frontal nude scenes (in this sort of movie, she should have). Also starring Chris Mitchum (Robert's son).
On the surface, Eloy de la Iglesia's MURDER IN A BLUE WORLD is set in a future where young gangs are directly influenced by Stanley Kubrick's A CLOCKWORK ORANGE, and pull off home invasions almost exactly like that movie, banned in Europe during this time...
Meanwhile, handsome doctor Jean Sorel is experimenting on a way to shock criminals into submission to become normal citizens, also like the Kubrick classic, one of his most controversial since LOLITA...
Enter that film's teenage starlet turned thirty-something beauty Sue Lyon, who went from studio films to exploitation b-movies, wherein MURDER aka CLOCKWORK TERROR is the epitome of...
But the best scenes exist beyond the whole CLOCKWORK juxtaposition, centering on Lyon, as Sorel's head nurse and semi-girlfriend, who's so rich and lonely she murders equally lonely (and equally beautiful) men in scenes straight from a kind of melancholy/arthouse giallo that BLUE WORLD mirrors more than the offbeat sci-fi homage/satire intended...
More scenes should have been given to Sue Lyon as the surreptitious costume-wearing, nightclub-frequenting, bedroom-seducing, black-widow-like killer providing a slow-burn intensity perfectly suited for a cult starlet usually prone to victims, and less to her own personal stalking blackmailer in a bland Christopher Mitchum, member of a "droogie" style gang that he seems to both co-lead and be bullied by...
Enveloped in this deliberately doubly-ironic curio where one of the most famous Kubrick starlets not only exists in a violent CLOCKWORK ORANGE-style death WORLD, but at one point even reads that book by Nabokov before broodingly yet delightfully adding to the body count - that's all her own.
Meanwhile, handsome doctor Jean Sorel is experimenting on a way to shock criminals into submission to become normal citizens, also like the Kubrick classic, one of his most controversial since LOLITA...
Enter that film's teenage starlet turned thirty-something beauty Sue Lyon, who went from studio films to exploitation b-movies, wherein MURDER aka CLOCKWORK TERROR is the epitome of...
But the best scenes exist beyond the whole CLOCKWORK juxtaposition, centering on Lyon, as Sorel's head nurse and semi-girlfriend, who's so rich and lonely she murders equally lonely (and equally beautiful) men in scenes straight from a kind of melancholy/arthouse giallo that BLUE WORLD mirrors more than the offbeat sci-fi homage/satire intended...
More scenes should have been given to Sue Lyon as the surreptitious costume-wearing, nightclub-frequenting, bedroom-seducing, black-widow-like killer providing a slow-burn intensity perfectly suited for a cult starlet usually prone to victims, and less to her own personal stalking blackmailer in a bland Christopher Mitchum, member of a "droogie" style gang that he seems to both co-lead and be bullied by...
Enveloped in this deliberately doubly-ironic curio where one of the most famous Kubrick starlets not only exists in a violent CLOCKWORK ORANGE-style death WORLD, but at one point even reads that book by Nabokov before broodingly yet delightfully adding to the body count - that's all her own.
I took a chance on this because of Sue Lyon and the references to Stanley Kubrick. And yes, it's there in good fun. Apparently the original script was more focused on the nurse character, and less of the gang. But when A Clockwork Orange was released, De La Iglesia saw a way to tie it in, and no doubt try to capitalize on it. However the gang is just 'goofy'. Like the boy scouts trying to be the Hell's Angels. But the member David (Chris Mitchum) is interesting, as he solely witnesses Ana's (Sue Lyon) disposing of a body and proceeds to craftily blackmail her. The men she chooses to lure and dispose of is interesting as well, but not really fully explained. And the exterior environment and its 'futuristic' look is barely noticeable. Yet, Ana as a respected and dedicated nurse by day, and luring and unremorseful serial killer by night is a good story in itself. And the blackmailing, and how to remedy that is intriguing as well. But the ending is without any resolve or reason. Other than violence and murder cannot be readily detected or cured. So in taking away Kubrick's influence, lack of budget, and loose threads all around - the integral story isn't half bad. And there are some good haunting shots that show integrity and vision above a cheaply thrown together 'knock off' as it was panned. Not the greatest movie, but worth a watch and to have knowledge of.
The third De La Iglesia film I am watching in a row – and the best (though the "Cult Films" website rates this a measly *1/2) – that, while it touches on the same theme of a serial-killer on the loose, is the most ambitious (numbering no fewer than 5 scriptwriters!) because it is set in a dystopian future and employs international actors. Since I have made it a point to discard Sci-Fi titles for this year's "Halloween Challenge", I was a little wary of adding this but, thankfully, it proved a continuation of De La Iglesia's preoccupations.
The film wears its obvious inspiration from Stanley Kubrick's A CLOCKWORK ORANGE (1971) proudly on its sleeve because, not only is there a Droog-like band of violent criminals marauding at night (wielding whips at leisure), but they also assault an upper-class household that is very much decorated in the ultra-modern fashion seen in CLOCKWORK and, as if this was not enough, a screening of that very Kubrickian adaptation of the Anthony Burgess novel is about to start on TV when their doorbell rings! Likewise, a subplot revolves around an experimental program which is supposed to render hardened criminals into acceptable society members (but, predictably, the last scene demonstrates that the scheme has failed horribly), while peppering the soundtrack with classical music pieces (albeit being otherwise scored as if it were a Spaghetti Western!). Interestingly, whether deliberately or not, Kubrick returned the favor by utilizing music by the composer of this one (Georges Garvarentz) for his own swan-song EYES WIDE SHUT (1999)! Indeed, while the original Spanish title translates to the poetic A DROP OF BLOOD TO DIE LOVING and that the film was released on R2 DVD as MURDER IN A BLUE WORLD (for the record, the widescreen copy I acquired, albeit VHS quality, was fairly good and did not noticeably detract from my enjoyment of the striking visual look of the décor and costumes), the film was apparently known in the U.S. under the rather condescending moniker of CLOCKWORK TERROR.
Moreover, Sue Lyon – as it happens, the young star of Kubrick's LOLITA (1962) – has the leading role here and, at one point, is even seen leafing through Vladimir Nabokov's eponymous novel while lounging in a gay bar! The rest of the cast is made up of Christopher Mitchum (who would later appear in another foul-play-in-a-hospital movie, FACELESS {1987}) and Jean Sorel (who had already played a doctor in his most famous film, Luis Bunuel's BELLE DE JOUR {1967}: incidentally, A CLOCKWORK ORANGE itself was Bunuel's own favorite movie!). For being the younger son of Hollywood legend Robert Mitchum, Chris worked with some far-out directors: in fact, apart from De La Iglesia, he also made films for Alejandro Jodorowsky and Jess Franco! Lyon, while ostensibly renowned psychiatrist Sorel's girl, moonlights as a serial-killer of males between the ages of 17 and 25 (though her reasons for running amok are attributed to the traumatic death of the girl's parents in childhood, it is never quite clear why she targets that particular age group, one of whom she ensnares by outbidding him at an auction for the very first edition of the "Flash Gordon" comic-strip!) and, therefore, according to news reports, the murderer must be a homosexual! Conversely, Mitchum is one of the four members of the afore-mentioned "Droog"-like anarchists who falls foul of his team-mates and, to earn some cash on the side, takes to blackmailing Lyon (whom he had unwittingly spied while disposing of a body: she often affects disguises herself – as a mature woman or a man! – to lure her victims, who include a macho publicity guy modeling underwear on TV, linking the film, as do the entire lady-killing scenario and the overriding influence of TV, to the recently-viewed THE WITCH WHO CAME FROM THE SEA {1976}). Eventually, Mitchum's former friends beat him up and he is hospitalized and, ironically enough, put in Lyon's care but, in eliminating him there, she also gives herself away – to Sorel's obvious horror.
Given my rewarding experience so far with the filmography of Eloy De La Iglesia (on a side-note, that of Alex, who is not a relation, is no less intriguing but somewhat less consistent), I opted to acquire yet one more effort i.e. his adaptation of Henry James' classic – and much-filmed – ghost story THE TURN OF THE SCREW (1985), but which I was unable to include in the "Halloween Challenge" that has just come to an end.
The film wears its obvious inspiration from Stanley Kubrick's A CLOCKWORK ORANGE (1971) proudly on its sleeve because, not only is there a Droog-like band of violent criminals marauding at night (wielding whips at leisure), but they also assault an upper-class household that is very much decorated in the ultra-modern fashion seen in CLOCKWORK and, as if this was not enough, a screening of that very Kubrickian adaptation of the Anthony Burgess novel is about to start on TV when their doorbell rings! Likewise, a subplot revolves around an experimental program which is supposed to render hardened criminals into acceptable society members (but, predictably, the last scene demonstrates that the scheme has failed horribly), while peppering the soundtrack with classical music pieces (albeit being otherwise scored as if it were a Spaghetti Western!). Interestingly, whether deliberately or not, Kubrick returned the favor by utilizing music by the composer of this one (Georges Garvarentz) for his own swan-song EYES WIDE SHUT (1999)! Indeed, while the original Spanish title translates to the poetic A DROP OF BLOOD TO DIE LOVING and that the film was released on R2 DVD as MURDER IN A BLUE WORLD (for the record, the widescreen copy I acquired, albeit VHS quality, was fairly good and did not noticeably detract from my enjoyment of the striking visual look of the décor and costumes), the film was apparently known in the U.S. under the rather condescending moniker of CLOCKWORK TERROR.
Moreover, Sue Lyon – as it happens, the young star of Kubrick's LOLITA (1962) – has the leading role here and, at one point, is even seen leafing through Vladimir Nabokov's eponymous novel while lounging in a gay bar! The rest of the cast is made up of Christopher Mitchum (who would later appear in another foul-play-in-a-hospital movie, FACELESS {1987}) and Jean Sorel (who had already played a doctor in his most famous film, Luis Bunuel's BELLE DE JOUR {1967}: incidentally, A CLOCKWORK ORANGE itself was Bunuel's own favorite movie!). For being the younger son of Hollywood legend Robert Mitchum, Chris worked with some far-out directors: in fact, apart from De La Iglesia, he also made films for Alejandro Jodorowsky and Jess Franco! Lyon, while ostensibly renowned psychiatrist Sorel's girl, moonlights as a serial-killer of males between the ages of 17 and 25 (though her reasons for running amok are attributed to the traumatic death of the girl's parents in childhood, it is never quite clear why she targets that particular age group, one of whom she ensnares by outbidding him at an auction for the very first edition of the "Flash Gordon" comic-strip!) and, therefore, according to news reports, the murderer must be a homosexual! Conversely, Mitchum is one of the four members of the afore-mentioned "Droog"-like anarchists who falls foul of his team-mates and, to earn some cash on the side, takes to blackmailing Lyon (whom he had unwittingly spied while disposing of a body: she often affects disguises herself – as a mature woman or a man! – to lure her victims, who include a macho publicity guy modeling underwear on TV, linking the film, as do the entire lady-killing scenario and the overriding influence of TV, to the recently-viewed THE WITCH WHO CAME FROM THE SEA {1976}). Eventually, Mitchum's former friends beat him up and he is hospitalized and, ironically enough, put in Lyon's care but, in eliminating him there, she also gives herself away – to Sorel's obvious horror.
Given my rewarding experience so far with the filmography of Eloy De La Iglesia (on a side-note, that of Alex, who is not a relation, is no less intriguing but somewhat less consistent), I opted to acquire yet one more effort i.e. his adaptation of Henry James' classic – and much-filmed – ghost story THE TURN OF THE SCREW (1985), but which I was unable to include in the "Halloween Challenge" that has just come to an end.
Le saviez-vous
- AnecdotesAn even deeper connection between this film and Sue Lyon's most famous role in Lolita, other than her reading the classic novel from which it's based, is that Stanley Kubrick directed both Lolita and the movie that this movie's violent future world is centered around: A Clockwork Orange.
- GaffesMovie presenter on TV says Orange mécanique (1971) came out in 1972. It was 1971.
- Citations
Presentadora programa cine: [presenting tonight's feature] You will see "A Clockwork Orange," produced by Warner Brothers in 1972.
- Versions alternativesThe UK release "Murder in a Blue World" is missing footage. Missing is a scene where the gang decides they can't trust Mitchum and have to kill him. Also part of a scene at a cafe / club is cut. These scenes are present in the US theatrical release titled "Clockwork Terror".
- ConnexionsFeatured in Eurotika!: Is There a Doctor in the House? (1999)
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- How long is Murder in a Blue World?Alimenté par Alexa
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