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IMDbPro

La ragazza che sapeva troppo

  • 1963
  • VM14
  • 1h 26min
VALUTAZIONE IMDb
6,9/10
6029
LA TUA VALUTAZIONE
Valentina Cortese, Letícia Román, and John Saxon in La ragazza che sapeva troppo (1963)
A mystery novel-loving American tourist witnesses a murder in Rome, and soon finds herself and her suitor caught up in a series of killings.
Riproduci trailer2: 10
2 video
99+ foto
Dark ComedyGialloSlasher HorrorHorrorMysteryRomanceThriller

Una turista americana appassionata di romanzi gialli assiste ad un omicidio a Roma, e presto si ritrova, col suo pretendente, coinvolta in una serie di omicidi.Una turista americana appassionata di romanzi gialli assiste ad un omicidio a Roma, e presto si ritrova, col suo pretendente, coinvolta in una serie di omicidi.Una turista americana appassionata di romanzi gialli assiste ad un omicidio a Roma, e presto si ritrova, col suo pretendente, coinvolta in una serie di omicidi.

  • Regia
    • Mario Bava
  • Sceneggiatura
    • Ennio De Concini
    • Sergio Corbucci
    • Eliana de Sabata
  • Star
    • John Saxon
    • Letícia Román
    • Valentina Cortese
  • Vedi le informazioni sulla produzione su IMDbPro
  • VALUTAZIONE IMDb
    6,9/10
    6029
    LA TUA VALUTAZIONE
    • Regia
      • Mario Bava
    • Sceneggiatura
      • Ennio De Concini
      • Sergio Corbucci
      • Eliana de Sabata
    • Star
      • John Saxon
      • Letícia Román
      • Valentina Cortese
    • 70Recensioni degli utenti
    • 69Recensioni della critica
  • Vedi le informazioni sulla produzione su IMDbPro
    • Premi
      • 1 vittoria e 1 candidatura in totale

    Video2

    Trailer
    Trailer 2:10
    Trailer
    Bloody Beginnings of the Summer Camp Slasher
    Clip 7:00
    Bloody Beginnings of the Summer Camp Slasher
    Bloody Beginnings of the Summer Camp Slasher
    Clip 7:00
    Bloody Beginnings of the Summer Camp Slasher

    Foto102

    Visualizza poster
    Visualizza poster
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    + 97
    Visualizza poster

    Interpreti principali27

    Modifica
    John Saxon
    John Saxon
    • Dr. Marcello Bassi
    Letícia Román
    Letícia Román
    • Nora Davis
    • (as Leticia Roman)
    • …
    Valentina Cortese
    Valentina Cortese
    • Laura Craven-Torrani
    Titti Tomaino
    • Inspector
    Luigi Bonos
    Luigi Bonos
    • Albergo Stelletta
    Milo Quesada
    Milo Quesada
    • De Vico…
    Walter Williams
    • Dr. Alessi
    • (as Robert Buchanan)
    Marta Melocco
    Marta Melocco
    • Murder Victim
    Gustavo De Nardo
    Gustavo De Nardo
    • Dr. Facchetti
    Lucia Modugno
    Lucia Modugno
    • Nurse
    Giovanni Di Benedetto
    • Professor Torrani
    • (as Gianni De Benedetto)
    Franco Morici
    • Policeman
    Virginia Doro
    • Torrani's Maid
    Dante DiPaolo
    • Andrea Landini
    • (as Dante Di Paolo)
    Mario Bava
    Mario Bava
    • Uncle Augusto
    • (non citato nei titoli originali)
    Geoffrey Copleston
    • Asylum employee
    • (non citato nei titoli originali)
    Jim Dolen
    • Priest
    • (non citato nei titoli originali)
    Adriana Facchetti
    • Woman in Sguattera Restaurant
    • (non citato nei titoli originali)
    • Regia
      • Mario Bava
    • Sceneggiatura
      • Ennio De Concini
      • Sergio Corbucci
      • Eliana de Sabata
    • Tutti gli interpreti e le troupe
    • Produzione, botteghino e altro su IMDbPro

    Recensioni degli utenti70

    6,96K
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    10

    Recensioni in evidenza

    8eibon09

    Only Bava Giallo with Sympathetic Characters

    La Ragazza Che Sapeva Troppo/The Girl who Knew too Much(1963) is the first of the giallo genre that didn't blossom until the late 1960s. Also the final film by Mario Bava to be done in black and white. Although a Giallo, the film follows the plot lines of the more traditional mystery story with a few twists. The film that uses the perverse and violent elements of the Gialli or Giallo is Blood & Black Lace(1964). Mario Bava's next film, Blood and Black Lace(1964) is less interested in story and more interested in mood and style. The plot involves a woman who misinterprets the meaning of a murder she witnesses. The first horror picture that John Saxon was in.

    Bava in a rare instance uses naturalistic lighting. Usually the lighting in a Bava film is drenched in artful color. The only other film by Mario Bava to use naturalistic lighting is Rabid Dogs(1974). Lacks the sex and violence that dominates the gialli novels. The director was fascinated by the deception of appearences in this film and in his entire filmography. He seemed to have little optimism about human behavior or human nature. There are only three murders that occur in the film while the others happen before the story begins.

    The Girl who Knew Too Much(1963) deals with Bava's favorite theme of greed. The murderer before being overcome with bloodlust does these deeds because of obsession with money. Greed is the seed of destruction for the characters in Blood & Black Lace(1964), A Bay of Blood(1971), and Rabid Dogs(1974). Part Alfred Hitchcock and part Edgar Wallace. The acting in the film is good. Leticia Roman is excellent as the naive and attractive Nora Davis. Mario Bava was not interested in doing the film but due to money reason directed it anyway.

    Downplays the romantic subplot involving Nora Davis and Dr. Marcello Bassi. The scenes that uses suggestions of drug use were cut for the USA release. I love the scene where Nora sets up a booby trap to catch the murderer with disasterous results. The camera was in love with the figure of Leticia Roman during the scene at the beach while panning from her face to her feet. The short love scene between Nora and Marcello has a short spurt of eroticism. One of the writers who worked on the film was Django director, Sergio Corbucci. John Saxon does some fine acting as the leading man.

    Mario Bava and John Saxon did not get along due to many misunderstandings during filming. The director it seems didn't think too highly of actors or actresses. Dante Dipaolo plays the newspaper reporter with sympathy. The use of the tape recorder by the murderer is cleaver. Valentina Cortese gets the top acting honors as the mysterious Laura Terrani. The discovery of the murderer is one of the film's main highlights. Impressed Dario Argento when he did The Bird with the Crystal Plumage(1969) and thus being responsible for the longevity and success of the Giallo in Italy.
    8Red-Barracuda

    Bava creates the giallo by way of Hitchcock

    With The Girl Who Knew Too Much, director Mario Bava planted the seed that would evolve into the sub-genre known as the giallo. In fairness, it doesn't much resemble the films that would typify this genre in the 70's. Bava's next film Blood and Black Lace would truly be the definitive template film that would inform the giallo. But there is no doubting that some of the recurring motives and ideas of this most Italian film genre began here.

    As the title suggests, The Girl Who Knew Too Much is indebted to Alfred Hitchcock more than anything else. The idea of an innocent thrust into the middle of a deadly situation is one Hitchcock used many times. While the romantic sub-plot and moments of light comedy also recall his work. These latter two elements are mainly what mark out TGWKTM as a cross-over film, as they are certainly not features of giallo cinema as it would develop. But the light, comic approach is one of the things that make this one of the most playful and upbeat films that Mario Bava ever made. Unlike his three other gialli, this film actually has sympathetic characters. While it doesn't have the melodramatic tendencies that those ensemble movies had either. The approach is much more restrained, with a fairly simple amateur sleuth narrative being the framework. Completely different too is the black and white aesthetic. Bava is of course rightfully famous for his masterful use of colour but in this film he shows that his use of light and contrast is just as impressive. This is a very handsome looking movie. Letícia Román adds to this aesthetic too of course, seeing as she is a very beautiful woman. Visually, this is a terrific film. Story-wise, it's certainly less interesting. The fairly mechanical plot is sufficient enough in taking us from A to B but it isn't particularly memorable. But it does introduce some of the motives that would go on to form an important part of giallo cinema such as the convoluted mystery, the bizarre reasoning for murder and the importance of optical subjectivity as well as the focus on style over substance.

    The Girl Who Knew Too Much is a film that should be seen by fans of Mario Bava as well as dedicated students of all things giallo. It's a film that is as breezy and light as the genre ever got. It's a lovely and beautiful looking flick from a master film-maker.
    7Fella_shibby

    Weed ain't that bad aft all, its taking things from strangers n staying in stranger's house which are bad.

    I saw this for the first time recently and that too the 89 mins Italian version.

    This is no doubt the first giallo film and the last film Bava shot in black and white.

    It is very mild when it comes to the gore n it aint scary but a bit comedic n predictable if u pay attention.

    The movie plays more like a Hitchcockian thriller and it is obvious that this movie is one genius' homage to another genius.

    I enjoyed this even more as i am a big fan of Saxon and his character is one of the suspect. The beach scene is hilarious.

    The scene wher the priest picks up the cigarette laden with marijuana is epic.

    Bava's cinematography is once again splendid.

    The Piazza di Spagna n Spanish steps are captured very well.

    Bava is so precise with the direction. After the murder there is rain, so one can't look for blood.

    Also when the lead female is trying to recollect the murder n just when she is about to recollect the knife thrown by the killer, she is distracted by the gun shots (kid's toys) n she forgets.

    P. S. In the Italian Version, Nora and Marcello are standing at an overlook, trying to forget what happened, planning their wedding. When Marcello wants to light a cigarette Nora got out of her purse, she starts thinking that it was all in her head as a result of smoking weed. She tosses the spliffs and a reverend picks them up. Now the word "FINE" appears on the screen.

    In the US Version, a man with binoculars gets in a chair lift in order to shoot a woman. Nora and Marcello are in another chair lift and witness the entire thing. They are talking about getting married as well, but Marcello wishes that Nora would never ever start with any kind of crimes or murders.
    8bensonmum2

    Classic Bava

    • Nora Davis (Leticia Roman) is a young woman hoping to have a wonderful vacation in Italy. Within 24 hours of her arrival, she is almost mistakenly arrested for drug smuggling, the aunt she is staying with dies, she has her purse stolen, and she witnesses a murder. But the police can find no body and no signs of a murder. It seems that no on believes her. It's up to Nora to discover the truth to what happened that rainy night in the plaza.


    • Mario Bava is known for his magnificent use of color. So, it's a little odd that two of my favorite films that Bava made (The Girl Who Knew Too Much and Black Sunday) are black & white. Whatever the format, Bava again demonstrates his mastery of shadows and light very effectively. The film presents a series of images that are hard to forget. Each shot is perfection. One of my favorites is of the thief who steals Nora's purse as he moves from one side of the stairs to the other. It is admittedly a very minor moment, but Bava puts more care into this insignificant tracking shot than most director's do in the main scenes of their movies. It is one of the most beautiful films I've ever seen.


    • The Girl Who Knew Too Much is an obvious (and not just in title) homage to Alfred Hitchcock. Bava has loaded the movie with moments that are done as I imagine Hitchcock would have done them. If the movie weren't in Italian, you would swear Hitchcock directed it.


    • But the thing that make this movie so effective is Leticia Roman as Nora. Her performance is one of the best I've seen in a Bava film. She comes off as fragile, yet determined, depending upon what the script calls for. She has a believability that is necessary for this kind of movie if the audience to feel concern when she is in peril. Roman is perfect in the role.


    • One final note, this movie is often cited as the first giallo. Whether this is true or not, I only know what I've read. The Girl Who Knew Too Much does establish a very elementary framework for later gialli to follow. But, it bears little resemblance to the gialli that would come later. It's not until Bava fleshed-out the giallo in Blood and Black Lace do we get look and "rules" that have become so familiar to fans of the genre.
    ThreeSadTigers

    Bava's first Giallo; a minor-masterpiece of style and energy

    The Girl Who Knew Too Much (1963) is director Mario Bava's gleeful homage to Hitchcock; and one of the earliest examples of the Italian Giallo sub-genre of horror/suspense cinema that would go on to inspire an entire generation of horror filmmakers throughout the subsequent two decades. If you're at all familiar with the work of director Dario Argento for example, then you can see the roots of films like The Bird with the Crystal Plumage (1970), Deep Red (1975) and Tenebrae (1982) already being established by the skillful blending of low-key thrills, character development and good old fashioned murder mystery, as captured by Bava in this excellent, slow-burning suspense piece. Although it may take some viewers a while to settle into the overall tone of the film - with those first few scenes presenting us with a veritable bombardment of information, both narrative and thematic, before the first murder has even taken place - the eventual unravelling of the plot, and Bava's excellent direction eventually draw us deeper into a story that is here punctuated by a charmingly romantic subplot, a miniature travelogue around the tourist traps of Rome, some subtle moments of almost slapstick humour, and the director's always inventive use of visual experimentation.

    The usual Gialli trademarks are already beginning to take shape here, with the film focusing on a foreigner - in this case, twenty-year old American student Nora Davis - who travels to Rome to visit her ailing aunt and inadvertently witnesses a murder. Alongside this central plot device, which would be utilised by Argento in many of his greatest films, such as the three aforementioned, we also have the ideas of sight and perception; with the central protagonist unintentionally witnessing something that is shrouded in elements of doubt and abstraction, and thus having to prove what she saw to sceptical police officers and those nearest to her. Bava's film is also given a neat touch of self-referential sub-text; opening with a shot of the central character herself reading a Giallo murder mystery, casting some doubt as to whether or not the film plays out in the literal sense, or whether it is a merely a constructed reality, taking place in her own mind as she reads the book to herself. This is a thread of interpretation that is examined throughout by the filmmaker, with the title of the book itself, "The Knife", having an importance on the plot that perhaps surreptitiously suggest some element of imagined fantasy.

    Once we get through those hectic opening sequences, which introduce the characters and a number of potential sub-plots that are essentially window-dressing to throw us off the trail, the film settles into the murder mystery aspect and the burgeoning relationship between Nora and her young doctor friend, Marcello Bassi. Through the relationship, Bava introduces a subtle comment on the Holmes vs. Watson partnership recast as a romantic dilemma, whilst also creating space within his story to let the audience catch up and think about the potential clues already collected in order to lead us to the eventual discovery of the killer's identity. The use of sight and Bava's directorial slight-of-hand is used meticulously for the initial murder sequence; with the director creating a literal feeling of hazy disconnection and a distorted perspective through a somewhat dated visual effect and the always masterful use of light and shadow. Although the actual effect - which replicates the look of ripples on a pond - might lead a more contemporary audience to giggle or cringe, it does tie in with the continual use of water-symbolism in Bava's work, from the final story in The Three Faces of Fear/Black Sabbath (1963), and A Bay of Blood (1971) most famously, as well as a somewhat cheap gag about marijuana cigarettes that will pay off in the film's closing moments.

    Again, the use of humour taps into the spirit of Hitchcock, with intrigue, voyeurism, suspense and murder being reduced to mere complications in the continual romantic wooing of Nora by the charming Dr. Bassi. Nevertheless, the thriller aspects are what we remember most clearly; with Bava's always atmospheric direction, iconography and ability to create tension from the slightest movement of the camera. Once the credits have rolled, we release just how subtle much of Bava's use of sight and perception actually was; with a number of scenes leading on from a moment of confusion by the central character, in which she thinks she sees something that turns out to be nothing of the sort. Again, it shows the director playfully undermining the central character; presenting Nora as someone unable to trust her own eyes, and thus, unable to be trusted with the ultimate unravelling of the plot. Nonetheless, Bava also succeeds in throwing us into this enigmatic mystery; undermining our own perspective of the story by showing us important information early on, allowing us to feel superior to Nora with our benefit of a forewarning, only to then cast further doubt in our mind as the gallery of suspects mount up.

    Though still something of a minor work for Bava, The Girl Who Knew Too Much is undoubtedly great; enlivened by the fine performances from the two leads, John Saxon (a cult actor with an impeccable list of credits) and the delightful Leticia Roman (I'm honestly quite smitten), and absolutely brimming with style and energy. The gag at the end is in-keeping with Bava's work, but certainly doesn't lessen the impact of the more thrilling scenes that came before, or the air of grand mystery and excitement suggested by his excellent approach to editing, cinematography and design. Beware that the film also exists under the title The Evil Eye; re-edited by Bava for the American market as more of a light-hearted romp (Tarantino calls it's a masterpiece). The version reviewed here is the original Italian version, a minor masterpiece of Giallo thrills, cinematic abstractions and an old-fashioned approach to storytelling that grips us from the start and never lets us go.

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    • Quiz
      Mario Bava was a big fan of Alfred Hitchcock, and Hitchcockian touches abound in the film, including a cameo by the director. In the scene where Letícia Román is in her bedroom at Ethel's home, the portrait on the wall with the eyes that keep following her is that of Mario Bava.
    • Blooper
      When Nora answers the phone in the Torrani house, "hello" is heard before she speaks, even while the receiver is being lifted to her mouth.
    • Citazioni

      Nora Davis: [into the phone] Oh mother, murders don't just happen like that here.

    • Versioni alternative
      AIP released this as The Evil Eye, a recut version with material used just in some countries out of Italy.
    • Connessioni
      Featured in Mario Bava: Maestro of the Macabre (2000)
    • Colonne sonore
      Furore
      (Appears in the Italian version)

      Sung by Adriano Celentano

      Written and Composed by Adriano Celentano (as Adicel) and Piero Vivarelli (as Vivarelli)

      Published by Edizioni Nazionalmusic and Disco Jolly

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    Dettagli

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    • Data di uscita
      • 1963 (Italia)
    • Paese di origine
      • Italia
    • Lingue
      • Italiano
      • Inglese
    • Celebre anche come
      • Incubus
    • Luoghi delle riprese
      • Foro Italico Stadium, Foro Italico, Monte Mario, Roma, Lazio, Italia(location)
    • Aziende produttrici
      • Galatea Film
      • Coronet s.r.l.
    • Vedi altri crediti dell’azienda su IMDbPro

    Specifiche tecniche

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    • Tempo di esecuzione
      1 ora 26 minuti
    • Colore
      • Black and White
    • Mix di suoni
      • Mono
    • Proporzioni
      • 1.66 : 1

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