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Cross of the Devil

Titolo originale: La cruz del diablo
  • 1975
  • 1h 32min
VALUTAZIONE IMDb
5,4/10
234
LA TUA VALUTAZIONE
Cross of the Devil (1975)
Orrore

Un romanziere britannico si reca in Spagna per visitare sua sorella. Tuttavia, quando arriva, scopre che è stata assassinata da una banda di banditi adoratori del diavolo chiamata Devil's Cr... Leggi tuttoUn romanziere britannico si reca in Spagna per visitare sua sorella. Tuttavia, quando arriva, scopre che è stata assassinata da una banda di banditi adoratori del diavolo chiamata Devil's Cross.Un romanziere britannico si reca in Spagna per visitare sua sorella. Tuttavia, quando arriva, scopre che è stata assassinata da una banda di banditi adoratori del diavolo chiamata Devil's Cross.

  • Regia
    • John Gilling
  • Sceneggiatura
    • Gustavo Adolfo Bécquer
    • John Gilling
    • Félix Martialay
  • Star
    • Ramiro Oliveros
    • Carmen Sevilla
    • Adolfo Marsillach
  • Vedi le informazioni sulla produzione su IMDbPro
  • VALUTAZIONE IMDb
    5,4/10
    234
    LA TUA VALUTAZIONE
    • Regia
      • John Gilling
    • Sceneggiatura
      • Gustavo Adolfo Bécquer
      • John Gilling
      • Félix Martialay
    • Star
      • Ramiro Oliveros
      • Carmen Sevilla
      • Adolfo Marsillach
    • 14Recensioni degli utenti
    • 11Recensioni della critica
  • Vedi le informazioni sulla produzione su IMDbPro
  • Vedi le informazioni sulla produzione su IMDbPro
  • Foto45

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    Interpreti principali14

    Modifica
    Ramiro Oliveros
    Ramiro Oliveros
    • Alfred Dawson
    Carmen Sevilla
    Carmen Sevilla
    • Maria
    Adolfo Marsillach
    Adolfo Marsillach
    • Cesar del Rio
    Emma Cohen
    Emma Cohen
    • Beatriz
    Eduardo Fajardo
    Eduardo Fajardo
    • Enrique Carrillo
    Mónica Randall
    Mónica Randall
    • Justine Carrillo
    Tony Isbert
    Tony Isbert
    • Iñigo de Ataíde
    Fernando Sancho
    Fernando Sancho
    • Ignacio
    Silvia Vivó
    • Ines
    Eduardo Calvo
    Eduardo Calvo
    • Director Prisión
    Pascual Hernández
    • Guardia Civil
    Antonio Ramis
    • Criado
    Mariano Cristóbal
    • Cochero
    Rosa Valenty
    • Regia
      • John Gilling
    • Sceneggiatura
      • Gustavo Adolfo Bécquer
      • John Gilling
      • Félix Martialay
    • Tutti gli interpreti e le troupe
    • Produzione, botteghino e altro su IMDbPro

    Recensioni degli utenti14

    5,4234
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    Recensioni in evidenza

    7HumanoidOfFlesh

    The fifth 'unofficial' part of "Blind Dead" quartet.

    "La Cruz del Diablo" aka "The Devil's Cross" is based on stories by the 19th century writer Gustavo Adolfo Becquer,who was considered Spanish Poe.The film was scripted by Paul Naschy and directed by Hammer veteran John Gilling.The writer Alfred Dawson has opium visions,in which he sees undead Templars on horses pursuing a woman through a forest.One day he receives a letter from his sister,which instructs him to go to visit her in Spain as she seems to be in trouble since she lost the child she was expecting.Arthur goes to Madrid and finds that his sister was murdered.Then he is stalked by a creepy figure in black hood,who kills his people close to him.The figure is the Devil himself and skeletal zombie Templars wielding swords do appear near the climax.Very atmospheric and extremely obscure Spanish mood piece with competent direction by Gilling,rotting skeletons,drug hallucinations and old crumbling castles.The score is haunting as is the main performance of Ramiro Oliveros.7 out of 10.
    6EdgarST

    Hashish Dreams

    From the reading of Gustavo Adolfo Bécquer's legends in my adolescence, I have the memory of subtle and romantic stories about death, with apparitions, monks and strong presence of the Spanish landscape. Three of these stories served as the basis for «The Cross of the Devil» which was the last film directed by John Gilling, British filmmaker remembered for his low budget films of all genres: adventures, police, pirates and, above all, terror. Of these, I fondly remember two Hammer Films productions, in which he made the most of his plots and budget: «The Reptile» and «The Plague of Zombies.» By the early 1970s Gilling was in retreat and had not shot a feature since 1967. However, when he visited Spain to film some material, his friend Paul Naschy, the well-known Spanish horror film actor, asked him to direct his adaptation of three short stories by Bécquer, probable reserving for himself the role of the villain. At the end, the actor did not make the film, but Gilling filmed Naschy's screenplay (or Jacinto Molina's as he is credited), an adaptation that takes equal parts from «El miserere», «El monte de las ánimas» and «The Cross of the Devil» , which gives title to the film. Here the simplicity of Bécquer's direct prose is replaced by an intrigue full of subplots, red herrings and recurrent dreams, to achieve a product of hour and a half. Ramiro Oliveros plays Alfred Dawson, a British writer addicted to kif who is undergoing a literary block. The young man will be able to write the article of his life when he travels to Spain, called by his sister Justine, married to a wealthy bourgeois from Bilbao. When Dawson arrives in Spain, Justine has been murdered and the writer initiates an investigation that puts him in contact with stories of knights Templars, a bewitched armour, gallantry between cousins that leads to death and insinuations about the low morality of his sister. The script has several endings that lengthen the film a little, closing what was taken from each of the three stories. The result is a correct film, but little else, while Gilling continued to happily enjoy his holidays until the year of his death.
    5ma-cortes

    Average Spanish horror film by the notorious British fimmaker John Gilling

    This story is based on some writings by famous poet Gustavo Adolfo Becquer, as ¨Mount of Animas¨, ¨Miserere¨ and ¨Devil's cross¨. This is a Spanish film but the director is John Gilling , a master of Hammer production. Gilling was on holidays in Spain and Paul Naschy or Jacinto Molina asked him to make this movie . Being shot on various Spanish locations in Talamanca del Jarama , Casa de Campo, Madrid , and Escalona, Toledo, Castilla-La Mancha . The film is starred by all the best Spanish cinema actors: Carmen Sevilla , Adolfo Marsillach , and Eduardo Fajardo , Fernando Sancho , both of whom made many spaghetti Westerns .

    The plot is a mess of ghosts and skull crusaders, a rip-off of the zombies of Amando De Ossorio who, by that time realized many creepy films about the blind Templar Zombies, today deemed semi-classics. However, the movie is dreary and dull . Gilling's direction is boring , it's too far from Hammer film but for a Spanish film is OK. Many years later would come Alejandro Amenabar and his successful horror pictures.

    The motion picture was middlingly directed by John Gilling . He was a good craftsman , a notorious writer/producer/director who worked for the prestigious Hammer Films , developing a long career making movies of all kinds of genres , such as : The Gilded Cage, The Guilty Person, The Embezzler, Double Exposure, Escape by Night, Recoil , Deadly Nightshade , The Voice of Merrill, The Frightened Man , The Quiet Woman ; but he stands out in Horror genre , such as : The Plague of the Zombies, Panic , The Mummy's Shroud , The Gamma People, Mother Riley Meets the Vampire , Devil's Cross, The Reptil and The Flesh and the Fiends.
    6I_Ailurophile

    Enjoyable, but troubled by weak pacing and weaker connections between story ideas

    John Gilling was a filmmaker of no small renown, and having him involved in a production is a fair get. It's to the credit of all involved that this film also boasts excellent production values up to the standards of the time, with superb art direction, costume design, and stunts and effects. One will also observe that like no few other contemporary examples, the picture leans considerably on mystery, and mounting investigation, with only sparing visualization for the preponderance of the length of violence, death, or the dark dealings portended in the lore revealed through dialogue. The premise is certainly sufficient to catch one's attention, too.

    Unfortunately, I'm not so sure that the strength of the viewing experience bears out the expectations one may have on any particular basis. Even recognizing the deliberate, measured dispensation of the story and the genre elements, the pacing feels dull to the point of dampening one's enthusiasm and trying our patience. Plot development is rather slow, and one will note that this was the last project that Gilling took on in his life, at that several years after his most recent previous work. I don't say this to altogether reflect on and impugn the man's skills as director; then again, there are definitely moments when his direction comes off as especially weak. There are no few moments, for example, when a scene relies rather oddly on hard gazes shared between Adolfo Marsillach as del Rio, Eduardo Fajardo as Enrique, and possibly other actors/characters, and the moment is so flimsily drawn out as to sap any possible tension from the intensity of the players' expressions. While we viewers are treated to bits and pieces of violence and horror notions as the length draws on, 'Cross of the devil' saves the vast preponderance for the last act. The wait is worth it to some degree, yet I can't help but feel disappointed; like a more famous Spanish flick involving the Knights Templar, 'Tombs of the blind dead,' the actual experience of watching doesn't live up to its reputation, or what we assume.

    I also think the writing is troubled. We're basically presented with three major plot points: the murder of Justine, and Alfred's interest in learning more about it; the tale of Beatriz and Inigo, a legend passed down through the years; and the legend of the Knights Templar and the titular location. The writers do make connections between these ideas, but the threads are weak and less than fully convincing; moreover, as they present, each plot point in and of itself is less than entirely cohesive. Note, for example, how the weapon that is offered up as a crucial MacGuffin in the last act has only just been introduced for the first time; as an audience we can only take it on faith. Even the last ten minutes or so serve up only a very meager resolution to the tale; the glove fits, but barely, and it has holes that our fingers easily poke through. I've heard it said that modern viewers are too obsessed with plot, and that in the face of story ideas that disagree or don't form a cogent whole we forget how to just have fun nevertheless. I understand that sentiment, but there comes a point when the frailty of a screenplay reduces the support structure for the movie that's built upon it. I rather think 'Cross of the devil' works best only if we can accept the logic of Movie Magic that holds its storytelling together.

    It's still enjoyable, by all means, and I'm glad I took the time to watch. I name-dropped 'Tombs of the blind dead' in fleeting reference and truthfully, I think this is a superior feature. That doesn't make it a great one though: good, yes; specifically admirable, no. I appreciate all the hard work that went into it, and I'm glad for those who get more out of it than I do. More than anything else, however, I believe this 1975 title needed more pep in its step to make its ideas count, and above all it needed more time to gestate so that the writers could patch the rough spots in the details of the plot. 'Cross of the devil' is a suitably good time if you come across it, but all told, you shouldn't go out of your way for it, and temper your expectations.
    9matheusmarchetti

    "Tombs of the Blind Dead" done right!

    Often said to be the unofficial fifth chapter in the "Blind Dead" series, John Gilling's "La Cruz del Diablo" (The Devil's Cross) easily tops his predecessors, and is among the very best horror films to have come out of Spain. The story follows a writer who has a series of drug addicted hallucinations involving the Templars. When he goes to Spain visit his sister, only to find that she died by the time he got there, he decides to investigate, and tries to find a connection between her death and his horrifying visions. While many have called it a mere cash-in on Amando de Ossorio's infamous series, it's actually a much more accurate and throughly superior adaptation of the writings of Gustavo Adolfo Bécquer, which also served as inspiration for "Tombs of the Blind Dead". Like Béquer, less emphasis is given to the Templars themselves, and the whole affair is more of a character-driven piece, that is not devoid of symbolism and ambiguity. I have to give credit to Ossorio, since his Templars are much creepier than those presented here, but I liked how Gilling went for something different, and kept them more in the shadows. Originally intended as a Paul Naschy vehicle, one can clearly see how this could've become just another 70's Spanish horror, but Gilling's direction makes the total difference. A Hammer Horror veteran, Gilling combines the more sophisticated, polished style of his British contemporaries and combines it with the more raw, grittier appeal of Spanish Gothic. There's a bit of Italian horror in there as well, "Kill Baby ... Kill!" and "Castle of Blood" to be more precise, and one can argue that the black-gloved killer is a nod to gialli. Judging from this combination, it is suffice to say that the visuals are simply jaw-dropping, making great use of the beautiful Spanish locations, which land to the ever-present fairytale-ish aspects of Bécquer's work, as well the use of actual ruins and atmospheric, candle-lit interiors. The sometimes eerie, sometimes romantic score by Ángel Arteaga matches the off-beat yet strangely poetic tone perfectly. The acting is also surprisingly decent, with a cast of familiar faces from the continental horror scene of the 70's. Ramiro Oliveros and Emma Cohen, who already acted together the previous year in Jess Franco's excellent "The Other Side of the Mirror" are particularly remarkable as the drug-addicted protagonist and his ghost lover respectively, although one cannot help but wonder how would Naschy turn out in the former's role. Carmen Sevilla makes for a strong and likable heroine, and Eduardo Fajardo is good too, although he seems to be playing Francis Lehar from "Lisa and the Devil" all over again (ironically, the way his corpse is positioned near the ending is almost exactly the same as in "Lisa". The highlight among the performers is certainly Adolfo Marsillach as the mysterious assistant to Fajardo's character. He has screen presence to boot, and is just so effortlessly creepy in his relatively low-key performance. There are no big flaws in the film as far as I'm concerned, although one could argue to that the final battle between the protagonist and the Templars is somewhat anti-climatic, and the pace might be a little too slow (think "The House with Laughing Windows"). Overall, an excellent and extremely underrated horror film worthy of rediscovery. Fans of Gothic horror and slow-burns just can't afford to miss it.

    Trama

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    • Quiz
      This was prolific director John Gilling's last film. He hadn't planned to make it, but he was on vacation in Spain when his friend, actor/director Paul Naschy, asked him to direct it for him.
    • Connessioni
      Referenced in Rojo sangre (2004)

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    Dettagli

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    • Data di uscita
      • 29 marzo 1975 (Spagna)
    • Paese di origine
      • Spagna
    • Lingua
      • Spagnolo
    • Celebre anche come
      • The Devil's Cross
    • Luoghi delle riprese
      • Casa de Campo, Madrid, Spagna
    • Azienda produttrice
      • Bulnes S.A.
    • Vedi altri crediti dell’azienda su IMDbPro

    Specifiche tecniche

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    • Tempo di esecuzione
      • 1h 32min(92 min)
    • Mix di suoni
      • Mono
    • Proporzioni
      • 1.85 : 1

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