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IMDbPro

Lisa e o Diabo

Título original: Lisa e il diavolo
  • 1973
  • Not Rated
  • 1 h 35 min
AVALIAÇÃO DA IMDb
6,2/10
5,8 mil
SUA AVALIAÇÃO
Telly Savalas and Elke Sommer in Lisa e o Diabo (1973)
Trailer for Lisa and the Devil
Reproduzir trailer3:21
1 vídeo
69 fotos
HorrorMistério

Adicionar um enredo no seu idiomaA tourist spends the night in a derelict Spanish villa seemingly held in the supernatural grip of an eccentric butler, who resembles a depiction of the Devil she had seen on an old fresco.A tourist spends the night in a derelict Spanish villa seemingly held in the supernatural grip of an eccentric butler, who resembles a depiction of the Devil she had seen on an old fresco.A tourist spends the night in a derelict Spanish villa seemingly held in the supernatural grip of an eccentric butler, who resembles a depiction of the Devil she had seen on an old fresco.

  • Direção
    • Mario Bava
  • Roteiristas
    • Mario Bava
    • Alfredo Leone
    • Giorgio Maulini
  • Artistas
    • Telly Savalas
    • Elke Sommer
    • Sylva Koscina
  • Veja as informações de produção no IMDbPro
  • AVALIAÇÃO DA IMDb
    6,2/10
    5,8 mil
    SUA AVALIAÇÃO
    • Direção
      • Mario Bava
    • Roteiristas
      • Mario Bava
      • Alfredo Leone
      • Giorgio Maulini
    • Artistas
      • Telly Savalas
      • Elke Sommer
      • Sylva Koscina
    • 73Avaliações de usuários
    • 72Avaliações da crítica
  • Veja as informações de produção no IMDbPro
    • Prêmios
      • 1 indicação no total

    Vídeos1

    Lisa and the Devil
    Trailer 3:21
    Lisa and the Devil

    Fotos69

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    Elenco principal10

    Editar
    Telly Savalas
    Telly Savalas
    • Leandro
    Elke Sommer
    Elke Sommer
    • Lisa Reiner…
    Sylva Koscina
    Sylva Koscina
    • Sophia Lehar
    • (as Silva Koscina)
    Alessio Orano
    • Max
    Gabriele Tinti
    Gabriele Tinti
    • George
    Kathleen Leone
    • Tourist
    • (as Kathy Leone)
    Eduardo Fajardo
    Eduardo Fajardo
    • Francis Lehar
    Franz von Treuberg
    • Shopkeeper
    Espartaco Santoni
    Espartaco Santoni
    • Carlo
    Alida Valli
    Alida Valli
    • Countess
    • Direção
      • Mario Bava
    • Roteiristas
      • Mario Bava
      • Alfredo Leone
      • Giorgio Maulini
    • Elenco e equipe completos
    • Produção, bilheteria e muito mais no IMDbPro

    Avaliações de usuários73

    6,25.7K
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    Avaliações em destaque

    8lost-in-limbo

    A beautifully stylish and incredibly bizarre trip.

    Lisa (Elke Sommer) who is a tourist gets lost from her group in an ancient Spanish city, but she come across a couple Mr Frank Lehar, his wife Sofia and chauffeur and gets a lift off them. Though, its short-lived as the car breaks down near an old villa. So they are invited to spend the night in the old, dark villa. The mansion's occupants are acting all strange and the dreary atmosphere takes hold. One by one, they meet their doom and Leandro (Telly Savalas) the villa's butler seems to have something to do with it. Could he be the devil himself who's toying with these guests or is it all a nightmare?

    Well, this was the first film I've seen of director/writer Mario Bava and I got to say I was truly amazed by it. Bava's "Lisa and the devil" is a slickly well-crafted surreal thriller that messes with our minds with its simply fetching details and a disquietingly grim atmosphere. It's one very picturesque film that holds superb composition and such flair in the lighting, backdrop, score and atmosphere. From the elegant scenery of the ancient city to the old fancy villa that holds such a morbid awe and to what builds on that is a strikingly eerie, but delicate score. While the brood atmosphere is sheer alienating and the fluid camera-work truly does capture that disorientating mood. The villa is covered with colourful artwork and luxurious furniture, which fills every room. The film is gracefully shot with plenty of zooms and also catching reflections and silhouettes. The location photography was excellent. These sublime images and score really built on the absorbing texture and peculiar state of the film. Plus under all that are an elegantly erotic undertone and a film that flows with pure originality.

    Premise is incredibly absurd and there's hardly no characterisation. Maybe there was too much going on in the flawed story, as it was downright confusing at times to know what was actually happening because the story would lead to a dead end. Overall it just felt like a blur. Though, yet again maybe it was meant to be like that? You are definitely lost and put off-balance just like Lisa is to what's reality and what's not. It's a baffling mystery that you could say comes across as rich poetry and art and you also pick up on little subtle hints throughout the story. The dialogue is rather sparse, but interesting if a little cheesy at times. You could probably say not much is going on with Lisa just wandering around the villa and there's a fairly slow pace to it all to begin with, but this is an atmospheric and physiological builder. Some scenes did drag on for too long and sometimes it gets a bit too sappy, but these things didn't take away from the film. The horror isn't that horrific, but it plays more on the images, sounds and atmosphere. Definitely the second half of the film is when it starts to get exciting and even more unnerving. This is when Bava tightens the screws with some well-designed shocks and jolts. By achieving some haunting images and a heart-stopping finale, literally. As each one the characters give into jealousy, hatred, lust and finally into their own demise. The characters turn out to be nothing more than pawns in this story and you question who's pulling whose strings. Most of the acting does come across as rather one-note or melodramatic. Telly Savalas steals the film as a lollipop sucking butler, who seems to have some hidden agenda and playing with these people's souls. His performance is sinisterly impressive in a manipulative nature and his dialogue is always a play on words. The gorgeous Elke Sommer shines in her role. Her dialogue might be pretty limited but her presence is enough to fit the bill.

    Incredibly lavish film-making that is particularly dreamlike and a marvel to look at. When it ends you'll be left scratching your head.
    7Bezenby

    Devilled Egghead

    It becomes clear almost from the outset that with this film Bava is out to mess with our heads and narrative cohesion isn't a priority, so it's best just to sit back and enjoy the ride, knowing you're in good hands. While viewing a strange fresco in a town on holiday, Lisa becomes distracted by the sound of music and in a small shop off the beaten track finds a music box with some creepy figurines spinning on top. She tries to buy it but learns that it belongs to the shop's only other customer: Telly Savalas, who greatly resembles a figure on the fresco that was described as the devil! Telly for some reason is carrying a life-sized figure of a man and finds it highly amusing when Lisa runs off.

    Lisa soon gets lost and after wandering around the strange streets, has to ask someone for directions, and that someone is Telly Savalas! This is where Bava starts really messing with us as the dummy in his hands is obviously actually played by an actor - but only in certain shots. Things get even more confusing when Lisa encounters a live version of the dummy who falls down a flight of stairs and dies. Eventually Lisa ends up getting a lift from a bickering couple (the wife of whom is having an affair with her chauffer) and they all end up at the usual huge mansion/castle inhabited by angry man Maximillian, his blind mother Alida Valli, and chirpy butler Telly Savalas, complete with Kojack lollipop. The house is full of Bava's favourite prop: creepy dolls, and things just get stranger and stranger for here on out.

    There's no point in detailing any more of the plot, but it involves murder, mysterious characters locked in rooms surrounded by slices of cake, people becoming dummies and Telly Savalas breaking the ankles of a corpse in order to fit it into a coffin. I was never really sure what was going on at all due to all the mind games Bava was playing. He even has certain characters follow the exact same path through the house using the exact same camera angles which just adds to the surrealism, and through it all Telly Savalas acts like that whole thing is some bizarre comedy. It all works for me though!

    He also has the light shine deliberately off of Savalas' head quite often too, films the action from above or below, and uses an awful lot of colour wherever he can. My favourite set was the mock-funeral that is later smashed to pieces by one of the characters. I wasn't expecting the film to be off the wall as much as it was and was nicely surprised.

    Perhaps it was this film that Umberto Lenzi and Lucio Fulci had in mind when they directed the House of Doom series in the late Eighties? I was getting a severe House of Clocks vibe from this film.
    horrorbargainbin

    Great minus the "Exorcist" scenes

    We all know that the possession scenes used to narrate the film were tacked on to capitalize on the recent success of The Exorcist. That said the movie has two plots which do not merge well together. Quite frankly the exorcism material is an awful mess of puke on the walls and references to whores. Yes, the pea soup scene is duplicated as is the thrashing, floating, and demonic vocal styles. Still, horror fans might enjoy watching this crud just for kicks.

    The other film, available as Lisa and the Devil - I was NOT lucky enough to find for four dollars in the video clearance bin. Too bad for me because it's spectacular. Each scene is intense due to Bava's direction. There is much use of reflected faces and close-ups of eyes. Emotions are caught by the camera without fail. I wish I could see this movie uncut so I could appreciate it on more than a scene by scene basis. The violence is more than memorable enough to please and most of the lines sound pretty cool. Even this messy version is worth watching if you have a taste for horror.
    7sunznc

    Vivid, gaudy, atmospheric, Gothic.

    Lisa and the Devil makes me think of Susperia. In fact, I think those sheer curtains with the appliqués that hang around the 4 poster bed were later used in Susperia. I've seen that film so many times I recognize those.

    Anyway, Lisa and the Devil is very low on dialog and big on atmosphere. Much like Susperia, we have the strange lighting, gaudy set pieces, beautiful sets and props, many rooms with fancy wainscoting and molding, and acting that is just slightly off. Dubbing that doesn't quite match up in a subtle way and eerie, dreamy music while the actors stare off into the distance or right into the lens of the camera.

    Dialog? Striped down to minimum. Story? Simple enough with a woman straying from her tourist group in a foreign city, wandering alone because she has heard some chimes. But what happens to her? She becomes ensconced in a surreal setting with people living in an old, Gothic mansion. But is it all real? Or is it all in her head? Are the murders really happening or did they happen many years ago?

    It's up to you to decide what the ending means. You'll probably enjoy the ride but don't expect anything too, too intense or deep here.
    reasonbran234

    deliciously atmospheric and just plain yummy

    i asked for "lisa and the devil" as a christmas present because I've always been a huge fan of dario argento, and it is common knowledge that he was in part inspired by the work of mario bava. i was not disappointed! like argento, bava has no concern for realism or complex character development and keeps it to the level of what it is, a horror film. it is hallucinatory, imaginative, intriguing, and also works as suspense, even if a little too campy for that genre. telly savalas does an excellent job as satan, and i loved how he enjoyed his trademark lollipop even during an italian horror film as though to say--"the devil loves ya, baby!" modern horror directors get everything wrong and make the mistake of thinking that meaningless action and excessive gore make an effective and memorable film, when nothing could be further from the truth. bava works with mystery and imagination, the two essential ingredients without which there can be no "horror" worthy of the name. of course, both the dialogue and behavior of the characters are ludicrous and laughably erratic, but you should come in expecting this from anyone who helped to inspire argento's film. "lisa and the devil" ranks up there with "suspiria" and "inferno", hands down. check it out.

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    Enredo

    Editar

    Você sabia?

    Editar
    • Curiosidades
      Leandro frequently having a lolly pop in his mouth was a trait added by Telly Savalas. Savalas had recently quit smoking and used the lolly pops as an alternative. The lolly pops would become a popular character trait on his American television series Kojak (1973) which started that same year.
    • Erros de gravação
      When butler knocks down doll's head, in the next shot it's not down and heads are arranged differently altogether.
    • Citações

      Sophia Lehar: I prefer ghosts to vampires, though. They're so much more human; they have a tradition to live up to. Somehow they manage to keep all the horror in without spilling any blood.

    • Versões alternativas
      To capitalize on the success of O Exorcista (1973), some new footage, featuring Robert Alda as a priest, was shot. It involved Lisa (Elke Sommer) being possessed by a demon. The original cut of Lisa e o Diabo (1973) was edited and used as flashback material to surround the possession theme. This resulting version was released in 1975 as "House of Exorcism."
    • Conexões
      Edited into Lisa e o Diabo (1975)
    • Trilhas sonoras
      Concerto of Aranjuez
      Composed by Joaquín Rodrigo (as Rodrigo)

      Directed by Paul Mauriat

      Philips record L 6444'504

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    Perguntas frequentes16

    • How long is Lisa and the Devil?Fornecido pela Alexa

    Detalhes

    Editar
    • Data de lançamento
      • 8 de dezembro de 1976 (Suécia)
    • Países de origem
      • Itália
      • Alemanha Ocidental
      • Espanha
    • Idioma
      • Italiano
    • Também conhecido como
      • Lisa and the Devil
    • Locações de filme
      • Toledo, Castilla-La Mancha, Espanha
    • Empresas de produção
      • Leone International
      • Euro America Produzioni Cinematografiche
      • Roxy Film
    • Consulte mais créditos da empresa na IMDbPro

    Bilheteria

    Editar
    • Orçamento
      • US$ 1.000.000 (estimativa)
    Veja informações detalhadas da bilheteria no IMDbPro

    Especificações técnicas

    Editar
    • Tempo de duração
      • 1 h 35 min(95 min)
    • Mixagem de som
      • Mono
    • Proporção
      • 1.85 : 1

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