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IMDbPro

Wicked, Wicked

  • 1973
  • PG
  • 1 h 35 min
AVALIAÇÃO DA IMDb
5,4/10
787
SUA AVALIAÇÃO
Tiffany Bolling and Randolph Roberts in Wicked, Wicked (1973)
As a handyman at a seacoast hotel, Randolph Roberts wears a monster mask while he kills and dismembers women with blond hair.
Reproduzir trailer3:14
1 vídeo
60 fotos
Terror slasherHorrorMistérioSuspense

Adicionar um enredo no seu idiomaSomeone murders and dismembers a series of blonde women; unique in that it is shot entirely in the early 1970's cinema gimmick DUO-VISION (split screen).Someone murders and dismembers a series of blonde women; unique in that it is shot entirely in the early 1970's cinema gimmick DUO-VISION (split screen).Someone murders and dismembers a series of blonde women; unique in that it is shot entirely in the early 1970's cinema gimmick DUO-VISION (split screen).

  • Direção
    • Richard L. Bare
  • Roteirista
    • Richard L. Bare
  • Artistas
    • David Bailey
    • Tiffany Bolling
    • Randolph Roberts
  • Veja as informações de produção no IMDbPro
  • AVALIAÇÃO DA IMDb
    5,4/10
    787
    SUA AVALIAÇÃO
    • Direção
      • Richard L. Bare
    • Roteirista
      • Richard L. Bare
    • Artistas
      • David Bailey
      • Tiffany Bolling
      • Randolph Roberts
    • 30Avaliações de usuários
    • 27Avaliações da crítica
  • Veja as informações de produção no IMDbPro
  • Vídeos1

    Trailer
    Trailer 3:14
    Trailer

    Fotos60

    Ver pôster
    Ver pôster
    Ver pôster
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    + 56
    Ver pôster

    Elenco principal18

    Editar
    David Bailey
    David Bailey
    • Rick Stewart
    Tiffany Bolling
    Tiffany Bolling
    • Lisa James
    Randolph Roberts
    Randolph Roberts
    • Jason Gant
    Scott Brady
    Scott Brady
    • Police Sgt. Ramsey
    Edd Byrnes
    Edd Byrnes
    • Henry Peter 'Hank' Lassiter
    Diane McBain
    Diane McBain
    • Dolores Hamilton
    Roger Bowen
    Roger Bowen
    • Simmons, Hotel Manager
    Madeleine Sherwood
    Madeleine Sherwood
    • Lenore Karadyne
    Stefanianna Christopherson
    Stefanianna Christopherson
    • Genny
    • (as Indira Danks)
    Arthur O'Connell
    Arthur O'Connell
    • Mr. Fenley, Hotel Engineer
    Jack Knight
    Jack Knight
    • Bill Broderick
    Patsy Garrett
    • Mrs. Griswald - Housekeeper
    Robert Nichols
    Robert Nichols
    • Fred, Day Clerk
    Kirk Bates
    • Owen Williams
    • (as Kirk Bates and The Leaves of Grass)
    Maryesther Denver
    • Adele Moffett - Organist
    Ian Abercrombie
    Ian Abercrombie
    • Eddie, Room Service Waiter
    • (não creditado)
    Hal K. Dawson
    • Grandpa Blake
    • (não creditado)
    Patrick Wright
    Patrick Wright
    • Abusive Stepfather
    • (não creditado)
    • Direção
      • Richard L. Bare
    • Roteirista
      • Richard L. Bare
    • Elenco e equipe completos
    • Produção, bilheteria e muito mais no IMDbPro

    Avaliações de usuários30

    5,4787
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    10

    Avaliações em destaque

    7preppy-3

    Silly but not bad

    Movie takes place at a huge seaside hotel in California. In it handyman Jason (Randolph Roberts) attacks and kills blonde women. He then hides the bodies so they just go missing. The hotel has a security man searching for the people and beautiful Lisa James (Tiffany Bolling) is hired to sing there. She has black hair...but decides to wear a blonde wig which has Jason after her.

    This was the first (and last) film shot in "Duo Vision"--basically a split screen used in 99.9% of the film (there are a few shots in the film not using it). It actually works pretty good sometimes. You see a person on one side of the screen and see what he's thinking of on the other. Still, it's just basically a gimmick to sell the film (it didn't work). The story itself is familiar and the killings are pretty non-bloody (this has a PG rating), but the acting itself is actually not half bad and the film kept my interest. Not a camp classic by any means but an OK film with a well-used split screen process. I give this a 7.
    4lynch-dennis-1

    What's wrong with the sound??

    With the split screen there are two stories being told with 2 soundtracks. Frequently, the dialogue side is turned down so that it can't be heard over sounds from the other half. It's extremely annoying and reduces any interest in watching the rest of the film.

    Was it that poorly mixed for theaters, too, or was this just a bad copy on TCM?

    I was also amused by the organist playing some random mood music. We see the sheet music for the piano score for the 1925 PHANTOM OF THE OPERA, but the notes visible in some shots are not the ones being played. It may be legit Phantom music, but who knows for sure?

    Other reviewers here have sufficiently summarized the rest of the film.
    8Casey-52

    Quite a gimmick, but a forgettable film

    OK, if you've heard anything about this movie, it's that the entire thing is in split-screen. 1970 was in the period when movie gimmicks were dying; William Castle had turned to producing with "Rosemary's Baby" and given up directing, 3-D was dead, and the audience participation concept was eradicated. "Wicked Wicked" must have been a nice return to the selling gimmick. Only this time, you didn't get items as a gimmick (bloody axes, 3-D glasses, plastic coins, barf bags), the whole movie viewing experience was a gimmick. Unfortunately, the makers of the movie thought that the split-screen effects would make "Wicked Wicked" a great film. In fact, it's just the opposite.

    I have always loved the idea of split-screen techniques used in movies (employed heartily by Brian dePalma for "Carrie", "Dressed to Kill", and others) and jumped at the chance of seeing this when I heard of the gimmick. Here's the final verdict: fun to watch, just don't take it seriously. The plot is flimsy (a murderer is stalking a hotel) and most of the acting horrible. But how can a movie go wrong with Tiffany Bolling in the cast? Beautiful blonde Tiffany Bolling spends half the movie in a black wig, the other with her gorgeous blond locks playing a lounge singer stalked by the killer. This woman steals the show, just like she does in "Kingdom of the Spiders" and "The Candy Snatchers". The music is atmospheric and makes for great background music, but is finally pushed to the point of head-splitting annoyance!

    If you enjoy split-screen and Tiffany Bolling, watch the movie. If not, you will probably find the whole thing tedious (which most of it is) and a cheap attempt to win an audience. Doesn't work a horror film, but will definitely win a larger cult if MGM just releases this on video (likewise with "Night of the Lepus" and "Private Parts"!).
    7Coventry

    Hello? Where's the fan-base?

    What I find so great about the horror genre is that, even though I've seen over 2500 films of different sub genres and numerous countries already, I keep stumbling upon crazy stuff nobody ever heard about. Even more incomprehensible – especially in the case of "Wicked Wicked" - is how come these movies are still so obscure and unloved? Now this certainly isn't a masterpiece of film-making, but nevertheless I would have expected a movie with such a peculiar gimmick to have some sort of loyal fan-base or at least enjoy some recognition at horror internet forums. Well, apparently not. "Wicked Wicked" remains underrated to this date, but hopefully a proper DVD-release will change that one day sooner or later. Make no mistake, however, the plot of this film is extremely rudimentary and straightforward all in favor of putting the emphasis entirely on the "Duo-Vision" gimmick. This is just a fancy term to say that the split-screen effect lasts throughout whole film. Unlike I feared, this gimmick isn't as irritating as I thought it would be, but nevertheless it's only truly creative in a handful of situations.

    There are a couple of highly disturbing murders taking place in a fancy Californian seaside hotel. Beautiful blond women are brutally stabbed by a maniacal culprit and their bodies dumped around the hotel. Former policeman turned security agent is asked to investigate discretely, but the bodies keep piling up at a fast pace. The case gets more personal when his beautiful blond ex-wife arrives at the hotel to put up a singing show.

    I don't really know why I bother to keep the killer's identity secret and even somewhat mysterious, because the film itself certainly doesn't. The culprit takes off his mask and exposes his face after the second murder already; probably to illustrate once more that the whodunit aspect of the film really wasn't the producers' main priority. And yet, despite this premature and regrettable revelation, there are multiple tiny plot components that are interesting and worth analyzing. For example, the sub plot about the hotel owner's reluctance to inform the police and his attempts to avoid negative publicity predate the similar "Jaws" plot with nearly two whole years. There's also a bizarre but engaging and original resemblance between this film's main characters and the ones from Gaston Leroux' immortal horror tale "The Phantom of the Opera". There's a pretty imaginative, yet typically rancid 70's and massively perverted twist regarding the culprit's motives to kill blond women near the end (which I really loved) and there's a neat supportive role for Spaghetti western regular Edd Byrnes as a moonlighting lifeguard. If you ever have the opportunity to watch "Wicked, Wicked" – and apparently it's occasionally programmed on TCM – please do so! It's far from being a great film, but it's definitely unique.
    7halcyon2000

    It's not that bad.....

    Wicked, Wicked is unique in that it is shot entirely in DUO-VISION (a gimmick of early 1970's cimena). Brian DePalma used this technique with great success in both Carrie and Phantom of the Paradise. The problem here is that Richard Bare is no Brian DePalma and the story is completely idiotic.

    the one saving grace of this film is the moment at which the duo-vision becomes "uni-vision" during the climactic moment of the story. You have to see it to appreciate the greatness of that one shot. Perhaps the director came up with that idea and then made a whole story around it?

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    Interesses relacionados

    Roger Jackson in Pânico (1996)
    Terror slasher
    Mia Farrow in O Bebê de Rosemary (1968)
    Horror
    Jack Nicholson and Faye Dunaway in Chinatown (1974)
    Mistério
    Cho Yeo-jeong in Parasita (2019)
    Suspense

    Enredo

    Editar

    Você sabia?

    Editar
    • Curiosidades
      The script for the film was unusual. It was typed sideways on legal-sized paper, with each side of the page corresponding to what happens on each side of the split-screen. Writer Richard L. Bare had trouble finding a typewriter with a wide enough carriage to accommodate the longer paper.
    • Erros de gravação
      As Delores Hamilton looks around the hotel lobby, her head moves slightly on the right side of the split-screen but doesn't on the left.
    • Citações

      Rick Stewart: We don't need any beach freaks makin' out with the guests!

    • Versões alternativas
      Warner Archive release makes several crude cuts for violence, causing jump cuts and a skipping soundtrack. -The first attack on a hotel guest is shorter. -The scene of a severed arm falling from a room service cart is removed; we only see a hand begin to slide out. -When the killer operates a guillotine, the Archive version cuts directly from the descending blade to the aftermath - there isn't even an impact sound! -The scene of a head falling off the jostled body of a victim has been removed. -A body impaled on a spiked fence been reduced from a zoom-closeup and a wide shot to about 10 frames of the wide shot.
    • Conexões
      Featured in 42nd Street Forever, Volume 1 (2005)
    • Trilhas sonoras
      I'll Be Myself
      Music by Philip Springer

      Lyrics by Irwin Levine

      Performed by Tiffany Bolling

    Principais escolhas

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    Perguntas frequentes14

    • How long is Wicked, Wicked?Fornecido pela Alexa

    Detalhes

    Editar
    • Data de lançamento
      • 15 de junho de 1973 (Estados Unidos da América)
    • País de origem
      • Estados Unidos da América
    • Idioma
      • Inglês
    • Também conhecido como
      • The Squirrel
    • Locações de filme
      • Hotel del Coronado - 1500 Orange Avenue, Coronado, Califórnia, EUA
    • Empresa de produção
      • United National Productions
    • Consulte mais créditos da empresa na IMDbPro

    Especificações técnicas

    Editar
    • Tempo de duração
      • 1 h 35 min(95 min)
    • Mixagem de som
      • Stereo
    • Proporção
      • 2.65 : 1

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