AVALIAÇÃO DA IMDb
6,9/10
2,8 mil
SUA AVALIAÇÃO
Adicionar um enredo no seu idiomaA district attorney and two inspectors discover that a girl's apparent suicide is linked to a teenage prostitution ring which employs a motorcycle-riding killer to tie up loose ends.A district attorney and two inspectors discover that a girl's apparent suicide is linked to a teenage prostitution ring which employs a motorcycle-riding killer to tie up loose ends.A district attorney and two inspectors discover that a girl's apparent suicide is linked to a teenage prostitution ring which employs a motorcycle-riding killer to tie up loose ends.
- Direção
- Roteiristas
- Artistas
Sherry Buchanan
- Silvia Polvesi
- (as Cheryl Lee Buchanan)
Avaliações em destaque
After an anonymous phone call, a teenage girl is found hanged in the attic of an old building in Lombardia and the police assume she committed suicide. The efficient Insp. Silvestri (Claudio Cassinelli) and the newcomer Asst. DA Vittoria Stori (Giovanna Ralli) assume the case and while checking the location, Insp. Silvestri sees a middle age man, Bruno Paglia (Franco Fabrizi), taking pictures of the place from a nearby building. The man is arrested and soon Insp. Silvestri learns that the 14-year-old victim, Silvia Polvesi (Cheryl Lee Buchanan), was part of a teenage prostitution ring, including the beloved daughter of Insp. Valentini (Mario Adorf). His further investigation with the Asst. DA Stori discover a tape where sexual encounters with important names in the Italian society are recorded. Meanwhile a motorcycle rider wearing black uses a cleaver to get rid of suspects and witnesses.
"La polizia chiede aiuto", a.k.a. "What Have They Done to Your Daughters?", is an excellent police story and one of the best Italian movies of the genre. The plot is surprisingly believable and with no flaws or tricks that are usual in giallos. Claudio Cassinelli and Giovanna Ralli have magnificent performances and the conclusion is realistic. My vote is eight.
Title (Brazil): "O Que Eles Fizeram a Suas Filhas?" ("What Have They Done to Your Daughters?")
"La polizia chiede aiuto", a.k.a. "What Have They Done to Your Daughters?", is an excellent police story and one of the best Italian movies of the genre. The plot is surprisingly believable and with no flaws or tricks that are usual in giallos. Claudio Cassinelli and Giovanna Ralli have magnificent performances and the conclusion is realistic. My vote is eight.
Title (Brazil): "O Que Eles Fizeram a Suas Filhas?" ("What Have They Done to Your Daughters?")
The police ask for help: Giallo classic with Giovanna Ralli and Mario Adorf
That's not nice! The very young Silvia Polesi (SherryBuchanan) hanged herself in an attic where she always met her boyfriend for rendezvous. Since it is apparently a suicide, Inspector Valentini (really good: EUROPEAN FILM AWARD nominee Mario Adorf, who received a nomination for ROSSINI by Helmut DIETL in 1997) and the second public prosecutor Vittoria Stori (Giovanna Ralli) are responsible for the case. By chance, however, it turns out that a shady neighbor (Franco Fabrizi) has repeatedly taken photos of the girl with various male acquaintances. Suddenly everything points to murder. Commissario Silvestri (Claudio Cassinelli) is now in charge. At some point, Silvia's overly carefree parents (Marina Berti and Hitchcock star Farley Granger) return to Rome. The inspector finds out that Silvia was probably part of a prostitution ring for very young girls. What does her psychotherapist Professor Beltrame (Steffen Zacharias) have to do with it? And suddenly the murder really starts: a motorcyclist equipped with a cleaver is on the way. The whole thing comes to a head even more when it becomes clear that Valentini's underage daughter is also involved in the prostitution ring...
Things are quite tough here, with hands sometimes being abused with a cleaver. On the other hand, the issue of youth prostitution is dealt with surprisingly sensitively. As a result, this film by Massimo Dallamano (1917-1976) was able to set a style for future Gialli and Poliziotteschi, who then worked on the subject in a more sensational way. And then there is a really good female role for Giovanna Ralli (Era notte a Roma), which wasn't necessarily the norm in Italian genre films of the 1970s.
This skilful mix of Giallo and Poliziottesco is a must-see for any fan of Italian genre cinema!
That's not nice! The very young Silvia Polesi (SherryBuchanan) hanged herself in an attic where she always met her boyfriend for rendezvous. Since it is apparently a suicide, Inspector Valentini (really good: EUROPEAN FILM AWARD nominee Mario Adorf, who received a nomination for ROSSINI by Helmut DIETL in 1997) and the second public prosecutor Vittoria Stori (Giovanna Ralli) are responsible for the case. By chance, however, it turns out that a shady neighbor (Franco Fabrizi) has repeatedly taken photos of the girl with various male acquaintances. Suddenly everything points to murder. Commissario Silvestri (Claudio Cassinelli) is now in charge. At some point, Silvia's overly carefree parents (Marina Berti and Hitchcock star Farley Granger) return to Rome. The inspector finds out that Silvia was probably part of a prostitution ring for very young girls. What does her psychotherapist Professor Beltrame (Steffen Zacharias) have to do with it? And suddenly the murder really starts: a motorcyclist equipped with a cleaver is on the way. The whole thing comes to a head even more when it becomes clear that Valentini's underage daughter is also involved in the prostitution ring...
Things are quite tough here, with hands sometimes being abused with a cleaver. On the other hand, the issue of youth prostitution is dealt with surprisingly sensitively. As a result, this film by Massimo Dallamano (1917-1976) was able to set a style for future Gialli and Poliziotteschi, who then worked on the subject in a more sensational way. And then there is a really good female role for Giovanna Ralli (Era notte a Roma), which wasn't necessarily the norm in Italian genre films of the 1970s.
This skilful mix of Giallo and Poliziottesco is a must-see for any fan of Italian genre cinema!
This movie's pretty blunt and straight to the point, so I can keep it brief.
What Have They Done to Your Daughters? Is an Italian crime/horror movie that follows a group of characters trying to catch a serial killer who's targeting teenage girls. It's the kind of premise that's been done to death, but it's the way it's done here that's interesting. It's fast-paced, surprisingly well-shot, memorably bloody, and also features some great music. In fact, it's the music that cancels out the bad dubbing, really, because while most Italian movies from this time don't have very good dubbing, this one kind of goes one step beyond, because it's really bad at points.
I can see these crime/horror/thriller movies from Italy in the 1970s being the next genre I hyper-fixate on, as I've done with kaiju movies, samurai movies, and martial arts movies. There's something really interesting about them (I'd call them Giallo movies, but I'm not entirely sure yet whether this particular movie counts as Giallo).
So overall, What Have They Done to Your Daughters? Isn't anything new when it comes to its story or characters, and it's kind of sleazy in parts, but it's well-made and consistently engaging, making it a pleasant surprise to watch, because I wasn't expecting this to be of a moderately high quality.
What Have They Done to Your Daughters? Is an Italian crime/horror movie that follows a group of characters trying to catch a serial killer who's targeting teenage girls. It's the kind of premise that's been done to death, but it's the way it's done here that's interesting. It's fast-paced, surprisingly well-shot, memorably bloody, and also features some great music. In fact, it's the music that cancels out the bad dubbing, really, because while most Italian movies from this time don't have very good dubbing, this one kind of goes one step beyond, because it's really bad at points.
I can see these crime/horror/thriller movies from Italy in the 1970s being the next genre I hyper-fixate on, as I've done with kaiju movies, samurai movies, and martial arts movies. There's something really interesting about them (I'd call them Giallo movies, but I'm not entirely sure yet whether this particular movie counts as Giallo).
So overall, What Have They Done to Your Daughters? Isn't anything new when it comes to its story or characters, and it's kind of sleazy in parts, but it's well-made and consistently engaging, making it a pleasant surprise to watch, because I wasn't expecting this to be of a moderately high quality.
From the director of the excellent what have you done to Solange, Massimo Dallamano, here is a strange Italian giallo, more a police procedural (an a really lurid tale, a ring of teens used as prostitutes by people in very high places - that was the time, in Italy, when several directors and scripwriters tried their hands on very hot subjects, like this one) than an Argentian thriller (but it is scary enough in a few places and also very gory). It starts with the false suicide of a very young girl, hanged nude under a roof and then proceeds with a lot of cars and bikes chases (the killer is always covered by a motorcycle helmet until the very end - it is possible that the director of Night School took from here the idea of the killer masked with an helmet), almost always running without pauses. Tense and scary enough, good almost till the end (a lot too Dillenger for my tastes).
Second in Dallamano's schoolgirls-getting-killed trilogy, it's not as good as Who's Next? (Solange) but not bad in its own right. The killer is someone who rides a motorino (hey, it is Italy!) and never takes off his/her riding helmet, ala Magnum Force, the 2nd Dirty Harry film. This one's more exciting than scary, as the police hunt down this maniac. He's one of the cooler villains in film history though, because unlike the traditional drag-ass killer, this guy never speaks and just RUNS at you with a machete. He really SPRINTS at top speed, which is actually very scary, especially to a jaded horror buff used to the Michael Myers/Jason/zombie method of ambling on over to their victims, who usually have to trip in order to be caught. And there's one scene involving a light switch that will make you jump out of your undies. Stelvio Cipriani's score is again top-notch (he later reused part of it for Tentacles), the dubbing tolerable.
Você sabia?
- CuriosidadesFarley Granger's voice was dubbed by another actor in the English-language version.
- Erros de gravaçãoIn the scene when Cassinelli and Ralli are looking at a strip of film footage, they repeatedly stop the projector to pause on a single frame. However, the shadow of the projector plainly reveals that it is still rolling.
- Citações
Sgt. Giardina: [after speaking with Talenti's wife] I'll tell you one thing, I don't blame Talenti for leaving that... scary!
- Cenas durante ou pós-créditosImmediately after opening credits: "Every day we read or hear about brutal things that happen and which appear to have no logical explanation. Only a faithful reconstruction of such incidents can bring to light the dramatic and disturbing truth behind them."
- ConexõesFeatured in Innocence Lost (2015)
- Trilhas sonorasLa polizia sta a guardare
from Resgate (1973) (uncredited)
Written by Stelvio Cipriani
Performed by Stelvio Cipriani
Courtesy of IDM Music o/b/o Bixio Music Group
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- How long is What Have They Done to Your Daughters??Fornecido pela Alexa
Detalhes
- Data de lançamento
- País de origem
- Idioma
- Também conhecido como
- What Have They Done to Your Daughters?
- Locações de filme
- Manerba del Garda, Lombardia, Itália(segment)
- Empresa de produção
- Consulte mais créditos da empresa na IMDbPro
- Tempo de duração
- 1 h 31 min(91 min)
- Mixagem de som
- Proporção
- 2.35 : 1
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