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In 19th century Holland, a professor of fine arts and an unlicensed surgeon run a secret lab where the professor's ill daughter receives blood-transfusions from kidnapped female victims who ... Read allIn 19th century Holland, a professor of fine arts and an unlicensed surgeon run a secret lab where the professor's ill daughter receives blood-transfusions from kidnapped female victims who posthumously become macabre art.In 19th century Holland, a professor of fine arts and an unlicensed surgeon run a secret lab where the professor's ill daughter receives blood-transfusions from kidnapped female victims who posthumously become macabre art.
Dany Carrel
- Liselotte Kornheim
- (as Danny Carrell)
Herbert A.E. Böhme
- Il professore Gregorius Wahl
- (as Herbert Boehme)
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Most people who write about the 1960 French-Italian coproduction "Mill of the Stone Women" can't seem to resist comparing it, and quite rightly, to "House of Wax" (1953) and "Eyes Without a Face" (1959); I guess I've just done so myself! But "Mill" has a lot more to offer than just a mashup of those two great pictures. In it, handsome Pierre Brice plays Hans van Harnim, a writer in what appears to be late 19th century Holland, who goes to the windmill home of one Prof. Wahl to do a story on his unusual abode and the professor/sculptor's carousel collection of grotesque female statues. What follows, for van Harnim, is quite the nightmarish experience, as he discovers the secrets of both this statuary and Wahl's mysterious daughter, Elfy. While not nearly as classic or seminal as two other horror films that premiered that year--Mario Bava's "Black Sunday" and Uncle Alfie's "Psycho" (then again, how many pictures are?)--"Mill" still manages to provide some shudders. The film begins quite eerily, and its unusual backdrop, that of the misty canal district in Holland's countryside, is a unique one for a horror film. An hallucinatory freakout sequence that transpires roughly halfway in is truly disorienting, before the picture turns to more conventional, albeit still quite fun, mad-scientist fare. The film also gives us handsome sets, nicely muted colors, interesting direction by Giorgio Ferroni, and perhaps the most inspired use of a creepy windmill since Uncle Alfie's "Foreign Correspondent" (1940). And almost stealing the show, in her role as Elfy, is Scilla Gabel, a gorgeous actress with Sophia Loren-type looks and the otherworldly air of the young Barbara Steele. In all, a very fine horror outing, nicely presented on this DVD from the good folks at Mondo Macabro, and with loads of fine extras, to boot.
Neatly expressionistic mood piece about a mad scientist/sculptor trying to keep his afflicted daughter from turning to stone by transfusing her with the blood of local babes. The storyline (a favorite of European horror films - THE AWFUL DR. ORLOF and EYES WITHOUT A FACE also had to do with a mad scientist trying to save a deformed daughter at the expense of anyone within reach) has holes thick enough to bowl a woman's severed head through, but the film is great on atmosphere and ambiance. Completed without credit by Mario Bava after director Giorgio Ferroni began it, the Mondo Macabro DVD version includes the uncut French edition (massacred in bad US VHS prints till now). This film was one of two that reportedly started the Eurohorror boom of the '60s and '70s, of which Bava was a primary maestro.
Beautifully directed and photographed European horror film that owes a debt to Franju's EYES WITHOUT A FACE.
An evocative, creepy score by Carlo Innocenzi helps director Giorgio Ferroni conjure a work of great atmosphere and intense drama.
As in EYES and Franco's ORLOFF, the subject is a fanatic obsessed with preserving the life of a dearly departed member of his family -- in this case, his daughter Elfi, played by the achingly beautiful and sensual Scilla Gabel.
The setting, a windmill outside Amsterdam, is a superb arena for the fantastic goings-on that provide frisson upon frisson of wonder and dread. The "stone women" of the title are frightening, fascinating figures of fear and are richly employed by Ferroni who demonstrates an acute talent for fantasy.
The superb opening sequence establishes a mood that never falters, and the exciting finale, with the Stone Women ablaze, is pure magic.
A handsomely produced gem.
An evocative, creepy score by Carlo Innocenzi helps director Giorgio Ferroni conjure a work of great atmosphere and intense drama.
As in EYES and Franco's ORLOFF, the subject is a fanatic obsessed with preserving the life of a dearly departed member of his family -- in this case, his daughter Elfi, played by the achingly beautiful and sensual Scilla Gabel.
The setting, a windmill outside Amsterdam, is a superb arena for the fantastic goings-on that provide frisson upon frisson of wonder and dread. The "stone women" of the title are frightening, fascinating figures of fear and are richly employed by Ferroni who demonstrates an acute talent for fantasy.
The superb opening sequence establishes a mood that never falters, and the exciting finale, with the Stone Women ablaze, is pure magic.
A handsomely produced gem.
Vintage and cult Italian movie , an offbeat and creepy story whose important status it retains today . It deals with a sculpture-studying art student called Hans (Pierre Brice) who encounters in Holland a mysterious mill , and inside a carousel , a type of sinister wax museum which showcases amazing figures . There Hans meets the professor's attractive and seductive daughter (Scilla Gabel) , and starts feeling passion for her in spite of his real love for Lisa Lotta (Dany Carrell) . Little by little he becomes aware of the strange experiments being conducted by a deranged mad doctor (Herbert Böhme) and his nefarious helper (Wolfgang Preiss) . UNBELIEVABLE! A Beautiful Girl Becomes a Petrified Monster! In Blazing Technicolor . Chilling : it will scare your pants off . Monstrous : have you been petrified lately ? . Grisly : blood is red in Technicolor . Frightening and wonderful exciting ¡ . Why do warm-blooded beauties suddenly turn to stone?
This is an outlandish chiller story with grisly horror , genuine thrills and shocks . This was reportedly Giorgio Ferroni's one of the biggest success and being well written by notorious writers/filmmakers as Remigio Del Grosso , Ugo Liberatore , Giorgio Stegani and Giorgio Ferroni himself , though taking parts here and there of other films . The eerie story contains bit good fun with killings , chilling interpretations , relentless horror and thrilling events . The chiller version of the 50s films packs scary chills and terrifying deaths . Concerning a strange carousel with beautiful babes rather than horses , and the starring soon finds out that the statues contain shocking secrets . The film blends ¨Roger Corman's Edgar Allan Poe¨ films , ¨Hammer¨ style , and ¨Andre De Toth's House of wax¨ . The Carousel figures are the real stars of this production , being alrightly realized . Some scenes are clumsily shot but the movie has some good moments here and there , the illogical parts in the plot are more than compensated for the excitement provided by the creepy wax models , eerie killings and many other things . This one still has the power to give the audience the creeps , thanks to attractive characters nicely played by protagonists as Pierre Brice -the unforgettable Winnetou- as Hans who despite his true love for his girlfriend Dany Carrell he falls with a mysterious woman : the always gorgeous Scilla Gabel , as well as Wolfgang Preiss who starred several wartime films playing Nazis , Liana Orfei who performed a lot of Peplum and the unknown Herbert A.E. Böhme .
It packs a rousing and suspenseful original music by Carlos Innocenzi . Colorful as well as glimmer cinematography with brilliant colors by Ludovico Pavoni . This creepy and gory horror movie is also titled : ¨Mulino delle donne di pietra¨ , or ¨Horror of the stone women¨ , ¨Drops of blood¨ and was professionally directed by Giorgio Ferroni . He was an expert on Peplum and Western . As he directed ¨Pompei (1936)¨, ¨The war of Troy¨ with Steve Reeves ,¨Hercules against Molock¨ , ¨Il Colosso Di Roma¨ with Gordon Scott and ¨Lion of Tebas¨ (1964) . He also directed Western as "Fort Yuma Gold" , ¨Wanted¨ , "Blood for a Silver Dollar" , and Wartime genre as ¨Battle of El Alamein¨ and Terror in acceptable results , such as : ¨Night of the Devils" and ¨ Mill of the stone woman". Rating . 7/10 . Decent terror movie .
This is an outlandish chiller story with grisly horror , genuine thrills and shocks . This was reportedly Giorgio Ferroni's one of the biggest success and being well written by notorious writers/filmmakers as Remigio Del Grosso , Ugo Liberatore , Giorgio Stegani and Giorgio Ferroni himself , though taking parts here and there of other films . The eerie story contains bit good fun with killings , chilling interpretations , relentless horror and thrilling events . The chiller version of the 50s films packs scary chills and terrifying deaths . Concerning a strange carousel with beautiful babes rather than horses , and the starring soon finds out that the statues contain shocking secrets . The film blends ¨Roger Corman's Edgar Allan Poe¨ films , ¨Hammer¨ style , and ¨Andre De Toth's House of wax¨ . The Carousel figures are the real stars of this production , being alrightly realized . Some scenes are clumsily shot but the movie has some good moments here and there , the illogical parts in the plot are more than compensated for the excitement provided by the creepy wax models , eerie killings and many other things . This one still has the power to give the audience the creeps , thanks to attractive characters nicely played by protagonists as Pierre Brice -the unforgettable Winnetou- as Hans who despite his true love for his girlfriend Dany Carrell he falls with a mysterious woman : the always gorgeous Scilla Gabel , as well as Wolfgang Preiss who starred several wartime films playing Nazis , Liana Orfei who performed a lot of Peplum and the unknown Herbert A.E. Böhme .
It packs a rousing and suspenseful original music by Carlos Innocenzi . Colorful as well as glimmer cinematography with brilliant colors by Ludovico Pavoni . This creepy and gory horror movie is also titled : ¨Mulino delle donne di pietra¨ , or ¨Horror of the stone women¨ , ¨Drops of blood¨ and was professionally directed by Giorgio Ferroni . He was an expert on Peplum and Western . As he directed ¨Pompei (1936)¨, ¨The war of Troy¨ with Steve Reeves ,¨Hercules against Molock¨ , ¨Il Colosso Di Roma¨ with Gordon Scott and ¨Lion of Tebas¨ (1964) . He also directed Western as "Fort Yuma Gold" , ¨Wanted¨ , "Blood for a Silver Dollar" , and Wartime genre as ¨Battle of El Alamein¨ and Terror in acceptable results , such as : ¨Night of the Devils" and ¨ Mill of the stone woman". Rating . 7/10 . Decent terror movie .
Based on a Flemish short story by Pieter Van Weigen, Mill of the Stone Women is an excellent slice of Eurocult Gothic horror. The film is along the same lines as films by Mario Bava; most notably Black Sunday and Kill Baby Kill, and just like the aforementioned masterpieces; bathes in its own atmosphere and most of the horror is drawn from that. Horror is a genre that people often mistake for not having many ideas, but films like this prove otherwise. Here, we have a story that couldn't be further away from the 'norm' in horror, and on a technical level, Mill of the Stone Women is both inventive and influential. The macabre plot follows a young journalist named Hans who travels to Holland to write an article on the mysterious sculptor, who lives in a mill, that the locals have nicknamed "The Mill of the Stone Women". While there, he meets the Professor's beautiful daughter; but she's damaged goods, as she suffers from a sinister malady that means she has to remain within the mill. Is there something yet more morbid to this intriguing set up...?
The mill at the centre of the piece makes for an excellent location for this story to take place in. Old castles are a more common location for Gothic horror, so the fact that this one takes place in a mill again differentiates it from the norm, and is yet another example of the imagination behind the story. The colour scheme is largely quite drab, and to be honest, I'd have preferred either more striking colours or a black and white picture...as the in-between doesn't look good in my opinion. That's pretty much the only thing I don't like about this film in regards to the style, however. The plot moves slowly, but this means that the film has time to both build up it's plot and wallow in the atmosphere. One of the trademarks of Italian horror is a muddled plot and things that don't completely make sense; and this film adheres to that. There are several threads within the plot, and a number of them are left unexplained by the conclusion...which is a shame. Still, the final conclusion is fitting and at least it doesn't suffer from bad dubbing! Recommended.
The mill at the centre of the piece makes for an excellent location for this story to take place in. Old castles are a more common location for Gothic horror, so the fact that this one takes place in a mill again differentiates it from the norm, and is yet another example of the imagination behind the story. The colour scheme is largely quite drab, and to be honest, I'd have preferred either more striking colours or a black and white picture...as the in-between doesn't look good in my opinion. That's pretty much the only thing I don't like about this film in regards to the style, however. The plot moves slowly, but this means that the film has time to both build up it's plot and wallow in the atmosphere. One of the trademarks of Italian horror is a muddled plot and things that don't completely make sense; and this film adheres to that. There are several threads within the plot, and a number of them are left unexplained by the conclusion...which is a shame. Still, the final conclusion is fitting and at least it doesn't suffer from bad dubbing! Recommended.
Did you know
- TriviaThough the credits state that the film is based on a short story by Pieter van Weigen (from the book Flemish Tales), no such author exists.
- GoofsThough the credits state that the film is based on a short story by Pieter van Weigen (from the book Flemish Tales), no such author exists.
- Quotes
Opening Credits: From the short story of the same name in "Flemish Tales" by Pieter van Weigen
- Crazy creditsThough the credits state that the film is based on a short story by Pieter van Weigen {from the book "Flemish Tales"}, no such author, or book, exists.
- Alternate versionsDespite listing the runtime as 93 minutes, the U.S. Paragon Video Productions VHS has the edited 85 minute version of the film.
- ConnectionsReferenced in Xenes se xeni hora: 50 ellinikes tainies mystiriou kai fantasias (2009)
Details
- Release date
- Countries of origin
- Languages
- Also known as
- Le Moulin aux femmes de pierre
- Filming locations
- Production companies
- See more company credits at IMDbPro
- Runtime
- 1h 36m(96 min)
- Sound mix
- Aspect ratio
- 1.66 : 1
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