When an unhinged surgeon happens across a young woman with her face beaten beyond recognition, he sees an opportunity to put his trusty scalpel to use - hatching a plan to "reconstruct" her ... Read allWhen an unhinged surgeon happens across a young woman with her face beaten beyond recognition, he sees an opportunity to put his trusty scalpel to use - hatching a plan to "reconstruct" her face in the image of his missing daughter.When an unhinged surgeon happens across a young woman with her face beaten beyond recognition, he sees an opportunity to put his trusty scalpel to use - hatching a plan to "reconstruct" her face in the image of his missing daughter.
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10Carrigon
This movie has a great plot. It's fast paced and fun. And it's full of surprises. There's lots of southern flavor here, even a funeral with a jazz band playing and lots of people actually dancing at it. This movie is a classic. It's best to see only the uncut version.
The topless stripper (Judith Chapman or a body double?) who gets her face bashed in at the start of the movie looks great topless from the shoulders down. Later, Judith Chapman gets chased through the woods in a hip-hugging red bikini. This is one of my favorite bikini scenes!
A murderous surgeon (Robert Lansing) concots a twisted scheme to win his missing daughters inheritance money, by transfroming a Jane Doe (Judith Chapman) into her double. Twists within twists make the rather convoluted plot entertaining. Lansing's character is a real creep, and Chapman who plays both the daughter and Jane is superb. Over all this movie is a fun little Hitchcock wannabe that amuses till the closing credits.
Interesting that imdb has this under the initial title and not the one it seems to be better known for (Scalpel). You'll still find it easily with the title it is marketed (by Arrow for example) and it is a point that gets talked about in the extras of that release too.
Talking about the Arrow release, it is amazing that the original DOP was not just available but went above and beyond to make sure anyone who wants to watch this gets the closest to what he had in mind back when they made the movie! Kudos to him and Arrow for allowing him that (also putting their own version on the disc for anyone to be able to compare and decide which to watch).
But enough about technicalities (although I would argue more than important for the enjoyment), the movie itself is also quite a find. There are always curiosities in the horror world. Movies you may not have heard about, that do deserve to be watched though. This is one of them. It may have notions of other movies (like Eyes without a Face, a classic itself), but that does not take anything away from the movie or the lead performances! Rabid which was released the same year took a similar theme to a different extreme. Both movies are more than fine.
So if you are into horror and like to be scared, I can recommend this highly .. especially when it looks so good as it does ...
Talking about the Arrow release, it is amazing that the original DOP was not just available but went above and beyond to make sure anyone who wants to watch this gets the closest to what he had in mind back when they made the movie! Kudos to him and Arrow for allowing him that (also putting their own version on the disc for anyone to be able to compare and decide which to watch).
But enough about technicalities (although I would argue more than important for the enjoyment), the movie itself is also quite a find. There are always curiosities in the horror world. Movies you may not have heard about, that do deserve to be watched though. This is one of them. It may have notions of other movies (like Eyes without a Face, a classic itself), but that does not take anything away from the movie or the lead performances! Rabid which was released the same year took a similar theme to a different extreme. Both movies are more than fine.
So if you are into horror and like to be scared, I can recommend this highly .. especially when it looks so good as it does ...
First, there was Vertigo...then, there was Eyes Without A Face...and now, there is Scalpel...
A plastic surgeon has become estranged from his daughter, after murdering his wife, and his daughter's long time boyfriend.
By his own admission, he does the devil's work...changing the ugly, maimed, and deformed, into the beautiful.
Though, clearly...he indulges in more gruesome aspects of the job.
The motives behind his actions are to secure his father's fortune.
As he knows his father had written him out of his will and left everything to his daughter.
Thus, he needs to keep her close, so that he could cash in on the inheritance he feels is rightfully his. . But this only acts to push her away.
So, having lost his daughter, when his father dies, he must come up with a new plan.
Which comes to fruition when he finds a battered stripper hobbling down the street.
Her face has been destroyed...so he recreates it in the likeness of his daughter.
Planning to use the woman, as his daughter's doppelganger, in order to trick his father's estate into handing over the money.
Little did he suspect, though, that his daughter would discover his plot...and return to try and foil it.
In a twist of fate, the two women start to work together, figuring he would resort to try and eliminate one of them.
Leaving them with only one option.
To fashion a scheme of their own...and turn the tables on him...
When you sell your soul to the devil...there's always a price to pay...and the time to pay it always comes before you think it will.
Just ask the not-so-good doctor...he's living proof.
Because he's now trapped in one hell of a bad trip...from which he'll never escape.
As the two women become the beneficiaries of everything he so desired to possess.
Such being the cost of playing games with the devil, on his terms.
Judith Chapman does an excellent job in both roles as Heather (his daughter) and Jane (the stripper).
And despite it's budget, VHS-quality format...the film is actually much better than one would suspect.
With a storyline that takes inspiration from, the aforementioned films, and then combining that with the plot from De Palma's Sisters.
Though all with an air of originality.
The whole thing was shot in Atlanta and Covington, Georgia...incorporating lots of beautiful scenery, and some great locations.
Exceeding all expectations I had going in.
It's definitely worth a watch.
7 out of 10.
A plastic surgeon has become estranged from his daughter, after murdering his wife, and his daughter's long time boyfriend.
By his own admission, he does the devil's work...changing the ugly, maimed, and deformed, into the beautiful.
Though, clearly...he indulges in more gruesome aspects of the job.
The motives behind his actions are to secure his father's fortune.
As he knows his father had written him out of his will and left everything to his daughter.
Thus, he needs to keep her close, so that he could cash in on the inheritance he feels is rightfully his. . But this only acts to push her away.
So, having lost his daughter, when his father dies, he must come up with a new plan.
Which comes to fruition when he finds a battered stripper hobbling down the street.
Her face has been destroyed...so he recreates it in the likeness of his daughter.
Planning to use the woman, as his daughter's doppelganger, in order to trick his father's estate into handing over the money.
Little did he suspect, though, that his daughter would discover his plot...and return to try and foil it.
In a twist of fate, the two women start to work together, figuring he would resort to try and eliminate one of them.
Leaving them with only one option.
To fashion a scheme of their own...and turn the tables on him...
When you sell your soul to the devil...there's always a price to pay...and the time to pay it always comes before you think it will.
Just ask the not-so-good doctor...he's living proof.
Because he's now trapped in one hell of a bad trip...from which he'll never escape.
As the two women become the beneficiaries of everything he so desired to possess.
Such being the cost of playing games with the devil, on his terms.
Judith Chapman does an excellent job in both roles as Heather (his daughter) and Jane (the stripper).
And despite it's budget, VHS-quality format...the film is actually much better than one would suspect.
With a storyline that takes inspiration from, the aforementioned films, and then combining that with the plot from De Palma's Sisters.
Though all with an air of originality.
The whole thing was shot in Atlanta and Covington, Georgia...incorporating lots of beautiful scenery, and some great locations.
Exceeding all expectations I had going in.
It's definitely worth a watch.
7 out of 10.
Did you know
- TriviaThe 5 million dollar inheritance would be worth nearly 24 million in 2022.
- GoofsWhen Phillip and Uncle Bradley are driving in the car at the beginning of the movie, they are approaching the Zebra Lounge on the left. A few minutes later, they approach the Zebra Lounge on the right.
- Alternate versionsAfter being released with an R-rating by United International. The film was picked by Avco Embassy who re-edited to secure a PG-rating in 1978. This PG-rated version is missing some sexualized nudity but the film is otherwise identical.
- ConnectionsReferenced in Adjust Your Tracking: The Untold Story of the VHS Collector (2013)
- SoundtracksAfter the Ball
by Charles Harris
- How long is Scalpel?Powered by Alexa
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