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Il gatto dagli occhi di giada

  • 1977
  • R
  • 1h 36m
IMDb RATING
5.9/10
1.6K
YOUR RATING
Il gatto dagli occhi di giada (1977)
"WHEN I GO BERSERKÂ… YOU'RE BETTER OFF DEAD!"

Just as some of Brian De Palma's most entertaining films have been tributes to Hitchcock's finest, so director Antonio Bido (The Bloodstained Shadow) pulls off a brilliant homage to the early giallos of Dario Argento with this razor-sharp thriller that's also known as The Cat's Victims.
When Mara (Paolo Tedesco) stops by at the chemist to pick up some painkillers she's unwittingly signed up for a prescription in terror and a world of pain for those around her! Told to come back another day, little does Mara realise that the chemist is lying dead in the back of the shop and she's bought herself a stalker determined to wipe her out now that she's a witness.

Bido weaves a web of one nod and a wink after another to any fan of Argento's most baroque thrillers with skilful murder set-pieces of his own and a soundtrack that could easily have been performed by Goblin. Intricate, suspenseful and satisfying, Bido applies his own visceral vision to the art of giallo film-making and pulls off a stunning bloodied gem.

Watch Me When I Kill (cert. 18) is released uncut as a Shameless Fan Edition DVD by Shameless Screen Entertainment. The film will be presented remastered in 1.85:1 with English 2.0 sound. Also included on the disc is a brand-new exclusive interview with Antonio Bido, Shameless Fact Track by the Wilson Bros, alternative opening sequences, two theatrical trailers, collector's photo gallery and a Shameless original trailer gallery.
Play trailer1:32
1 Video
73 Photos
Slasher HorrorHorrorMysteryThrillerWar

A pharmacist is murdered, and a woman happens to see the culprit leave the scene. She soon finds herself being stalked by the killer, and when her boyfriend tries to discover who the murdere... Read allA pharmacist is murdered, and a woman happens to see the culprit leave the scene. She soon finds herself being stalked by the killer, and when her boyfriend tries to discover who the murderer is and stop him, he begins to find out that there is much more to the murder than the or... Read allA pharmacist is murdered, and a woman happens to see the culprit leave the scene. She soon finds herself being stalked by the killer, and when her boyfriend tries to discover who the murderer is and stop him, he begins to find out that there is much more to the murder than the ordinary killing it first appeared to be.

  • Director
    • Antonio Bido
  • Writers
    • Vittorio Schiraldi
    • Antonio Bido
    • Roberto Natale
  • Stars
    • Corrado Pani
    • Paola Tedesco
    • Franco Citti
  • See production info at IMDbPro
  • IMDb RATING
    5.9/10
    1.6K
    YOUR RATING
    • Director
      • Antonio Bido
    • Writers
      • Vittorio Schiraldi
      • Antonio Bido
      • Roberto Natale
    • Stars
      • Corrado Pani
      • Paola Tedesco
      • Franco Citti
    • 35User reviews
    • 32Critic reviews
  • See production info at IMDbPro
  • Videos1

    Watch me when I Kill
    Trailer 1:32
    Watch me when I Kill

    Photos73

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    Top cast18

    Edit
    Corrado Pani
    Corrado Pani
    • Lukas Karman
    Paola Tedesco
    Paola Tedesco
    • Mara
    Franco Citti
    Franco Citti
    • Pasquale Ferrante
    Fernando Cerulli
    Fernando Cerulli
    • Giovanni Bozzi
    Giuseppe Addobbati
    Giuseppe Addobbati
    • Judge
    Gianfranco Bullo
    • Santoro, the pharmacist's assistant
    Jill Pratt
    • Signora Dezzan
    • (as Yill Pratt)
    Bianca Toccafondi
    Bianca Toccafondi
    • Esmeralda Messori
    Inna Alexeieff
    • Old woman
    • (as Inna Alexeiva)
    Paolo Malco
    Paolo Malco
    • Carlo
    Cristina Piras
    • Pasquale Ferrante's wife
    Roberto Antonelli
    • Michele
    Gaetano Rampin
    • Dott. Peretti
    Giuseppe Pennese
    • Marco
    Giovanni Vannini
    • Biagio Dezzan, the pharmacist
    • (as Giovanni Vanini)
    Camillo Besenzon
    • The mute
    • (uncredited)
    Antonio Bido
    • Cabaret's director
    • (uncredited)
    Gino Cassani
    • De Maria, Lukas's Assistant
    • (uncredited)
    • Director
      • Antonio Bido
    • Writers
      • Vittorio Schiraldi
      • Antonio Bido
      • Roberto Natale
    • All cast & crew
    • Production, box office & more at IMDbPro

    User reviews35

    5.91.5K
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    Featured reviews

    7christopher-underwood

    just a few too many red herrings

    Not the most shocking, nor the most bloody, nor the most stylish of giallo, but it's likable enough and is just that little bit different. Much helped by a very decent performance from Corrado Pani as the cigar chomping guy who seeks to unravel one of the most complicated of tales. Far too many characters and just a few too many red herrings and yet it does keep going and if Paola Tedesco as the female lead does not match the performance of Pani, this may be the fault of the dubbers. Not awash with killings, what there are, are very good. The first one is a bit pedestrian but the fantastic bath scene killing and the one backstage with all the costume are worth the admission price and if the ending is a bit abrupt, it is conclusive and brought a smile to my face. Effective score.
    6Prof-Hieronymos-Grost

    Decent Giallo

    A young woman Mara(Paola Tedesco) accidentally stumbles into a murder in progress of a pharmacist in his store, she then finds that she is now being sought be the killer. Instead of notifying the police, she intrusts the services of an old cigar chomping friend Lukas (Corrado Pani, Secrets of a Call Girl, Gambling City ) to help investigate the killing and prevent the killer from killing her. Lukas investigation gets progressively more confusing and frustrating as people he looks to for information turn up dead or are none to helpful.

    Bido of The Bloodstained Shadow fame, has a reputation for approaching his films differently and here again the film hides its dark secret until the finale of the film. The film suffers a little as the print available is very dark and grainy, a fact that might lead some to believe the film has no merit, but it does and it also has a message that the past comes back to haunt everyone. There are also some gruesome killings to keep the gorehounds happy. Pani puts in a fine performance, despite some dodgy dubbing and the score by Trans Europa Express is powerful and memorable and much in the vein of a Goblin opus.
    7MovieGuy01

    Good Italian horror...

    I just watched Watch Me When I Kill this evening and found it to be a very good film. This woman stops by a chemist to pick up some painkillers. she is told to come back another day by some voice she hears. the chemist is lying dead in the back of the shop. so she is now involved in a murder case. there were some quite gory senses with throat-slitting, and strangulations, apart from that i found it to be a very good storyline. I though that the director of the film, (Antonio Bido) did i very good job in making the film, i found the storyline to be quite gripping to watch as the story made sense more than some other Italian horrors that i have seen. Good Movie: Recommended
    7thalassafischer

    Astonishingly Dark Giallo

    I am subdued by the realistic darkness of this film. Giallos as a whole may have scenes of disturbing violence, including rape or murder, or other forms of torture and exploitation - but often it's presented in such a manner that it's not realistic. Giallos are either too stunningly beautiful to be scary (my personal favorites), and when they aren't stylish and fashionable or lavishly atmospheric, there's so much sex and silliness that the sub-set of giallo films are obvious predecessors to American popcorn slashers.

    Not so with Watch Me When I Kill, despite the absurd title, I avoided this giallo for months because I suspected that it was one of the slapstick exploitation proto-slashers that aren't really my preferred gialli, just because of the awful stupid English title. In fact, everything about English translation is why this film only gets a 7 and not an 8 or even a 9. The dialogue is too clunky and quaint, and I would really love to find an Italian-language version of this flick. The Cat with the Jade Eyes is the literal Italian title, and that's just the tip of the iceberg in how American marketing borderline destroys some of these old Italian sleeper hits.

    Unlike most giallo directors, Antonio Bido loved middle aged women. Middle aged women make appearances as real solid characters in both Il gatto dagli occhi di giada and Solamente Nero, and except for one youthful main character every other woman in this film is over 50 except the opera singer who might be 35-40ish at youngest. Bido shows their faces, shows these "invisible women" as people watching and waiting and being worthy of being part of his film.

    But that's not what makes Watch Me When I Kill so extraordinary. This movie is scary. The noises on the tape in the beginning of the film are truly disturbing, some scenes are mind-bendingly surreal but are more reminiscent of Bava or even Roman Polanski than Argento, and the end is so, so, so, so dark.
    5Coventry

    Watch somebody else killing.

    Purely by coincidence, I found an old & dusty videotape in the horror closet of an acquaintance of mine and the cover displayed the bizarre title (in Dutch) "Revenge of the Cat". I had to perform a search on the actors' names in order to find out that it actually was "Watch me when I Kill" (a.k.a. "The Cat's Victims", a.k.a "The Cat with the Jade Eyes") and initially that was a pleasant surprise, since this Italian late 70's giallo has been on my purchase list for quite some time now! After seeing it, I'm even more glad that I didn't spend money on a fancy DVD-version, as it is quite a disappointing and overly confusing horror effort. Surely not the worst film of its kind, but pretty bleak compared to the works of Sergio Martino or, of course, Dario Argento. The main problem with Antonio Bido's film is that it makes absolutely no attempts to involve the viewer in the search for the maniacal killer. Someone, who stays off screen all the time and deforms his voice whenever he leaves messages to his next victims, is seemly randomly killing people and it nearly takes half of the movie before we get informed that all the victims sat in the same jury committee during a lawsuit against a criminal who recently escaped from prison. That still doesn't reveal the killer's identity, but at least you can guess along from this point. Due to the lack of background during the beginning, "Watch me when I Kill" often feels a bit slow and dull. There's not much atmosphere and ever fewer tension, and the private detective character isn't the least bit amiable. The murders, on the other hand, are lusciously gore, with a close-up slit throat, a woman suffocated in a dish of food and the must brutal strangulation I ever saw. The cinematography sadly is too dark, although that might have been due to poor videotape quality, but the score is terrific (probably the best thing about the entire film) and the climax is fairly surprising.

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    Storyline

    Edit

    Did you know

    Edit
    • Trivia
      Antonio Bido: Cabaret's director.
    • Goofs
      When the doctor is murdered, the killer makes an incision on only the right side of the throat, but when the body is discovered it's been slashed, very crudely, all the way across.
    • Quotes

      Mara: Oh, a farmacia. Would you stop at that drugstore, please? I won't take long.

      [exits cab and crosses to farmacia. Starts to open door, but from inside it's slammed shut]

      Voice behind Farmacia door: We're closed.

      Mara: All I need is aspirin. please do me a favor.

      Voice behind Farmacia door: [louder, hoarse and scary] I said we're closed!

      [Mara shrugs and returns to cab]

      Cab Driver: [as engine turns over] Don't worry, lady. She's slow but she starts.

      Screaming Woman at Farmacia: [screams, through the now open door] Help! Help! Somebody help! There's been a murder! They killed him, oh my God!

      Cab Driver: What happened? Hey lady, what happened?

      Screaming Woman at Farmacia: [through sobs, incoherently] The Doctor--he's killed, he's gone, oh God!

    • Connections
      Referenced in Solamente Bido (2002)

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    FAQ

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    Details

    Edit
    • Release date
      • August 6, 1977 (Italy)
    • Country of origin
      • Italy
    • Language
      • Italian
    • Also known as
      • Watch Me When I Kill
    • Filming locations
      • Cave FIlm Studio, Italy(studios)
    • Production companies
      • Elis Cinematografica
      • WeBi Cinematografica
    • See more company credits at IMDbPro

    Tech specs

    Edit
    • Runtime
      1 hour 36 minutes
    • Sound mix
      • Mono
    • Aspect ratio
      • 1.85 : 1

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