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IMDbPro

Des garces pour l'enfer

Original title: Il fiore dai petali d'acciaio
  • 1973
  • 1h 30m
IMDb RATING
5.5/10
324
YOUR RATING
Carroll Baker, Gianni Garko, and Ivano Staccioli in Des garces pour l'enfer (1973)
HorrorMysteryThriller

A wealthy doctor Andrea Valenti (Gianni Garko) accidentally kills his mistress, then the doctor falls victim of blackmail.A wealthy doctor Andrea Valenti (Gianni Garko) accidentally kills his mistress, then the doctor falls victim of blackmail.A wealthy doctor Andrea Valenti (Gianni Garko) accidentally kills his mistress, then the doctor falls victim of blackmail.

  • Director
    • Gianfranco Piccioli
  • Writers
    • Gianni Martucci
    • Gianfranco Piccioli
  • Stars
    • Gianni Garko
    • Carroll Baker
    • Ivano Staccioli
  • See production info at IMDbPro
  • IMDb RATING
    5.5/10
    324
    YOUR RATING
    • Director
      • Gianfranco Piccioli
    • Writers
      • Gianni Martucci
      • Gianfranco Piccioli
    • Stars
      • Gianni Garko
      • Carroll Baker
      • Ivano Staccioli
    • 13User reviews
    • 9Critic reviews
  • See production info at IMDbPro
  • See production info at IMDbPro
  • Photos4

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    Top cast12

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    Gianni Garko
    Gianni Garko
    • Dr. Andrea Valenti
    Carroll Baker
    Carroll Baker
    • Evelyne Graffi
    Ivano Staccioli
    • Ispettore Garrano
    Pilar Velázquez
    Pilar Velázquez
    • Lena
    Paola Senatore
    Paola Senatore
    • Daniela
    Umberto Raho
    Umberto Raho
    • Psychiatrist
    Eleonora Morana
    Eleonora Morana
    • Female surgeon
    Angelo Bassi
    Giuseppe Mattei
    Alessandro Perrella
    • First young surgeon
    Alba Maiolini
    Alba Maiolini
    • Female porter
    Maurizio Streccioni
    • Policeman
    • (uncredited)
    • Director
      • Gianfranco Piccioli
    • Writers
      • Gianni Martucci
      • Gianfranco Piccioli
    • All cast & crew
    • Production, box office & more at IMDbPro

    User reviews13

    5.5324
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    10

    Featured reviews

    6Bezenby

    Gianni versus and underwater fanny

    You don't often get to see a scuba diving lesbian love scene in a film, but that situation is less likely in the crazy world of the gialli, it seems...

    Gianno Garko plays a jerk doctor who has just dumped his lover Daniela, perhaps for his assistant who's been making kissy faces at him. Daniela's sister is angry Carol Baker, who seems to also be Daniela's lover and is enraged at Daniela's continuous relationship with Gianni. Things come to a head one night when Gianni comes home to find a strangely silent Daniela there, and accidentally kills her by impaling her head with one of his strange object d'art required by all characters in gialli.

    Panicking, Gianni uses his super surgeon skills to dismember the body and get rid of it, not knowing he's being watched all the time. Also, he's not as smart as he thinks as he didn't notice Daniela's car is outside of the building. When Carol Baker turns up looking for her sister, Gianni tells her, rather unconvincingly, that she hasn't been around in some time, and then a cop, who is falling for Carol, turns up looking for the dead girl too...and he's becoming increasingly biased.

    Although this is very much a typical 'Carol Baker' giallo with seventies nudity, it is still watchable for Gianni Garko's increasingly unhinged performance and the twists all thrown in at the end (try not to think about them too hard though or you'll get a nose bleed). There are no good characters to root for in the film so it's a case of seeing who'se going to win the mind games that are being played out. Not the most manically paced, however, and I was kind of yearning for that - until the underwater love scene (bizarre
    7Bunuel1976

    THE FLOWER WITH THE PETALS OF STEEL (Gianfranco Piccioli, 1973) ***

    Being a latter-day entry in Carroll Baker's Italian giallo tenure, coupled with its essential lack of reputation (probably ascribed to the involvement of an obscure director – one of only three he helmed), I was surprised to learn that the title under review was held in higher esteem by the "Cult Filmz" website than the American star's renowned collaborations with Umberto Lenzi; in hindsight, I agree with this estimation, since I had always found that series of movies average at best (though, in all fairness, I still have one more to check out i.e. SO SWEET…SO PERVERSE [1969] and which I will do presently). Incidentally, despite her top billing, Baker is not the protagonist of the film – in fact, she is just one among a bevy of fetching females with whom leading man Gianni Garko interacts (in more ways than one) throughout. This suggests a reasonably convoluted plot line and, in fact, the revelation offered here is among the wildest (as the whole resolves itself with a bit of lesbian underwater sex!) I have seen within this genre…though I felt the added ironic twist (which sees the culprits not getting away with it after all) unwarranted and a miscalculation! For the record, two other unexpected elements here are the sheer fact that a surgeon would allow himself such an impossibly intricate love life, which would surely prevent him from functioning properly within his chosen – and ultra-delicate – profession, and also that the (hardly handsome) cop on the trail of the assassin would fall for one of the suspects, the not-so-young-anymore Baker (whose drop in stature in this case eventually numbers her among the murder victims themselves)! While the film maintains a frustratingly unhurried pace – albeit offset by a good Marcello Giombini score – along the way, like I said earlier, the premise is woolly enough to keep one engrossed trying to unravel it!; by the way, the subject of the Argento-like title is the weapon that unwittingly brings about the original killing (which party's face is cleverly concealed until the climax).
    lazarillo

    Very well-made giallo with a strong cast

    Gianni Garko plays an amoral, social-climbing surgeon who has had his wealthy wife committed to a mental institution. After he accidentally kills his mistress(Paola Senatore) in a bizarre accident involving the titular "flower with petals of steel" (actually a sculpture),he manages to dispose of the body, but finds himself being pursued by the woman's sister, who is also his vengeful former (Carrol Baker), and a dogged police inspector. Then he begins to be blackmailed by a strange voice on the phone. He also has ANOTHER lover, a nurse (Pilar Velasquez) who may not be what she appears.

    This obscure, long unavailable(at least in English) Italian giallo has a central twist that even by the standards of the genre is pretty far-fetched. It generally works though. It is very well-filmed. Piccolo is not one of the acknowledged masters of the genre like Argento or Bava (or Martino, Fulci, or Lenzi), but he definitely does a good job. The movie begins with a beautifully shot, seemingly gratuitous underwater diving scene that doesn't make sense until the end where it turns out to be a (definitely gratuitous) underwater lesbian scene (which gives new meaning to the term "muff diving"), but I would think also the first such scene in cinema history. The rest of the cinematography and editing is impressive too (if sometimes a little dark in the print I saw), but with one rather awkward murder scene.

    The acting is very good, the Italian cast much more so than Carroll Baker (who I imagine was getting tired of the genre by this time). Garko manages to make his character a sympathetic Hitchcockian innocent, who only towards the end is revealed to be real cad getting his comeuppance. Paola Senatore doesn't have much screen time, but is very effective (it helps that she's naked in almost every scene). The beautiful Velasquez also provides some sumptuous nudity, but also some good acting as she goes from a seemingly throw-away character to a very important one by the end. The print I saw was a Spanish language fan-sub, but I imagine this would only get better with a more legitimate, re-mastered release.
    5Coventry

    Doctor, doctor! I'll give you the news... You've got a bad case of mistress blues!

    There exist two types of Italian gialli. The coolest type of giallo handles about masked psycho-killers with black gloves butchering people - preferably pretty young models - with sharp objects. The slightly duller but usually more stylish type of giallo handles about convoluted murder conspiracies complete with sexual intrigues, betrayal and triangular relationships. "The Flower with Petals of Steel", belongs in the second category. Even though the plot is wild and wickedly far-fetched, the film contains too many dull moments. The story revolves around Dr. Valenti. Although a busy surgeon, Dr. Valenti still has time to entertain several mistresses. He accidentally murders one in his apartment, with a hideous type of plant-statue, but is cold-blooded enough to professionally dissect her corpse and make it disappear. The girl's sister (played by giallo-regular Carroll Baker) and a sly homicide inspector are on the doctor's tail, and then he's also getting blackmailed. The film has one or two unforgettable sequences (most notably a lesbian scuba-diving highlight) and the bizarre plot is intriguing enough to keep you gazing at the screen until the finish, but overall it's disappointing and not at all recommended to anyone (except giallo-completists)
    7gorytus-20672

    decent giallo...remains hard to see

    Sep 22

    So we have here a pretty decent giallo, which remains very hard to get hold of, so i am surprised its got as many reviews as it has.

    Depending on how you are watching it, it clearly has several titles, its on imdb as "Flowers With A Deadly Sting", i know it as " Flowers With The Petal Of Steel".

    Perhaps i would find it a bit better if i could see it top quality, but as it stands its a decent giallo but not a great one, and i have only seen it about half dozen times, which is well below what i watch my favourite gialli.

    Plenty of faces you have seen before in gialli and as pointed out by others the end does come as something of a surprise.

    If you can get it and you are a giallo fan then of course its a must watch, but its definitely a middle of the road giallo for me.

    My rating for this one is 7.5 out of 10.

    Related interests

    Mia Farrow in Rosemary's Baby (1968)
    Horror
    Jack Nicholson and Faye Dunaway in Chinatown (1974)
    Mystery
    Cho Yeo-jeong in Parasite (2019)
    Thriller

    Storyline

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    Did you know

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    • Trivia
      Doctor drives a Mercedes and drinks J&B scotch.
    • Goofs
      Though the sisters's are named Graffi on the cast-list, the detective refers to them as "Gherardi".
    • Quotes

      Dr. Andrea Valenti: I'll give you a vitamin shot so you can be ready for your wife.

      Hospital patient: My wife! No! Anything but that! Not even if they paid me! I'd rather "play the pipe!"

      [with hand gestures, indicates fingering a pipe to suggest masturbation]

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    Details

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    • Release date
      • November 13, 1973 (Italy)
    • Countries of origin
      • Italy
      • Spain
    • Language
      • Italian
    • Also known as
      • The Flower with the Deadly Sting
    • Filming locations
      • Incir De Paolis Studios, Rome, Lazio, Italy
    • Production companies
      • Parva Cinematografica
      • Producciones Cinematográficas D.I.A.
    • See more company credits at IMDbPro

    Tech specs

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    • Runtime
      • 1h 30m(90 min)
    • Aspect ratio
      • 2.35 : 1

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