The Bloodstained Shadow (1978)
Facts
| Directed by | Antonio Bido |
| Cast | Lino Capolicchio, Stefania Casini, Craig Hill, Juliette Mayniel and Massimo Serato |
| Theatrical Release | November 30, 1977 |
| DVD Release | June 25, 2002 |
| Running Time | 109 minutes |
| MPAA Rating | Unrated |
| UPC Code | 013131205398 |
| Buy this item | $17.99 at Amazon.com As of Nov 23 11:35 EST (details) 1 DVD, Starz / Anchor Bay, Usually ships in 24 hours, Color, DVD-Video, Subtitled, Widescreen, NTSC Languages: English (Subtitled), English (Original Language), Italian (Original Language) Or 5 new from $11.63, 15 used from $3.58, 1 collectible from $49.95 |
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User Reviews
Average user review:| Most Enjoyable |
| Can't get enough of these gialli! |
"The Bloodstained Shadow" begins by introducing us to a scholar named Stephano (Lino Capolicchio) returning home after many years for a visit with his brother Father Paul (Craig Hill), a trusted local priest. Right from the start, the film also introduces us to some tensions in this little town. Paul hints at problems he has had with a few locals involved in some sort of séance group. The members consist of Nardi (Juliette Mayniel), a woman who acts as a midwife to pregnant mothers but harbors a secret she keeps hidden in her house; Count Pedrazzi (Massimo Serato), an unsavory character whose hatred for Father Paul knows no bounds and who is involved in highly suspect activities with his young male assistant and the children entrusted to him by local parents; and a doctor who accidentally shot and killed his wife years before while cleaning a firearm. A nice bunch, eh? All suspects in the coming bloodbath, too, I might add. On the very first night Stephano spends with his brother, the murder of the woman who leads these séances takes place right outside. Father Paul witnesses the crime, in fact, but is too late to do anything to prevent the tragedy. Oddly, both Stephano and his personal assistant were outside at the time. Hmmm. It's starting to look like even Sherlock Holmes would have a tough time putting this one in the bag.
Stephano starts to spend a fair amount of time with Sandra (Stefania Casini), an art student he met on his journey back home. Between cuddling and taking boat rides with Stephano, Sandra takes care of her ailing mother. When her new boyfriend finally stops in to visit, he notices a bizarre painting hanging on the wall that brings back horrific flashbacks of an event during his childhood, an event involving the murder of a young girl at the hands of an unknown assailant. As if bizarre flashbacks aren't sinister enough, something weirder starts happening to Father Paul. He begins receiving cryptic, typewritten messages hinting at horrible things. As members of the séance group fall prey to a shadowy murderer, it is up to Stephano and Father Paul to figure out who is committing the crimes and why. If Stephano could remember who pulled the plug on that girl in his flashback, he feels, he and his brother might figure out what is going on. The conclusion to "The Bloodstained Shadow" isn't really surprising if you're at all familiar with the giallo genre. What did surprise me was how Antonio Bido cribbed a scene from the final sequences of Lucio Fulci's "Don't Torture a Duckling" in order to wrap up his own murder mystery.
Despite the obvious plagiarism at the end, I immensely enjoyed "The Bloodstained Shadow." Perhaps the best elements of the film are the controversial characters and situations he injects into his story. The Count Pedrazzi character is a really sleazy guy, plagued with the same problem the Grant character suffered from in Samuel Fuller's "The Naked Kiss." Moreover, Bido doesn't pull away when aiming shots at the Catholic Church, which takes an incredible amount of bravery in a country like Italy. I've seen so much Church bashing in so many gialli that I'm beginning to think I need to add it to the list whenever discussing the central elements of the genre, right next to the black gloved killer and the red herrings. Less impressive points of the film revolve solely, at least for me, around the fact that there isn't enough gore in the killings. Oddly enough, most of the gialli included in this boxed set pull back when the sauce begins to flow. It's sad, really. Especially when someone like Dario Argento filled his gialli to the rafters with cringe inducing bouts of bloody mayhem. I definitely think "The Bloodstained Shadow" would have benefited from more of the red stuff.
Anchor Bay once again delivers the goods with the DVD. The picture and audio quality are great, and several extras help round out the disc. "Solamente Bido," a thirteen-minute interview with the director, provides good insight into the film. The director discusses his likes and dislikes of the movie, expresses his love for the giallo genre, and even muses aloud that he would like to make another one soon. Throw in a trailer and a director's filmography and you have everything you need for an enjoyable couple of hours. I can't wait to see Anchor Bay's next gialli collection, hopefully available sometime this year.
January 4, 2005
| ALWAYS ROOM FOR GIALLO? |
Craig Hill, who I remember from a sixties series called WHIRLYBIRDS, plays the priest with the right amount of religious fervor, but doesn't handle his fright scenes too well. And who is it that jumps out at him in the cemetery? That is never explained. Massimo Serato (Black Sunday) plays a homosexual count, and the lovely Stefania Casini plays the heroine. Lino Capolicchio as the hero is so frail looking, one has a hard time seeing him in this role. The movie's biggest flaw is when the murderer is revealed, there is no explanation for why he killed the young girl in the opening credits. One can only imagine.
There are a couple of suspenseful films, but many times director Antonio Bido chases a character around without any obvious reason for such.
Not a good representative of the true Giallo films. December 13, 2004
| Overacted, silly, and loads of fun-- in other words, giallo! |
Bido's second film (after The Cat with the Jade Eyes) is good, solid giallo. A bit raw in places, but that's defniitely not a reason to miss this one.
Stefanio D'Archangelo (Lino Capolicchio, of The Last Days of Mussolini and The House with the Laughing Windows fame) takes some time off from his professorship to go back to his childhood home, an island near Venice, to unwind. On the way there, he meets Sandra (Stefania Casini, fresh off her amazing performance in Suspiria), a lovely young thing who gets him thinking about all sorts of fun diversions. They quickly take a back seat, however, to events on the island; a serial killer starts murdering the members of a circle of friends who are outcast from the community at large. The murderer believes Stefanio's brother, Paolo (spaghetti western staple Craig Hill), saw the first murder, and has been delivering threatening notes to try and shut him up, to no avail. Stefanio divides his time between wooing Sandra and trying to find out who the killer is to put a stop to the notes that are driving his brother nuts. And how does it all tie into a decades-old murder?
Bido handles most of the movie with aplomb, keeping the tension at just the right level. The movie does slow down a bit, though, and as to be expected, both the setup and the climax are remarkably cheesy (really, can you imagine standing in front of a killer and explicating the route you took to figure out the crimes? It didn't work in Agatha Christie, and it doesn't work now). Pacing and dialogue issues aside, though, this is fine stuff. It's well-shot and well-edited, easily on a par with any of Argento's gialli (Argento was Bido's mentor, so this should come as no surprise). It is surprisingly not graphic (with the exception of one memorable scene), which may be a way to hook fans of regular mystery films into giallo. Both Casini and Cappolicchio are very good here. Soundtrack is (uncredited) by the giallo masters Goblin. All in all, a good hour and a half of pure entertainment. *** ½ May 20, 2004
| Excellent Giallo |
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