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Gothic Fantastico: Four Italian Tales of Terror

Barcode 5027035024844
Blu-ray

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Availability:
Out of stock

Release Date: 17/10/2022

Edition: Limited Edition Box Set
Genre: Feature
Sub-Genre: Horror
Region Code: Region B
Certificate: 15
Label: Arrow Video
Actors: Richard Johnson, Paul Muller, Gordon Mitchell, Gian Maria Volonte, Erika Blanc, Leo Anchóriz, Helga Liné, Barbara Nelli, Franco Nero, Olga Solbelli, Gérard Tichy, Ombretta Colli, Gioia Pascal, Sarah Ferrati, Rosanna Schiaffino
Director: Mino Guerrini, Damiano Damiani, Alberto De Martino, Massimo Pupillo
Number of Discs: 4
Audio Languages: English, Italian
Subtitle Languages: Hard of Hearing English, English

While groundbreaking director Mario Bava (Black Sunday, Black Sabbath) remains the most well-known purveyor of Italian Gothic horror, many other filmmakers tried their hand at the form throughout the 1960s as part of a hugely prolific and popular cycle. Gothic Fantastico presents four off-the-beaten path titles from this classic period, all of which demonstrate Italy's ability to expand genre beyond the classic literary monsters that dominated elsewhere. Gaslighting abounds in Massimo Pupillo's Lady Morgan's Vengeance - a delicate tale of romance and mystery, with a sprinkling of sadism and the supernatural - as newlywed Sir Harold Morgan (Paul Muller, Nightmare Castle) attempts to destroy his new bride (Barbara Nelli, Double Face) with help from his sinister maid (Erika Blanc, Kill, Baby. Kill!). Meanwhile, the perverse influence of Poe is used to great effect in Alberto De Martino's The Blancheville Monster - a tale of family curses and madmen in the attic, as Emilie de Blancheville (Ombretta Colli, Gladiator of Rome) returns home to her brother Rodéric (Gérard Tichy, Hatchet for the Honeymoon) and discovers her own family may be out for her blood. Mino Guerrini's The Third Eye features not only a very early role for Italian cult film icon Franco Nero, but a plot that borrows several elements from Hitchcock, layered with a whiff of necrophilia. Finally, Damiano Damiani's The Witch takes a more avant-garde approach, when a young historian (Richard Johnson, Zombie Flesh Eaters) is lured to work for an ageing woman, only to be held captive when he becomes obsessed with her beautiful daughter (Rosanna Schiaffino, The Killer Reserved Nine Seats). Madness, obsession and messed up families are the order of the day in these four lesser-known monochrome gems from Italy's peak Gothic period.