Castle of Blood
Template:Short description Template:Main otherScript error: No such module "Infobox".Template:Template otherScript error: No such module "Check for unknown parameters".Template:Main other Castle of Blood (Template:Langx) is a 1964 gothic horror film directed by Antonio Margheriti and starring Barbara Steele, Georges Rivière, Margarete Robsahm, Arturo Dominici, Silvano Tranquilli and Umberto Raho. It was an Italian-French co-production.Template:Sfn
The film was initially commissioned to director Sergio Corbucci, who had Gianni Grimaldi and Bruno Corbucci set to write the film. A scheduling conflict led to Corbucci's friend Margheriti being hired to complete the film. To avoid going over time, Corbucci was brought in to film one scene.Template:Sfn
The film was released in Italy in 1964 and received low box office numbers, which led to Margheriti remaking the film in colour as Web of the Spider (1971).
Plot
Template:More plot A journalist challenges the authenticity of Edgar Allan Poe's stories (which are presented in the context of the film as Poe's eyewitness accounts of the supernatural, not as literary fiction). To prove himself, the journalist accepts a bet from Lord Blackwood to spend the night in a haunted castle on the night between All Saints’ Day and All Souls’ Day. Ghosts of the murdered inhabitants appear to him throughout the night, re-enacting the events that led to their deaths. One of the ghosts reveals that they all need his blood in order to maintain their existence. Barbara Steele plays a ghost who attempts to help the journalist escape.
Cast
Production
The idea for Castle of Blood came to Sergio Corbucci when producer Giovanni Addessi commissioned him to create a film that would reuse the Medieval sets from Corbucci's comedy film The Monk of Monza.Template:Sfn Corbucci had his brother Bruno Corbucci and screenwriter Gianni Grimaldi write the script.Template:Sfn The script is credited to a short story by Edgar Allan Poe, but the film is not based on any specific Poe work.Template:Sfn The English-language version credits the (fictional) short story "Dance Macabre," which is the original Italian title of the film.Template:Sfn
According to Ruggero Deodato, who was the assistant director on set, he persuaded actress Barbara Steele to star in the film,Template:Sfn although Steele had just done 8½ for director Federico Fellini, and wanted to distance herself from horror films.Template:Sfn When filming was about to begin, Sergio Corbucci found that his schedule conflicted with the shoot and called upon his friend Antonio Margheriti to direct the film.Template:Sfn
Margheriti had a tight schedule for filming, and shot the film using the same method as a television production by setting up four cameras at once.Template:Sfn To finish the film on time, Margheriti brought in Sergio Corbucci to direct the scene where Giovanni Cianfriglia's characters murder Steele's character.Template:SfnTemplate:Sfn The film was eventually shot in 15 days.Template:Sfn
Release
Castle of Blood was distributed in Italy by Globe International Film and released on 27 February 1964.Template:Sfn The film grossed a total of 100.68 million Italian lire in Italy.Template:Sfn It was released in France on 14 April 1965 under the title "Danse Macabre" (Dance of Death).[1] The French cut of the film features actress Sylvia Sorrente in a nude scene.Template:Sfn
The film's disappointing box office was one of the reasons that Margheriti remade the film as Web of the Spider in colour in 1970.Template:Sfn Margheriti would later comment that it was "stupid to remake it" and that "the color cinematography destroyed everything: the atmosphere, the tension."Template:Sfn
Critical reception
From contemporary reviews, The Globe and Mail praised the film, noting an "ingenious script" and the acting by Georges Rivière, stating that the film was an "example of how an imaginative director can use camera, music, and a deliberately slow pace to fray the nerve ends."[2] The review critiqued the ghost special effects as "unconvincing", and found Barbara Steele's performance to be melodramatic.[2] The Monthly Film Bulletin praised the cinematography of the film but referred to Ortolani's score as "cliche-ridden", and wrote negatively about Steele's acting and the dubbed dialogue.[3]
Margheriti would later call the film "even more boring" many years after its initial release.Template:Sfn AllMovie's review of the film was favorable, calling it an "eerie and effective early horror film."[4]
Remake
Margheriti remade the film in colour in 1971, as Web of the Spider.
See also
References
Footnotes
Sources
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External links
- Template:Trim/ Template:Trim at IMDbTemplate:EditAtWikidataScript error: No such module "Check for unknown parameters".Template:WikidataCheck
- Pages with script errors
- Italian haunted house films
- Gothic horror films
- Italian horror films
- 1960s Italian-language films
- 1964 horror films
- Films directed by Antonio Margheriti
- Films directed by Sergio Corbucci
- 1964 films
- French horror films
- Films scored by Riz Ortolani
- Films set in castles
- Cultural depictions of Edgar Allan Poe
- Holiday horror films
- Works about Edgar Allan Poe
- French haunted house films
- 1960s Italian films
- 1960s French films