Ajouter une intrigue dans votre langueA number of women are brutally murdered. It quickly becomes apparent that all the victims are connected to a woman who had been having illicit affairs with them.A number of women are brutally murdered. It quickly becomes apparent that all the victims are connected to a woman who had been having illicit affairs with them.A number of women are brutally murdered. It quickly becomes apparent that all the victims are connected to a woman who had been having illicit affairs with them.
- Anna
- (as Pier Anna Quaia)
- Mario the coiffeur
- (as Giovanni Brusatori)
Histoire
Le saviez-vous
- AnecdotesWhen the cultured but assumedly heterosexual dress designer happens to employ the French phrase "mise en scene" to "set the scene" for his testimony, Sgt. Panto, who just assumes all designers and hairdressers are automatically gay [he's previously insinuated that the couturier wears his own wares, and later professes the belief that the guy's a "fag"], on a hunch it must be something subversive and immoral, mimics back "mise en shame", so as to indicate that he knows it's pervy code for a proposition to commit some sort of disgusting same-sex act.
- GaffesWhen the cultured but assumedly heterosexual dress designer happens to employ the French phrase "mise en scene" to "set the scene" for his testimony, Sgt. Panto, who just assumes all designers and hairdressers are automatically gay [he's previously insinuated that the couturier wears his own wares, and later professes the belief that the guy's a "fag"], on a hunch it must be something subversive and immoral, mimics back "mise en shame", so as to indicate, wrongly, that he knows it's pervy code for a proposition to commit some sort of disgusting same-sex act.
- Citations
Dressmaker: Our work requires a certain "mise en scene." ... Do you understand Sergeant?
Sgt. Pantò: Well,,, I try ... So I wanted to ask you if you ever dressed as a woman?
Dressmaker: Me, dress as a woman? Why would I?
[Panto stutters, trying to avoid an indelicate or explicit response]
Dressmaker: Mise en scene?
Sgt. Pantò: [cutting him off, relieved he didn't have to say it first] "Mise en shame!" Exactly!
During "Reflections in Black" I often wondered why I am doing this. There are so many great movies out there, in fancy and highly qualitative BluRay releases, but I spent my time and money on stinking old sleaze-movies that nobody even bothers to restore.
The film itself is also very mundane and derivative, even by mid-to-late 70s Giallo standards. The plot revolves around beautiful and almost always naked women getting brutally killed by a "mysterious" figure dressed in black and waving around a razorblade. The police investigation is dire and slow-moving, and it takes the coppers an awfully long time to figure out all the murdered women were having lesbian affaires with a married countess.
What's so upsetting about "Reflections in Black" is that the unknown and inexperienced director Tano Cimarosa (who also plays one of the policemen) confidently assumed that he was making a good Giallo. He inserted all the typical trademarks, and figured that would be enough. He threw in gruesome kills, lesbian sex, gratuitous nudity, and the killer's usual disguise in black. Too bad he forgot that Giallo-lovers also (and primarily) seek suspense, style, and convoluted plot twists (and, most of all, decent picture quality).
- Coventry
- 20 mai 2024
- Lien permanent