Lamberto Bava appears to have been channeling his mentors Mario Bava
and Dario Argento (both of whom he previously worked for as an assistant
director) in this unremarkable 1983 giallo (or Italian
horror-thriller).
The Package
This was the second film directed by Lamberto Bava, the
talented son of the late Mario. Lamberto’s first credited directorial
effort was 1980’s impressive
MACABRE. Following that he returned to
his former profession of assistant director on Dario Argento’s TENEBRAE
(1982) and then made this film. It has a colorful history, having begun
life as a four part Italian TV movie that was reedited to feature
length. It was released in Italy as LA CASA CON LA SCALA NEL BUIO and in
America as A BLADE IN THE DARK (a title Bava says he prefers to the
original).
The extreme violence reportedly caused a fair amount of
controversy in Europe, although Bava insists the film was intended as a
parody of violent shockers. He followed it with
DEMONS, which
remains Lamberto Bava’s most widely viewed--and probably most
artistically successful--work.
The Story
Bruno is a musician who’s been hired to score a horror
movie, and has rented a secluded villa to do so. He doesn’t realize the
place is also inhabited by a shadowy maniac with a penchant for hacking
up people with a box cutter. The maniac’s first victim is an attractive
lady friend of Bruno; during the melee Bruno wanders out to see what’s
happening but misses out on the action (of course!), and finds
his workshop ransacked when he returns.
The second victim is another unfortunate young woman
who comes on to Bruno, and ends up with her head bashed in and her
throat slashed. By this time Bruno has begun investigating the life of
the villa’s former owner, a disturbed woman who it seems is still afoot
and committing the murders.
Victim number three is a dude who finds a corpse in a
tank and gets repeatedly conked in the head with a wrench. Another woman
acquaintance of Bruno’s, the director of the film he’s working on, is
the next victim: she’s strangled to death, appropriately enough with a
mass of celluloid!
As Bruno delves deeper into the past of the woman who
once owned his house, he discovers a sordid history of abuse, gender
confusion and a weird fetish for tennis balls.
The Direction
This being the heavily referential effort it is, A
BLADE IN THE DARK is filled with hommages to past giallos: a tennis ball
tossing little girl is an obvious throwback (pun intended) to the
ghost girl with the bouncing ball of Mario Bava’s
KILL BABY KILL.
I’ll assume the film’s many similarities to Brian De Palma’s early
eighties thrillers DRESSED TO KILL and BLOW OUT are also intended as
hommages rather than outright steals (though I doubt it!).
Lamberto Bava says the film was intended as a parody,
but it doesn’t play that way. I suspect Bava claimed that to justify the
many over-familiar elements. You’ll need to be conversant with the
giallos of Argento and the elder Bava to fully “get” this film, but then
you’re also likely be bored by its uninspired run-through of giallo
clichés.
The murder sequences are among the most startling and
sadistic of any giallo. They’re the one area in which the film really
works, as the domestic scenes with actor Andrea Occhipinti, playing one
of the blandest protagonists on record, definitely don’t! The many
attractive young women on display offer some welcome eye candy, but the
ladies exist solely as potential victims--who all conveniently take long
walks around the nether regions of the villa in the film’s many
suspense-free stalk and slash sequences.
Vital Statistics
A BLADE IN THE DARK (LA CASA CON LA SCALA NEL BUIO)
National Cinematographica sri/Nuova Cinematographica sri
Director/Producer/Editor: Lamberto Bava
Screenplay: Dardano Sacchetti, Elisa Brigante
Cinematography: Gianlorenzo Battaglia
Cast: Andrea Occhipinti, Anny Papa, Fabiola Toledo, Michele Saovi,
Valeria Cavalli, Stanko Molnar, Lara Naszinski