Nothing Underneath

Last updated
Nothing Underneath
Sotto-il-vestito-niente-italian-movie-poster-md.jpg
Directed by Carlo Vanzina
Screenplay by
Story byEnrico Vanzina
Produced by Achille Manzotti [2]
Starring
CinematographyBeppe Maccari [1]
Edited by Raimondo Crociani [1]
Music by Pino Donaggio [1]
Production
company
Faso Film [1]
Distributed by Titanus
Release date
  • 7 November 1985 (1985-11-07)
CountryItaly [3]

Nothing Underneath (Italian : Sotto il vestito niente) is a 1985 Italian thriller film directed by Carlo Vanzina. The film is about Bob Crane (Tom Schanley) who has visions of his fashion model twin sister (Nicola Perring) being murdered in Milan, but finds his sister has disappeared on his arrival in Italy.

Contents

Nothing Underneath was originally going to be developed by director Michelangelo Antonioni. After Antonioni dropped out, Carlo Vanzina and Enrico Vanzina were hired to work on the film, abandoning the novel the film was based on. Franco Ferrini was also hired and made further changes on Vanzina's story. The film was a great box office hit in Italy in 1985 leading to a sequel in the 1980s titled Too Beautiful to Die and a third film in 2011.

Plot

Bob is a forest ranger working at Yellowstone National Park, while his twin sister Jessica has become a jet-setting fashion model based in Milan; he claims they have had a psychic bond since childhood. After receiving a copy of a magazine she did a shoot for with her contact information, he suddenly has a vision of her being murdered. Bob quickly heads to Milan and checks into the same hotel as his sister, but finds she has disappeared. Upon meeting local police commissioner Danesi, who is on the verge of retirement, he convinces a skeptical Danesi to look into the case.

Bob begins questioning other people who worked with Jessica, including Barbara, another high-profile model with the same agency Jessica worked with, who hints at a romantic attraction to him. However, several other models who knew Jessica are found murdered with a pair of scissors—the same weapon Bob envisioned his sister being killed with. One of the victims is found to have a cache of diamonds in her possession, which immediately directs suspicion to Giorgio Zanoni, a wealthy fashion designer known to host private parties with models. When the police question Giorgio, he reveals Jessica and the other murdered women were present with him the night of a private party where a game of Russian roulette accidentally killed another fashion model; he disposed of the body and bribed the others with diamonds in exchange for their silence.

Giorgio is arrested and jailed, and the police establish Jessica as the prime suspect in the killings of the other models, but Bob remains suspicious, particularly when he receives a telegram allegedly from Jessica asking him to return home. Bob traces the telegram back to the post office in Lugano where it was sent from, and upon heading there and asking for the original handwritten copy of the message, he spots inconsistencies in Jessica's signature. All the while, an Interpol agent in contact with Danesi has been tailing Bob out of suspicion. Bob returns to Milan, checks out of his hotel, then heads to a large studio apartment he expects to find a lead at. He finds the door locked with no one answering, but manages to climb through the apartment window, injuring his arm in the process. In the apartment he discovers that someone has forged Jessica's handwriting, and also finds Jessica's dead body pinned to a chair.

Bob telephones Danesi to warn him, but is forced to hide when he hears someone entering the apartment; it is revealed to be Barbara, who had attempted a lesbian relationship with Jessica, but murdered her after she rejected her advances. She also killed the other models, framed Giorgio, and sent the telegram to Bob in an attempt to throw him and the police off her trail. When Barbara discovers Bob hiding in the apartment, she attacks him with an electric drill, but Danesi and the Interpol agent arrive and unplug the drill before she can kill Bob. Seeing she has no way out, Barbara pushes the chair Jessica is pinned to out of the window and jumps after it to her death.

Cast

Production

Nothing Underneath was initially set to be based on the novel by the same name by fashion journalist Paolo Pietroni under the alias of Marco Parma. The film was initially set up by producer Achille Manzotti to have Michelangelo Antonioni direct the film with the aim of repeating the success of Blowup (1966). Antonioni developed a seven-page scenario with Nicola Badalucco before abandoning the project. [2] Carlo Vanzina and Enrico Vanzina came aboard production in February 1985 and disregarded the novel. The two felt the title and the premise of a thriller set in the fashion world had promise and decided to make the film in what they described as a "Brian de Palma-styled movie." [4] Italian film critic and historian Roberto Curti noted the connection to De Palma, stating the film wore its influences on its sleeve with reprising the power tool murder scene from Body Double (1984) and the telekinetic link between siblings being a nod to Sisters (1972) and The Fury (1978). [4]

Manzotti hired screenwriter Franco Ferrini specifically due to his work with director Dario Argento. Ferrini radically changed the script stating that he told the directors it was not scary enough. Among his changes was making the murderer more deranged and changing his weapon to being scissors instead of a gun. [4]

Release

Nothing Underneath was released in November 1985 and was distributed by Titanus. [1] [5] The film was a huge box office success in Italy grossing 1.692 billion Italian lire, beating other American productions at the box office such as The Goonies and Mad Max Beyond Thunderdome . Its popularity led to an in-name only sequel titled Too Beautiful to Die , and a few other Italian productions set in the fashion world in the 1980s. These includes Obsession: A Taste of Fear and Fashion Crimes . [5] The Vanzina brothers made a third film in the series in 2011 titled The Last Fashion Show . [5]

Nothing Underneath and its sequel Too Beautiful to Die were released on blu-ray by Vinegar Syndrome in October 2021. [6]

See also

Related Research Articles

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Giorgio Armani</span> Italian fashion designer

Giorgio Armani is an Italian fashion designer. He first gained renown working for Cerruti and then for many others, including Allegri, Bagutta, and Hilton. He formed his company, Armani, in 1975, which eventually expanded into music, sport, and luxury hotels. By 2001, Armani was acclaimed as the most successful designer of Italian origin, and is credited with pioneering red-carpet fashion. In 2010, he opened the Armani Hotel in Burj Khalifa, the world's tallest building. He is also the wealthiest openly bisexual person in the world. According to Bloomberg Billionaires Index, as of 2021, Armani had an estimated net worth of US$9.53 billion.

<i>Giallo</i> Literature and film genre

In Italian cinema, giallo is a genre of murder mystery fiction that often contains slasher, thriller, psychological horror, sexploitation, and, less frequently, supernatural horror elements.

<i>Blood and Black Lace</i> 1964 film by Mario Bava

Blood and Black Lace is a 1964 giallo film directed by Mario Bava and starring Eva Bartok and Cameron Mitchell. The story concerns the brutal murders of a Roman fashion house's models, committed by a masked killer in a desperate attempt to obtain a scandal-revealing diary.

Renée Toft Simonsen is a Danish writer and former model. Simonsen was one of the most successful models in the world during the 1980s.

<i>Opera</i> (1987 film) 1987 film

Opera is a 1987 Italian giallo directed and co-written by Dario Argento and starring Cristina Marsillach, Urbano Barberini, Daria Nicolodi, and Ian Charleson. The film's plot focuses on a young soprano (Marsillach) who becomes involved in a series of murders being committed inside an opera house by a masked assailant. The film features music composed and performed by Brian Eno, Claudio Simonetti, and Bill Wyman.

<i>La Notte</i> 1961 film by Michelangelo Antonioni

La Notte is a 1961 drama film directed by Michelangelo Antonioni and starring Marcello Mastroianni, Jeanne Moreau and Monica Vitti. Filmed on location in Milan, the film depicts a single day and night in the lives of a disillusioned novelist (Mastroianni) and his alienated wife (Moreau) as they move through various social circles. The film continues Antonioni's tradition of abandoning traditional storytelling in favor of visual composition, atmosphere, and mood.

<i>Caliber 9</i> 1972 film

Caliber 9 is a 1972 Italian noir-poliziottesco film written and directed by Fernando Di Leo and starring Gastone Moschin, Mario Adorf, Barbara Bouchet, Philippe Leroy, Frank Wolff, Luigi Pistilli, and Lionel Stander. The film takes its title from the short story collection of the same name by Giorgio Scerbanenco, and is partially based on three of its stories. The musical score was composed by Luis Enriquez Bacalov and performed by the progressive rock band Osanna.

<i>From Corleone to Brooklyn</i> 1979 film

From Corleone to Brooklyn is an Italian poliziotteschi film directed by Umberto Lenzi. The film was released in Italy on 13 April 1979 and stars Maurizio Merli, Mario Merola and Van Johnson.

<i>Ghosthouse</i> (film) 1988 film

Ghosthouse is a 1988 Italian horror film written and directed by Umberto Lenzi. It co-starred Lara Wendel and Donald O'Brien. The plot focuses on a deserted house where the visions of a ghostly girl and her haunted doll wreak havoc on those who enter it.

Franco Ferrini is an Italian screenwriter. His works often fall into the genres of horror or thriller. He was one of the interviewees represented in the book Spaghetti Nightmares.

<i>Story of a Love Affair</i> 1950 Italian film

Story of a Love Affair, released in the United Kingdom as Chronicle of a Love, is a 1950 Italian drama film directed by Michelangelo Antonioni in his feature-length directorial debut. The film stars Massimo Girotti and Lucia Bosè in lead roles. Despite some neorealist background, the film was not fully compliant with the contemporary Italian neorealist style both in its story and image, featuring upper-class characters portrayed by professional actors. Ferdinando Sarmi was, however, a fashion designer rather than a professional actor. Its story was inspired by the James M. Cain novel The Postman Always Rings Twice. In the film, the camera pans the same street corner in Ferrara, the director's native city, that appears in his film Beyond the Clouds forty-five years later. In 1951, the film won the Nastro d'Argento Award for Best Original Score and the Special Nastro d'Argento for "human and stylistic values".

<i>Incantesimo</i> Television series

Incantesimo is a long-running Italian drama series, originally broadcast on the RAI network from 1998 to 2008. It is mainly set in a hospital called Clinica Life in Rome, Italy, and revolves around the lives of the staff that works in it. It is known for having different lead actors who play a different story in almost every of its ten seasons.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Carlo Vanzina</span> Italian film director, producer and screenwriter (1951–2018)

Carlo Vanzina was an Italian film director, producer and screenwriter.

<i>Dagger Eyes</i> 1983 film by Carlo Vanzina

Dagger Eyes is a 1983 Italian thriller film directed by Carlo Vanzina, starring Carole Bouquet as Mystère.

<i>Naked Violence</i> (film) 1969 film

Naked Violence is a 1969 Italian giallo film directed by Fernando Di Leo and based on the novel I ragazzi del massacro written by Giorgio Scerbanenco.

<i>Sweets from a Stranger</i> (film) 1987 film

Sweets from a Stranger is a 1987 Italian thriller film directed and co-written by Franco Ferrini. The film is about a serial killer targeting sex workers. The women decided to band together to protect themselves, but their efforts are only partially successful as the killer continues their killing spree. As the police investigate, the sex workers group together to try and find some leads on their own.

<i>Spirits of Death</i> 1972 film

Spirits of Death is a 1972 Italian film directed by Romano Scavolini and starring Ida Galli, Ivan Rassimov and Luigi Pistilli. The film was also released as Exorcisme Tragique.

Achille Manzotti was an Italian television and film producer.

<i>The Last Fashion Show</i> 2011 Italian film

The Last Fashion Show is a 2011 Italian giallo-thriller film directed by Carlo Vanzina. This film was the third in a gialli trilogy, which included Nothing Underneath (1985) and Too Beautiful to Die (1988).

<i>Too Beautiful to Die</i> 1988 film

Too Beautiful to Die is a 1988 Italian thriller film directed by Dario Piana. The film is an in-name only sequel to Nothing Underneath (1985). It is about a group of models and dancers who find that one member of their crew has been raped and then later murdered. The group finds that the killer is taking revenge on anyone involved in the original assault, just as a new person joins their group for a music video-styled project. The film has received negative reviews from Scott Aaron Stine, Roberto Curti and L'Unita who found the film to be all style with no substance.

References

  1. 1 2 3 4 5 6 "Sotto il vestito niente (1985)" (in Italian). Archivio Del Cinema Italiano. Retrieved September 27, 2022.
  2. 1 2 Curti 2022, p. 360.
  3. "Collections Search". British Film Institute. Archived from the original on September 27, 2022. Retrieved September 27, 2022.
  4. 1 2 3 Curti 2022, p. 361.
  5. 1 2 3 Curti 2022, p. 362.
  6. Squires, John (October 1, 2021). "Vinegar Syndrome's October Releases Include a Never-Seen Extended Version of 90s Creature Feature 'Ticks'!". Bloody Disgusting . Retrieved September 27, 2022.

Sources