Nude per l'assassino | |
---|---|
Directed by | Andrea Bianchi |
Screenplay by | Massimo Felisatti |
Story by | Andrea Bianchi |
Starring | |
Cinematography | Franco Delli Colli |
Edited by |
|
Music by | Berto Pisano |
Production company | Fral Cinematografica [1] |
Release date |
|
Running time | 98 minutes |
Country | Italy |
Language | Italian |
Nude per l'assassino (English: Strip Nude for Your Killer) is a 1975 giallo film directed by Andrea Bianchi. Written by Massimo Felisatti, the film stars Nino Castelnuovo, Edwige Fenech and Solvi Stubing, and features music by Berto Pisano. Nude per l'assassino has received mixed to negative reviews from critics.
After a model dies while undergoing an illegal abortion, a killer disguised in a motorcycle helmet tracks down and kills the doctor involved. Several models and photographers working at the same agency as the dead girl are also murdered, leading two surviving photographers to fear for their lives as they try to track down the killer.
Nude per l'assassino is one of several collaborations between Bianchi, Felisatti and cinematographer Franco Delli Colli. The film has been described as a formulaic giallo thriller, and has been cited as an influence on the development of the American slasher film genre.
After a fashion model dies while undergoing an illegal abortion, the attending doctor moves her body back to her home, staging her death to remove any trace of his involvement. However, he is murdered by a stranger disguised in racing leathers and a motorcycle helmet. At the Albatross Modelling Agency, the womanizing photographer Carlo embarks on an affair with fellow photographer Magda.
Meanwhile, a newly hired model, Patrizia, fends off the unwanted advances of Maurizio, whose wife owns the agency. One evening, Mario, who also works at the agency, invites a guest in racing leathers into his home for a drink, and is stabbed to death. The police question the agency's owner Gisella and another model, Lucia about the killing, but learn very little. Gisella makes Lucia exchange in sex with her to keep her job; one night when Gisella leaves after a fight, Lucia is attacked and killed.
Maurizio propositions another model, Doris, but when she refuses to sleep with him for money, he attempts to rape her. However, he suffers from impotence and Doris leaves unharmed. Shortly afterwards, Maurizio is stabbed by the killer. Carlo later witnesses Gisella being murdered, and is able to photograph the attack; however, he runs off and is injured in a hit and run accident. While he is in hospital, Magda recovers his camera and attempts to develop the film, but the killer breaks in and destroys the negatives. Carlo hurries home, but the killer has gone—going instead to kill Doris and her abusive boyfriend Stefano.
Carlo finds Magda alive, but the killer returns to attack them both. During the struggle, the killer is knocked down a flight of stairs. The killer is unmasked and revealed to be Patrizia, who accuses Carlo of causing the death of her sister—the girl who died in the botched abortion, and whose death it is revealed Carlo helped to conceal. However, Patrizia dies of her injuries, leaving no trace of Carlo's involvement.
Writer Massimo Felisatti did not wish to be seen as having solely written the film, and gave director Andrea Bianchi credit for the story in order to "deflect his role and not have to bear full responsibility" for the script. [2] Bianchi, Felisatti and cinematographer Franco Delli Colli would collaborate again the following year in La moglie di mio padre . [3] Nude per l'assassino's score was written by Berto Pisano, who would also go on to write the score for Bianchi's 1979 film Malabimba – The Malicious Whore . [4] Bianchi would later cast Femi Benussi, who portrayed one of the slain models, in two other films—La moglie di mio padre and Cara dolce nipote . [5]
Nude per l'assassino has been described as following "the giallo formula almost to the letter", demonstrating that "the giallo conventions established by Bava and Argento and elaborated upon by a number of directors in the early 1970s had become well codified" by the time the film was produced. [6] The film has also been cited as being "the perfect bridge to the American slasher film", with its emphasis on "violence and sex" and a plot "dumbed down to the barest minimum". [7]
Nude per l'assassino was released on 26 August 1975. [8] Upon release in the United Kingdom on October 4, 1979, it was rated X by the British Board of Film Classification, following the removal of five minutes of material from the film. [9] It has subsequently received home media releases in English by Blue Underground as Strip Nude for Your Killer, first on DVD on October 25, 2005, [10] and on Blu-ray Disc on March 27, 2012. [11] Shameless Screen Entertainment also released a DVD version under the title Strip Nude for Your Killer on October 27, 2008. [12] The film has also been distributed under the titles Tenebre braccia della morte and Strip Naked for Your Killer. [13]
Nude per l'assassino has been met with mixed to negative reviews. Martyn Auty of the Monthly Film Bulletin , stated that "For all its clichéd direction (voyeuristic threateningly subjective camerawork) and perfunctory sexual diversions, this routine sex-ploiter is at least tolerably shot and unfussily plotted." [14] Writing for AllMovie, Jason Buchanan rated the film two stars out of five, calling it "unabashedly sadistic". [8] Budd Wilkins, writing for Slant magazine, rated the film three stars out of five, calling it "one of the more sordid examples" of the giallo genre. Wilkins noted that the film's violence "isn't necessarily stronger than in contemporary giallo films like Argento's Deep Red ", but that it is "more resolutely tied to aberrant sexuality than almost anywhere else in the genre". Wilkins also compared the film's central premise—that of revenge for a failed abortion—to that of Massimo Dallamano's 1972 film What Have You Done to Solange? . [15] DVD Talk's Adam Tyner also gave the film two stars out of five, summarising it as "not much of a movie". Tyner noted that Nude per l'assassino "doesn't set out to be revered as an artistic triumph", and described it as "worth at least a rental" for fans of the genre. [16]
Writing for The A.V. Club , Noel Murray compared the film to Sergio Martino's 1972 film Your Vice Is a Locked Room and Only I Have the Key (Il tuo vizio è una stanza chiusa e solo io ne ho la chiave), noting that "both take place among the idle European aristocracy, with vapid models, rugged motocross drivers, bigoted executives, and debauched artists wandering through a world of soft fabrics and bloody, gashed skin". [17] Bloody Disgusting's Mike Pereira rated Nude per l'assassino 0.5 out of 5, writing that it "reeks of amateur hour". Pereira felt that the film featured "dead-on-arrival pacing" and "terrible filmmaking and acting [18] A staff review for the Italian magazine Nocturno rated the film four out of five, describing it as "one of the most daring" giallo films of the 1970s. [nb 1] [19] Previewing the film's Blu-ray release, IGN's David McCutcheon described Nude per l'assassino as an "infamous shocker that packs more grisly violence and sexual depravity into each frame than just about any other film". [20]
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.
Edwige Fenech is a French-Italian actress and film producer. She is mostly known as the star of a series of commedia sexy all'italiana and giallo films released in the 1970s, which turned her into a sex symbol.
The Bird with the Crystal Plumage is a 1970 giallo film written and directed by Dario Argento, in his directorial debut. It stars Tony Musante as an American writer in Rome who witnesses a serial killer targeting young women, and tries to uncover the murderer's identity before he becomes their next victim. The cast also features Suzy Kendall, Enrico Maria Salerno, Eva Renzi, Umberto Raho and Mario Adorf.
Deep Red, also known as The Hatchet Murders, is a 1975 Italian giallo film directed by Dario Argento and co-written by Argento and Bernardino Zapponi. It stars David Hemmings as a musician who investigates a series of murders performed by a mysterious figure wearing black leather gloves. The cast also stars Daria Nicolodi, Gabriele Lavia, Macha Méril, and Clara Calamai. The film's score was composed and performed by Goblin, the first in a long-running collaboration with Argento.
Andrea Bianchi was an Italian film director and writer.
Don't Torture a Duckling is a 1972 Italian giallo film directed by Lucio Fulci, starring Florinda Bolkan, Tomas Milian and Barbara Bouchet. The plot follows a journalist investigating a series of child murders in an insular Italian village whose residents are riddled with superstition and mistrust. The film's score was composed by Riz Ortolani and features vocals by Ornella Vanoni.
The David di Donatello for Best Costumes is a film award presented annually by the Accademia del Cinema Italiano to recognize outstanding efforts on the part of film costume designers who have worked within the Italian film industry during the year preceding the ceremony. It was first presented during the 1981 edition of the David di Donatello award show.
Torso is a 1973 Italian giallo film directed by Sergio Martino, produced by Carlo Ponti, and starring Suzy Kendall, Tina Aumont, Luc Merenda, and John Richardson. Martino’s fifth giallo, the film centers on a string of brutal murders of young female students at an international college in Perugia. Several critics describe it as one of the earliest examples of a slasher film.
Vera Carmi was an Italian film actress. She appeared in more than 50 films between 1940 and 1956.
Confessions of a Frustrated Housewife is a 1976 Italian drama film directed by Andrea Bianchi and starring Carroll Baker.
Eufemia "Femi" Benussi is a Yugoslav-Italian film actress. She appeared in 82 films, between 1965 and 1983.
The Night Evelyn Came Out of the Grave is a 1971 Italian gothic film directed by Emilio Miraglia.
Le foto proibite di una signora per bene, also known as Forbidden Photos of a Lady Above Suspicion, is a 1970 giallo film directed by Luciano Ercoli. Written by Ernesto Gastaldi and Mahnahén Velasco, the film stars Pier Paolo Capponi, Simon Andreu and Dagmar Lassander. The film, featuring a score written by Ennio Morricone, has received mixed to positive reviews from critics.
La morte accarezza a mezzanotte is a 1972 giallo film directed by Luciano Ercoli and written by Ernesto Gastaldi, Guido Leoni, Mahnahén Velasco and Mannuel Velasco. It stars Susan Scott, Simón Andreu, Peter Martell, Claudie Lange and Carlo Gentili.
One on Top of the Other, also known as Perversion Story, is a 1969 giallo film directed by Lucio Fulci. Written by Fulci and Roberto Gianviti, the film stars Jean Sorel, Marisa Mell, Elsa Martinelli, Alberto de Mendoza and John Ireland. The first giallo directed by Fulci, its plot concerns George Dumurrier (Sorel), an unscrupulous San Franciscan doctor who is suspected of orchestrating the death of his asthmatic wife Susan (Mell) as part of an insurance scam, despite her seeming reemergence as Monica Weston, a high-class stripper.
Deadly Inheritance, is a 1969 Italian giallo film directed by Vittorio Sindoni.
The Young, the Evil and the Savage, also known as Schoolgirl Killer, is a 1968 Italian giallo film directed by Antonio Margheriti.
Franco Diogene was an Italian actor and comedian.
Massimo Felisatti was an Italian novelist, essayist, screenwriter, and director.