‘Giallo Essentials’ – THE PYJAMA GIRL CASE, THE FIFTH CORD, and THE POSSESSED Set Available November 30th From Arrow Video

“I am going to commit murder. I am going to kill another human being. How easy it is to say, already I feel like a criminal. I’ve been thinking it over for weeks, but now that I’ve giving voice to my evil intention I feel comfortably relaxed. Perhaps the deed itself will be an anti-climax, but I think not.”

The box set Giallo Essentials featuring THE PYJAMA GIRL CASE (1978), THE FIFTH CORD (1971), and THE POSSESSED (1965) set will be available November 30th from Arrow Video

Alongside the spaghetti western, the giallo is one of the most famous Italian export genres: films steeped in mystery and intrigue, delivered with stylised violence and unforgettable musical themes. The Possessed (1965) masterfully combines noir, mystery and giallo tropes in a proto-giallo based on one of Italy’s most notorious crimes. It tells the story of a depressed novelist (Peter Baldwin) in search of his old flame (Virna Lisi) who has disappeared under suspicious circumstances, prompting an investigation that finds him plunged into a disturbing drama of familial secrets, perversion, madness and murder. The Fifth Cord (1971) boasts a complex, Agatha Christie-esque plot of investigation into a series of brutal assaults. As the body count rises, whisky swilling journalist Andrea Bild (Franco Nero) finds himself under suspicion, making it all the more imperative he crack the case. The Pyjama Girl Case (1978), inspired by a real-life case that baffles to this day, takes us to Australia where former inspector Timpson comes out of retirement to crack the case of a young woman, found on the beach, shot in the head, burned to hide her identity and dressed in distinctive yellow pyjamas… In the first of a multi-volume series of Giallo Essentials these films feature a raft of talent in front and behind the camera with each film restored from the original camera negatives and presented with a range of contextualising interviews and featurettes.

  • SPECIAL EDITION CONTENTS:
  • Brand new 2K restorations of the film from the original camera negative for The Possessed, The Fifth Cord and The Pyjama Girl Case
  • High Definition Blu-ray (1080p) presentations of each film
  • Original lossless mono Italian and English soundtracks
  • Newly translated English subtitles for the Italian soundtracks
  • Optional English subtitles for the deaf and hard of hearing for the English soundtracks
  • Rigid box packaging with newly designed artwork by Adam Rabalais in a windowed Giallo Essentials Collection slipcover
  • THE POSSESSED
  • New audio commentary by writer and critic Tim Lucas
  • Richard Dyer on The Possessed, a newly filmed video appreciation by the cultural critic and academic
  • Cat’s Eyes, an interview with the film’s makeup artist Giannetto De Rossi
  • Two Days a Week, an interview with the film’s award-winning assistant art director Dante Ferretti
  • The Legacy of the Bazzoni Brothers, an interview with actor/director Francesco Barilli, a close friend of Luigi and Camillo Bazzoni
  • Original trailers
  • Reversible sleeve featuring original and newly commissioned artwork by Sean Phillips
  • THE FIFTH CORD
  • New audio commentary by critic Travis Crawford
  • Lines and Shadows, a new video essay on the film’s use of architecture and space by critic Rachael Nisbet
  • Whisky Giallore, a new video interview with author and critic Michael Mackenzie
  • Black Day for Nero, a new video interview with actor Franco Nero
  • The Rhythm Section, a new video interview with film editor Eugenio Alabiso
  • Rare, previously unseen deleted sequence, restored from the original negative
  • Original Italian and English theatrical trailers
  • Image gallery
  • Reversible sleeve featuring original and newly commissioned artwork by Haunt Love
  • THE PYJAMA GIRL CASE
  • New audio commentary by Troy Howarth, author of So Deadly, So Perverse: 50 Years of Italian Giallo Films
  • New video interview with author and critic Michael Mackenzie on the internationalism of the giallo
  • New video interview with actor Howard Ross
  • New video interview with editor Alberto Tagliavia
  • Archival interview with composer Riz Ortolani
  • Image gallery
  • Italian theatrical trailer
  • Reversible sleeve featuring original and newly commissioned artwork by Chris Malbon

THE POSSESSED (1965) – The Blu Review

Review by Roger Carpenter

Originally entitled The Lady of the Lake—a much more accurate title then The Possessed—this is a unique genre film that is part noir, part art film, and is also considered a proto-giallo film.

Based on a hit book that was based itself on a notorious Italian murder, The Possessed tells the tale of  Bernard, a lost and depressed author (played by Peter Baldwin) and a hotel maid, Tilde (Virna Lisi), whom Bernard has become obsessed with.

The film opens as Bernard makes his way to the isolated hotel where he first met Tilde, and where she still works.  It is winter and the hotel is closed for the season.  However, Bernard has had some success with his first novel so the proprietor welcomes him with open arms.  Soon, though, Bernard discovers that Tilde has committed suicide since he was last at the hotel.  Or perhaps it was murder.  Small towns sometimes have a way of creating drama where there is none.  Small towns also have a way of discovering the actual truth to events, no matter what the official explanation may be.

Bernard, who is devastated by the turn of events, is drawn into a web of intrigue that involves witnesses to the aftermath of the crime, photos of the victim just prior to her death, and the seeming involvement of everyone at the hotel.

Directed by Luigi Bazzoni and Franco Rossellini and co-written with Giulio Questi, The Possessed is a fascinating mashup of various genres.  Bazzoni only directed a handful of films and is probably best remembered for his spaghetti western Man, Pride and Vengeance along with the giallo The Fifth Cord, both of which starred Franco Nero.  Rossellini—yes, from the famous film family—produced only a handful of movies, but many of them were prestige productions from the likes of Pasolini and Fellini, and also included the infamous Bob Guccione/Tinto Brass film, CaligulaThe Possessed was his only directorial effort.  Questi was a screenwriter responsible for two very unique genre films, the giallo Death Laid an Egg, and the surreal spaghetti western Django Kill…if You Live, Shoot!


The Possessed is a unique film, based upon a real-life murder, which takes elements of the giallo and mixes them with noir, all with an arthouse flavor.  There is the common giallo theme of sexual obsession, though less elaborate than it would become in the early 1970’s.  Bernard is in love with Tilde but knows the girl has been promiscuous in the past.  This may or may not be connected to her mysterious death.  Too, there is the concept of distorted memory that is slowly pieced together, bit by bit, as the movie unfolds, feeding the audience juicy details until the final reveal.  And finally, there is the theme of a once-prominent family –in this case, the family who runs the hotel that keeps the village alive—falling from grace as sordid secrets unfold.

At the same time, the film can also be seen as a classic whodunit, or psychological mystery.  Filmed in lush black-and-white, the overall feel of the film is noir-ish, as Bernard wanders the lonely, shadowed halls of the empty hotel and the silent, windswept shore of the lake at night.  The film can sometimes become a bit obtuse as Bazzoni and Rossellini perhaps rely too much on washed-out flashbacks and dreams to add mystery and detail to the story.  In one bizarre scene, Bernard watches the now-dead Tilde make love to a strange man in one of the hotel rooms. But it is just a memory rushing back to Bernard, though it throws the viewers off a bit with its insertion.

There is also Tilde’s father, a drunkard who lives deep in the woods and seems to know something more than he is telling.  He tends to walk the streets of the village at night shouting at the shuttered windows of the villagers’ homes as he seeks resolution during his drunken state.  But he is not as forthcoming with information when sober.  Bernard also meets the local photographer who insists the crime scene as described in the official report is different than the one he stumbled upon.  And he has a photo—never recovered by the victim before she died—that seems to show her in…how should we put it?  A delicate state, so to speak.  Then there is the hotel owner’s son, who is masterful with butchering tools and who is rumored to have been involved with Tilde just before her death.  This can’t possibly be true, as he is already married to another girl, the delicate and sickly Adriana (Pia Lindstrom), who herself seems to harbor a secret she badly wants to tell someone.


In the end, The Possessed is a captivating and entertaining murder mystery, less giallo than psychological drama.  It is beautifully filmed and well-acted even if sometimes a bit confused with flashbacks, dream sequences, and other bits of memories floating throughout the film. It remains an important transition in the history of the giallo film and a solid, if a bit obscure, entry into the psychological drama genre.

Arrow Video USA has just released The Possessed in a special edition which contains a Blu-Ray version of the film in a brand new 2K scan from the original camera negative.  The film looks and sounds as if it was just produced this year.  An audio commentary by Tim Lucas is essential to learning about the history of this particular film and the giallo genre in general, and there are several special features that place the film in its proper historical perspective while exploring the themes and people behind the film.  These include a newly-filmed video appreciation of the film itself, an interview with the film’s makeup artist, the famous Giannetto De Rossi, an interview with assistant art director Dante Ferretti, and a documentary about the Bazzoni brothers and their film careers.  Also included are trailers for the film as well as, for the first pressing, a booklet with new writing on the film.

The Possessed is now available for purchase at Amazon or you can purchase the film directly from Arrow Video at http://www.arrowfilms.co.uk/category/usa/.

 

 

THE POSSESSED (1965) Available on Blu-ray February 5th From Arrow Video


THE POSSESSED will be available on Blu-ray February 5th From Arrow Video


The Possessed is a wonderfully atmospheric proto-giallo based on one of Italy s most notorious crimes, the Alleghe killings, and adapted from the book on that case by acclaimed literary figure Giovanni Comisso.


Peter Baldwin (The Ghost, The Weekend Murders) stars as Bernard, a depressed novelist who sets off in search of his old flame Tilde (Virna Lisi, La Reine Margot), a beautiful maid who works at a remote lakeside hotel. Bernard is warmly greeted by the hotel owner Enrico (Salvo Randone, Fellini’s Satyricon) and his daughter Irma (Valentina Cortese, Thieves Highway, The Iguana with the Tongue of Fire), but Tilde has disappeared under suspicious circumstances. Bernard undertakes an investigation and is soon plunged into a disturbing drama of familial secrets, perversion, madness and murder…


Co-written by Giulio Questi (Death Laid an Egg, Arcana) and co-directed by Luigi Bazzoni (The Fifth Cord, Footprints on the Moon), The Possessed masterfully combines film noir, mystery and giallo tropes, whilst also drawing on the formal innovations of 1960s art cinema (particularly the films of Michelangelo Antonioni). A uniquely dreamlike take on true crime, The Possessed is presented here in a stunning new restoration.


SPECIAL EDITION CONTENTS

  • Brand new 2K restoration from the original camera negative
  • High Definition Blu-ray (1080p) presentation
  • Original Italian and English soundtracks, titles and credits
  • Uncompressed Mono 1.0 PCM audio
  • Newly translated English subtitles for the Italian soundtrack
  • Optional English subtitles for the deaf and hard of hearing for the English soundtrack
  • New audio commentary by writer and critic Tim Lucas
  • Richard Dyer on The Possessed – a newly filmed video appreciation by the cultural critic and academic
  • Cat s Eyes, an interview with the film’s makeup artist Giannetto De Rossi
  • Two Days a Week, an interview with the film’s award-winning assistant art director Dante Ferretti
  • The Legacy of the Bazzoni Brothers, an interview with actor/director Francesco Barilli, a close friend of Luigi and Camillo Bazzoni
  • Original trailers
  • Reversible sleeve featuring original and newly commissioned artwork by Sean Phillips
  • FIRST PRESSING ONLY: Illustrated collector’s booklet featuring new writing on the film by Andreas Ehrenreich, Roberto Curti and original reviews