La horrible noche del baile de los muertos backdrop
La horrible noche del baile de los muertos poster

LA HORRIBLE NOCHE DEL BAILE DE LOS MUERTOS

Nella stretta morsa del ragno

1971 DE HMDB
agosto 26, 1971

Tras hacer una apuesta, un hombre debe pasar una noche en un castillo embrujado. Además de las sombras ominosas y los vientos sibilantes, aparecen una bella mujer y una dama amenazadora. Una de las mujeres es asesinada y su cadáver desaparece. El protagonista, asesorado por un extraño médico, emprende su búsqueda.

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Equipo

Produccion: Giovanni Addessi (Producer)
Guion: Giovanni Grimaldi (Screenplay)Bruno Corbucci (Screenplay)Antonio Margheriti (Screenplay)
Musica: Riz Ortolani (Original Music Composer)
Fotografia: Sandro Mancori (Director of Photography)Guglielmo Mancori (Director of Photography)

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Marco Castellini
El escritor Edgar Allan Poe hace una apuesta con un joven periodista: si logra pasar la noche en un castillo embrujado por fantasmas recibirá una recompensa de cien libras esterlinas. El periodista acepta valientemente, pero en el castillo los espíritus son reales y llegar al amanecer sano y salvo no será cosa fácil. Margheriti dirige esta nueva versión en colores de su «Danza macabra», con Klaus Kinski en el papel de Poe y Antony Franciosa en el rol del periodista valiente, pero a pesar de las buenas interpretaciones de los dos buenos actores, esta reedición no logra tener el encanto de la original. Véanlo solo si no logran conseguir «Danza macabra».
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Wuchak

Wuchak

7 /10

A macabre dance at Blackwood Castle in England on All Hallows' Eve

In the late 1840s, an American writer (Anthony Franciosa) meets Edgar Allan Poe (Klaus Kinski) on his visit to London and questions the authenticity of his tales. He is thus challenged to spend the night in Blackwood castle, which is reportedly haunted and no one has yet fulfilled the bet and come back alive.

“Web of the Spider” (1971) was called “In the Spider’s Tight Grip” in Italian (translated) and is a remake of the director’s 1964 B&W film “Castle of Blood,” aka “Dance Macabre.” It was erroneously advertised as based on Poe’s “Night of the Living Dead,” but no such story exists (although he has a poem called “Spirits of the Dead”). Scriptwriters Bruno Corbucci (Sergio’s brother) and Giovanni Grimaldi drew from Poe's literary traditions rather than from a particular text.

Franciosa is seriously reminiscent of William Shatner in this particular production, although he was actually older by 2.5 years, not to mention four inches taller. On the feminine side of things, redhead Michèle Mercier is stunning. She was 32 during shooting in March, 1971, but looked older (her character was only 26, but I guess it works out since she’s actually dead). Brunette Irina Maleeva is also lovely while Karin Field is worth a mention, but the latter’s character, Julia, is a turn-off.

I prefer this to “Castle of Blood” simply because it’s in color, not to mention the presence of Michèle Mercier and Irina Maleeva. I also favor Franciosa as the protagonist. There’s an exquisiteness to the proceedings, particularly the pre-Victorian Age costumes and dance sequences, mixed with the creepy ghostly element and the castle setting. I also valued the insights on spectral happenings.

I saw the English version, which runs about 90-93 minutes and is better than the 85-minute German rendition, but I’d love to see one of the fuller Italian versions, which run like 15-18 minutes longer. Needless to say, we’re being shortchanged by the butchered English print!

It was shot at Castello Massimo, which is 37 miles northeast of Rome, and at Dino De Laurentiis’ Italian studio.

GRADE: B

Reseñas proporcionadas por TMDB