Operación miedo backdrop
Operación miedo poster

OPERACIÓN MIEDO

Operazione paura

1966 IT HMDB
julio 8, 1966

Un médico de ciudad viaja a un país remoto para realizar una autopsia sobre el cadáver de una niña que murió en circunstancias misteriosas, entonces descubrirá que ésta es sólo la última de una extensa serie de muertes. Sus pesquisas le conducirán hasta la villa de Graps, que según los aldeanos está embrujada.

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Equipo

Produccion: Nando Pisani (Producer)Luciano Catenacci (Producer)
Guion: Romano Migliorini (Screenplay)Roberto Natale (Screenplay)Mario Bava (Screenplay)
Musica: Roman Vlad (Music)Francesco De Masi (Music)Angelo Francesco Lavagnino (Music)Franco Mannino (Music)Armando Trovajoli (Music)Carlo Rustichelli (Music)
Fotografia: Antonio Rinaldi (Director of Photography)

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Marco Castellini
En un pueblito, una serie de muertes parecen ocurrir sin ninguna razón lógica. Para investigar estos extraños hechos, se envían al lugar un comisionado de policía y un médico forense. Este último, apenas llegado al pueblo, decide hacer la autopsia a una mujer recientemente fallecida y descubre un terrible secreto: todo parece estar relacionado con una anciana noble dama, algunos años antes, conmocionada por la muerte de su querida hijita... Un clásico de Mario Bava (junto con "La Máscara del Demonio" y "Reacción en Cadena" es uno de los mejores del maestro italiano del escalofrío) en el que se encuentran concentrados todos los elementos clave que caracterizan el filón gótico italiano: la venganza del Más Allá, el terror psicológico, el misterio unido al fascino por todo lo que es sobrenatural, la predominante importancia de los personajes femeninos. Inolvidables las inquietantes apariciones del fantasma "vengador" de la niña, precedidas por el rebote de su pelota que anuncia su presencia pero, al mismo tiempo, el fin inminente para alguien. Dos curiosidades: el protagonista de la película es el excelente Giacomo Rossi Stuart mientras que la inquietante niña no era otra que un muchacho, y precisamente el hijo del portero de Bava, "maquillado" para la ocasión con una peluca rubia.
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Wuchak

Wuchak

7 /10

Colorful Italian Gothic/Horror from Mario Bava

RELEASED IN 1966 and directed by Mario Bava, "Kill, Baby, Kill" takes place in a Carpathian village in 1907 where Dr. Paul Eswai (Giacomo Rossi-Stuart) arrives to perform an autopsy at the request of the inspector (Piero Lulli). The evidence points to the hamlet being cursed with a mysterious ghost girl that compels those who see her to kill themselves, which the doctor thinks is rubbish; at first anyway. Erika Blanc plays a visiting medical student who assists Eswai while Fabienne Dali appears as the village witch and Giovanna Galletti as a bitter baroness. Luciano Catenacci is on hand as the burgomaster (mayor) and the witch’s lover.

The movie has a colorful and haunting Gothic/Horror ambiance, which can be traced to earlier films like the B&W "The City of the Dead" (aka "Horror Hotel") (1960) and, more so, “The Terror” (1963), which was one of Francis Ford Coppola’s early works, although he only directed part of it. Like those flicks, “Kill, Baby, Kill” features mysterious manors, dilapidated churches, ghosts, cobwebs, witches and bell towers in the mold of Hammer flicks of the era, such as the contemporaneous "Dracula, Prince of Darkness" (1966). As far as spooky MOOD goes, “Kill, Baby, Kill” is superb, but the story isn’t as compelling as “The Terror,” except for the last act. Nevertheless, the movie has influenced many artists and their works.

Rossi-Stuart makes for a stalwart protagonist in the mold of James Bond (looks-wise) while Erika Blanc and Fabienne Dali work well on the other side of the gender spectrum, both striking in different ways.

The title of the film is cheesy and recalls Russ Meyer’s “Faster, Pussycat! Kill! Kill!” from the year before. It was obviously used to give the film a “hip” edge and sell as many tickets as possible. In 1971 it was retitled “Curse of the Living Dead” in the US, which was a 100% improvement. Here are several other sample titles that would be an upgrade, as well as more accurate: “Village of the Laughing Dead”; “Night of the Laughing Dead”; “Child of Vengeance”; “The Ghost at the Window”; “Child Cursed Village”; “Forgotten Daughter”; “Make them Pay”; “Sorceress' Regret”; “Melissa”; and “Melissa’s Curse.”

Okay, now for a few joke titles: “Melissa and her Sissa”; “The Graps of Wrath”; “That Damn Ball” and “Ghost Boy in Drag.” That last one is due to the fact that the ghost girl was played by a boy, one-shot actor Valerio Valeri.

THE MOVIE RUNS 1 hour, 23 minutes and was shot entirely in Rome, Lazio, Italy. WRITERS: Romano Migliorini, Roberto Natale and Bava.

GRADE: B

Reseñas proporcionadas por TMDB