La mansión de la niebla backdrop
La mansión de la niebla poster

LA MANSIÓN DE LA NIEBLA

1972 IT HMDB
agosto 5, 1972

Un grupo de personas que se pierde en una zona rural a causa de la espesa niebla, acaba refugiándose en una mansión, donde no tardarán en suceder cosas muy extrañas y truculentas.

Reparto

👍 👎 🔥 🧻 👑

Comentarios

Comentarios (0)

Equipo

Guion: Luis G. de Blain (Screenplay)Antonio Troiso (Writer)
Musica: Marcello Giombini (Original Music Composer)
Fotografia: Guglielmo Mancori (Director of Photography)

RESEÑAS (1)

Marco Castellini
Un grupo de personas es obligado a pasar la noche en una antigua y lúgubre mansión y es diezmado, al parecer, por algunos espíritus malignos. Al final se descubre que se trataba de una puesta en escena diabólica. Coproducción italo-española confusa y triste, nuevo intento fallido de unir el elemento de terror al erótico. Trascendental, casi malo.
👍 👎 🔥 🧻 👑

Comentarios

Comentarios (0)

RESEÑAS DE LA COMUNIDAD (1)

Wuchak

Wuchak

7 /10

A Mansion in the Darkness

A dozen miles from Milan in the mountains of northern Italy, six people have to spend the night in a creepy mansion by a cemetery. The owner of the manor shares spooky tales of vampires and ghosts, including the aged matriarch of the mansion and her lumbering chauffeur.

A Spanish/Italian production, “Murder Mansion” (1972) was originally titled “The Mansion in the Fog” (translated from Spanish). It’s a mystery/horror and could be classified as a giallo. It’s similar to “The Devil’s Nightmare” and “The Night Evelyn Came Out of the Grave” from the year prior, not to mention it would influence “The Vampires Night Orgy” and “Count Dracula’s Great Love,” both of which would debut the next year.

The difference is that this one’s more family friendly and smacks of a Scooby-Doo tale featuring Fred (Andrés Resino) and two Daphnes (Lisa Leonardi as Laura and Analía Gadé as Elsa), minus the other characters (Velma, Shaggy and the dog). The variance is that Fred and two Daphnes are about 12-15 years older than their doppelgangers in Scooby-Doo.

Don’t get me wrong, this is by no means a kiddie flick. It includes adult-oriented material, like tipsy Mr. Porter constantly coming-on to the various beautiful women, as well as Frad and Elsa’s intimate relationship (with the two being former strangers). There’s just no overt nudity or buckets of gore.

What works best, beyond the beauty of the two aforementioned redheads, is the spooky ambiance of the fog, the graveyard, the mysterious manor, the gothic décor, the occultic paintings and the creepy rumors spoken in hushed tones. The only problem is the highly coincidental nature of the proceedings but, if you can suspend disbelief, the flick delivers the goods.

It runs 1 hour, 26 minutes, and was shot mostly in the studio in Madrid, Spain, but also Guadalajara, Castilla-La Mancha (the opening), which is located 40 miles northeast of the city.

GRADE: B

Reseñas proporcionadas por TMDB