Nero Criminale – Le Belve sono tra Noi backdrop
Nero Criminale – Le Belve sono tra Noi poster

NERO CRIMINALE – LE BELVE SONO TRA NOI

Frightmare

1974 GB HMDB
novembre 5, 1974

Dorothy Yates è appena stata rimessa in libertà dopo aver trascorso 15 anni in prigione, colpevole di omicidio e di terribili atti di cannibalismo. Una volta di nuovo fuori la donna - insieme alla figlia Debbie - riprende però le sue terribili abitudini.

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Produzione: Pete Walker (Producer)Tony Tenser (Executive Producer)
Sceneggiatura: David McGillivray (Screenplay)
Musica: Stanley Myers (Original Music Composer)
Fotografia: Peter Jessop (Director of Photography)

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Marco Castellini
Dorothy Yates dopo aver trascorso gli ultimi quindici anni della sua vita in un ospedale psichiatrico per aver commesso alcuni atroci delitti ed atti di cannibalismo viene dimessa. Ora però la donna, nuovamente libera, decide di riprendere, insieme alla figlia, le vecchie abitudini “alimentari”… Una sceneggiatura debole e dei dialoghi spesso “improvvisati” (ancora peggiori nella versione italiana) limitano la riuscita di un horror che poteva risultare un piccolo cult di genere ma che invece si risolve in un insipido cannibal-movie. Visto l’argomento ci si aspetterebbe almeno sangue a fiumi e scene “forti” ed invece neppure questo. Evitabile.
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John Chard

John Chard

5 /10

Ghastly, Ghoulish, Grotty & Gory.

Frightmare is directed by Pete Walker who also co-writes the screenplay with David McGillivray. It stars Rupert Davies, Shelia Keith, Deborah Fairfax, Paul Greenwood and Kim Butcher. Music is by Stanley Myers and cinematography by Peter Jessop.

Edmund and Dorothy Yates are freed after fifteen years in an asylum, committed for despicable crimes, but is Dorothy cured? And what of their daughters?

Frightmare is what it is, a British exploitation horror made at a time when it was out to get the best rise out of the audience. As much as Pete Walker’s fans don’t want to believe it, there is no social comment being made, no hidden agenda or attempts to push the boundaries of British horror in visual or thematic achievements. Walker, a very likable and honest man, even says his films are not for deep cranial pondering, he couldn’t believe his luck that he got to throw blood and guts about and got paid for it.

Frightmare is a thinly plotted and written picture that serves only to bask in some shock and awe scenes. The ineptitude of the mental health authorities is given a cursory glance, but really the picture plods from one scene to the next waiting for Dorothy to get busy with her tool kit. It’s there, with the wonderfully scary Keith doing her stuff, where Walker excels. Though in today’s desensitised age it’s more fun than frightening, while there’s actually not as much gore on show as you would think. It’s all very basic in truth, but Walker achieved his aims back then, and kudos to him for serving up a truly bleak finale. 5/10

Recensioni fornite da TMDB