The Night Evelyn Came Out of the Grave backdrop
The Night Evelyn Came Out of the Grave poster

THE NIGHT EVELYN CAME OUT OF THE GRAVE

La notte che Evelyn uscì dalla tomba

1971 • IT HMDB
August 18, 1971

A rich, mentally-unstable man with a penchant for playing deadly S&M games with women who resemble his dead wife, sparks off a chain of bizarre events after getting remarried.

Cast

Comments

Crew

Production: Antonio Sarno (Producer)
Screenplay: Massimo Felisatti (Screenplay)Fabio Pittorru (Screenplay)Emilio P. Miraglia (Screenplay)
Music: Bruno Nicolai (Original Music Composer)
Cinematography: Gastone Di Giovanni (Director of Photography)

REVIEWS (1)

Marco Castellini

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A man killed his wife, now he is completely crazy and hosts young women resembling his deceased wife in some way in his castle to then kill them. His second wife understands everything and tries to deceive him by making him believe that the ghost of his first wife has returned for revenge. Surprise ending. Classic Italian giallo-horror not without some good ideas but nothing exceptional. Only for fans of the genre.

Comments

COMMUNITY REVIEWS (1)

Wuchak

Wuchak

6 /10

Giallo madness with several alluring redheads

A psychologically damaged man living in a castle in Europe (Anthony Steffen) handles his grief over his deceased wife, Evelyn, by bringing home redhead prostitutes or strippers for some macabre thrills. His doctor advises him to marry, which he does, but will this solve his problems?

"The Night Evelyn Came Out of the Grave" (1971) is a Giallo film, aka Italian psychological crime/thriller with bits of sexploitation, horror and, maybe, the supernatural. Mario Bava’s contemporaneous “A Bay of Blood” is a good example.

While these kinds of movies can be creepy with slasher elements, they’re also sexy (Erika Blanc's coffin dance), perverse (Blanc in panties and thigh-high boots being chased by a guy with a whip), ridiculous (the bloody catfight in the third act) and highly-stylized, not to mention they function as murder mysteries.

A highlight here is the female cast, including Maria Teresa Toffano (Polly), Blanc (Susie) and Marina Malfatti as new wife, Gladys, not to mention Paola Natale as Evelyn in flashbacks.

It’s curious that the story takes place in the London area because it’s clear that it was shot in Italy. Why not just have the story occur in Italy? In any case, if I’m in the mood for colorful Italian horror from the early 70s, I’ll go with “The Devil’s Nightmare,” which also costars Erika Blanc. Yet there’s enough here to entertain if you like Giallo flicks.

The film runs 1 hour, 43 minutes, and was shot at Thiene Castle, which is an hour’s drive northwest of Venice in northeastern Italy, with studio work being done in Rome.

GRADE: C+/B-

Reviews provided by TMDB