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Italy
- U.S.A. - Austria / 1972
Directed by Mario Bava
Starring
Joseph Cotten
Elke Sommer
Massimo Girotti
Color / 100 Minutes / Not Rated
Format: DVD (R1
- NTSC)
Image
Entertainment
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2007
Anchor Bay Edition
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Review
by
Brian Lindsey
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5
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3 |
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10
= Highest Rating |
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After
the shockingly violent and sexual nature of his transgressive
giallo Twitch of the Death Nerve
(1971), Italian director Mario Bava returned to the kinder,
gentler trappings of old-fashioned gothic horror with his next
film, Baron Blood. Although set
in modern times, its
chief location — a medieval castle in Austria — gives the film
the ambiance of a classic Universal or Hammer production. So
does Bava's restraint in telling the story. Twitch
featured a naked woman being hacked up with a machete (amongst
many other things); the mayhem in
Baron Blood is strictly PG-rated material.
Handsome college
grad Peter Kleist (Antonio Cantafora) travels from the U.S.
to visit his ancestral home in rural Austria. With
his uncle, Prof. Karl Hummel (Massimo Gerotti), he tours an
ancient castle once owned by his forebears, now being renovated
for sale at auction. 300 years ago it was the fortress of the
notorious Otto von Kleist,
an evil nobleman called "Baron Blood" by the local
populace he terrorized in a reign of torture and murder. His
crimes were such that the people finally revolted, storming
the castle and subjecting the Baron to his own implements of
pain before burning him alive.
Peter is obsessed
with an occult angle to the legend of the Baron's death. Supposedly
a witch whom von Kleist had condemned to the stake placed a
curse on him before being consumed by the flames; a certain
incantation will bring the Baron's corpse back to life so that
he can be tortured anew in atonement. Peter has brought with
him a centuries-old parchment containing the words of the spell
and, enlisting a pretty architectural student (Elke Sommer)
in a late-night visit to the dungeon, speaks the incantation.
At first unbeknownst to them, the hideously disfigured Baron
does rise from his grave, killing a number of people
as he skulks about the castle grounds in a black cape and hat.
Later the couple starts to believe that he's really come back
and that their own lives are in danger. Meanwhile a strange
elderly millionaire,
Herr Becker (Joseph Cotten), shows up out of the blue to purchase
the castle. He plans to restore Baron Blood's torture chamber
to its original condition...
Except for perhaps
Antonio Margheriti (The Virgin
of Nuremberg), nobody knew their way around a castle,
crypt, or night-shrouded cemetery like Mario Bava. A
craftsman of profound visual acumen, Bava —
whose wizardry at creating the illusion of opulence with but
a pittance is legendary —
makes excellent use of his locations, steeping the film in a
rich gothic atmosphere. This is particularly evident in Baron
Blood's two most effective set-pieces: when caretaker
Fritz (Luciano Pigozzi) discovers a body hanging in the stairwell,
only to get a rude pointer from the Baron personally; and the
stalker-like pursuit of Sommer through the fogbound alleyways
of the local village. Other than these standout scenes the film
is well-mounted but mostly bland, even routine. Without injecting
any sleaze or ultraviolence into the proceedings, there's really
not much else Bava could do (given the rather basic plot) but
make it look great and give it the proper ambiance. At 100 minutes
it runs a tad long; 10 or even 15 minutes could've easily been
shaved to quicken the pace without compromising the bare-boned
scenario. Composer Stelvio Cipriani's score is especially undistinguished,
actually hurting the film with its inappropriately bouncy (and
kitschy) opening/closing theme, which sounds like it belongs
in a sex comedy set on the sunny Riviera.
Though evidently
game, the grandfatherly Cotten is much less effective here as
the monstrous villain than he is in more sympathetic genre roles
(The Abominable Dr. Phibes, Lady
Frankenstein). He just doesn't seem the type who'd derive
sadistic thrills from torturing people. (And does a lousy job
of 'air-slapping' one victim, missing by an obvious country
mile. Vincent Price reportedly turned down the part; it's a
given, I think, to suggest the film would've been considerably
better for his presence, with Cotten more suited to the Uncle
Karl role.) The best performance is by Rada Rassimov (The
Cat o' Nine Tails) in a small but crucial supporting role
as a medium who, at the behest of the protagonists, summons
the spirit of the dead witch to learn a way of sending the Baron
back to Hell. Buxom blonde Elke Sommer (Bava's Lisa
and the Devil) is a real honey — and a decent actress,
too, with a sexy German accent — but her hoarse, raspy screaming
starts to grate after awhile... and she does a lot of
screaming.
A must-see for Bava
admirers, Baron Blood only barely
achieves time-waster status for gothic horror fans in general.
They've seen this type of story many, many times before. And
without any serious gore or T&A
to 'sex' things up it may prove a bit of a snoozer.
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| This
was actually the first DVD in Image Entertainment's Mario Bava
Collection, initially released in 1999 and then reissued a
couple of years ago in superior keepcase-style packaging. (Thank
goodness the company phased out those blasted cardboard snappers!)
Being an older disc, A/V quality is a letdown, with picture and
sound barely adequate at best. At least the film is presented
in its original (1.85:1) aspect ratio, which is essential when
watching anything helmed by Bava. (The transfer is not anamorphically
enhanced for widescreen TVs, however.) Bonus
features include an image gallery, filmographies, a bio of Bava
and Baron Blood-specific liner notes
by Video Watchdog's Tim Lucas, plus a rather murky and
muddy U.S. theatrical trailer. 12/13/04 |
UPDATE
This DVD went OOP in 2005. Starz/Anchor Bay issued a new, remastered
edition of Baron Blood in October
2007 as part of the 6-disc/8-film Mario
Bava Collection, Vol. 2. Picture and sound quality are
markedly improved; radio spots and a newly recorded audio commentary
by Bava expert Tim Lucas are included as extras with this superior
new edition. (The other films in the set are: 5
Dolls for an August Moon, Roy
Colt & Winchester Jack, Bay
of Blood, Four Times That Night,
Lisa and the Devil, House
of Exorcism and Kidnapped.)
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