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BLUE
EYES OF THE
BROKEN DOLL
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Spain
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1973
Directed by Carlos Aured
Starring
Paul Naschy
Diana Lorys
Eva Leon
Color
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88 Minutes
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Not Rated
Format: DVD (R1 - NTSC)
BCI/Deimos
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Also
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10
= Highest Rating |
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Guest
Review by Rod
Barnett |
Gilles
(Horror Rises from the Tomb's
Paul Naschy) is hitchhiking his way across northern
France looking for a job. Each stop in a small
town or village results in sullen stares from
the out-of-work locals, a gentle indicator that
he should move on. Trudging down a dark road one
evening he's picked up by Claude (Diana Lorys,
Nightmares
Come at Night). She's a pretty woman with
a horribly scarred right arm on which she wears
a prosthetic hand. Gilles apologizes for staring
and his questions about how the wounds were inflicted
are bluntly turned aside. But when Gilles asks
about work, Claude offers him the position of
gardener/caretaker of the ramshackle estate she
shares with her two sisters. The last employee
was let go under bad circumstances and the unemployed
fellow gladly accepts.
On
the way to the house the car strikes a bird, injuring
it. When Claude mercifully kills the broken creature
Gilles has a sudden flashback in which he seems
to be strangling a woman. Upon arriving at the
estate he meets Nicole (Eva Leon), the redheaded
and very flirtatious sister. The third of the
siblings is wheelchair bound Ivette (Maria Perschy).
Claude introduces him and explains that Ivette
was injured in an accident several years before,
but declines to give any details. Gilles gets
the impression that the two sisters' different
injuries may be related.
The next
morning Nicole follows the new hired hand around,
watching him work and making her lustful intentions
obvious. In the afternoon Ivette's new nurse arrives
and, much to the surprise of her doctor, it's
not the woman he recommended. Ivette is immediately
suspicious of Nurse Michelle (Ines Morales), a
gorgeous blonde, but the family doctor trusts
her and does his best to set his patient's mind
at ease. This becomes more difficult the next
day, when it's discovered that the police have
found the murdered body of the originally expected
nurse beside the road on the way to the estate.
Hmm. Could Michelle
be hiding something sinister? She certainly acts
odd, especially after a tense phone call from
an unknown person. Hmm. And
on the sinister side of things, Gilles is plagued
by nightmares repeating the scenario of him strangling
a laughing woman... And the nurse was strangled
to death. Hmm. Happily for him, Nicole
sneaks into his room on his second evening and
administers her own brand of welcome. But is that
a carefully controlled desire to grip her neck
the man fights down as he makes love? Hmm...
Doing
yard work the following day, Gilles is attacked
by a knife-wielding maniac. He's able to fight
off and even stab the man as he escapes, but he
receives a cut across his stomach. Michelle bandages
him up and he rests the remainder of the day in
bed. Claude visits him to explain that the man
with the knife was Jean, the previous caretaker,
who was fired for sleeping with nymphomaniac Nicole.
It's clear Claude feels guilty about what happened
and before the evening is over she's prescribed
some sexual healing of her own. That's two of
the sisters in the house...
Will Gilles go for all three?
Later
that night, in the nearby village, a young girl
is attacked and killed while walking home through
a cemetery. The victim's eyes (looking like soft
boiled eggs) are gouged out and taken by the murderer.
This second murder in a few days leads the police
to fear they may have a serial killer on their
hands. And after a third corpse appears the next
morning — missing
its eyes — the cops
are in a frenzy to find the criminal. The single
common denominator is that each girl killed had
blonde hair and blue eyes. Hmm. Doesn't
the woman in Gilles flashbacks/nightmares have
blonde hair? Hmm.
The police suspect Jean, the
missing knife-wielding ex-caretaker, but Claude
does some snooping in Gilles' room and finds old
newspaper clippings. These identify Gilles by
another name and relate his past conviction for
raping and killing his fiancée years before. Confronting
Gilles with this information, he breaks down and
tells her the details of his past, gaining her
sympathy but leaving a real possibility in the
viewer that he's our black-gloved killer. (Little
hint for all ex-convicts trying to leave their
past behind — don't carry around newspaper clippings
that detail your criminal deeds.)
Throwing
more confusion into the mix is the discovery of
Jean in a field, dead from the stab wound inflicted
by Gilles days earlier. Hmm. Who is murdering
all these pretty young girls?
This
is a great little thriller that easily fits into
the giallo genre. Although some purist would argue
that only the Italians made true gialli, I find
that a silly and pointlessly limiting way of looking
at European thrillers. This may be a Spanish-made
film set in France but it's clearly a giallo and
an inventive one at that. Indeed, I find Blue
Eyes of the Broken Doll
to be a strong example of its type with only one
serious flaw — its
often off-putting music. But even this flaw isn't
a total disaster. The movie boasts two reoccurring
tunes that underscore the story, one a bouncy
piece that we first hear under the credits. While
a very catchy song that I'd love to have on a
soundtrack CD, its repeated use in some scenes
that it REALLY doesn't fit works against the tension
the film builds. More than once it plays under
a dramatic sequence that it complete deflates
with its cheerful sound. But the other song used
is an amazing, sinister version of the old childhood
sing-a-long "Frère Jacque" which is
used during the stalking/attack scenes as the
unseen killer picks off the blue-eyed victims.
Sparse and haunting, the song becomes more off
kilter and out of tune with each murder, giving
a nice hint of the deteriorating mental state
of the black-gloved strangler.
One of
the great joys of any Paul Naschy (real name:
Jacinto Molina) horror film is the feeling of
affection for the genre that always shines through.
Even in his lesser efforts it's obvious that he
loves making monster movies and is honestly trying
to make the best one he possibly can. Of course,
this sometimes causes them to be so over-earnest
in their seriousness that even a diehard fan can
wish that characters would stop whining and just
do something. Pathos and a surfeit of sentimentality
often crept into the screenplays penned by Naschy.
But luckily this was before horror film lengths
expanded past the two hour mark so that final
act rampage was never too far away. Also, his
desire to inject some romanticism into nearly
every story could come off as forced and silly
by turns. These dives into doe-eyed lovemaking,
complete with swelling musical accompaniment,
were not helped by the fact that in nearly every
case it was Naschy himself who was rolling around
in the sack with the beautiful actresses. Not
that Paul wasn't a fine example of studly machismo.
But when the scriptwriter/actor ends up bedding
almost every gorgeous woman in the film EVERY
TIME it becomes a growing source of amusement.
"Hey, Jacinto... How many naked actresses
do you get to paw in this movie?" I suspect
that a compilation of just the lovemaking scenes
form his movies strung together one after another
would make a pretty amusing (and lengthy) party
tape. The looks of barely restrained lust are
only rivaled in their entertainment value by his
intense contortions of pain and rage during one
of his dozens of screen werewolf transformations.
For sheer emotional overkill, Naschy was your
man!
Luckily,
Blue Eyes of the Broken
Doll manages to avoid the oversentimentality
of most Naschy stories. I thought we were really
in for it when Ivette shows up in the wheelchair,
but she is never played for cheap emotion. The
character is central to the underlying tensions
between the sisters but is kept mostly in the
background, with only her paranoia about her new
nurse giving a view into her inner world.
Of course,
the main reason the film is so engrossing is its
central mystery — who
is killing the young women around the village?
It's a great puzzle, and even if the final reveal
shows that there was no way at all for a viewer
to figure things out it's still a fun tale. The
film goes out of its way to provide clues pointing
to several characters, setting up plenty of red
herrings. And even if we know it simply can't
be Gilles (because he's the most obvious choice),
his barely suppressed desire to strangle women
does cause a few doubts.
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BCI continues its series of DVDs bringing Naschy's
film to America with all the loving affection
a fan could ask for. An uncut print (including
the gratuitous pig slaughter scene) is presented
looking bright, clean and very sharp. The only
complaint I can give is an odd one in this day
but its strange to see a film presented fullframe
instead of matted to its proper aspect ratio.
At first I was irritated, but after two careful
viewings I can say that I never noticed any obvious
missing image or too-tight compositions one might
expect. Instead I think that to have matted the
picture would have hampered the movie at certain
points. I don't know why this film has been handled
like this, but I can assure fans it's not a problem
at all. The film is playable with either the English
dub track or the Spanish Castilian language track
(with excellent optional English subs). Both are
fine options for watching the film, imparting
the same information in slightly different ways.
The
extras are fantastic, starting with a full length
commentary track with star/screenwriter Naschy
and director Carlos Aured. This track is presented
with optional subtitles (thank goodness) and is
well worth a listen for any fan of the film or
Naschy. It also represents one of the last public
works by Aured, as he died only a few months after
the recording session. Film historians and horror
movie fans alike can be happy he was able to complete
this before his talent left us forever. Inside
the DVD case is a wonderful color tri-fold sheet
of liner notes on the film by Naschy expert Mirek
Lipinski. Informative and well written, this essay
also provides a nice personal touch when he relates
his first viewing of the movie in a 42nd Street
theater in the mid-1970s.
Also
on the disc is a great gallery of production stills,
posters and advertising material from around the
world. (My favorite of this batch of stuff is
all the artwork for the American release, using
the title House of Psychotic
Women; it was under that title that I first
encountered this film years ago, on videotape,
and even then it packed a punch.) Lastly, Naschy
himself provides a sardonic 'horror host'-style
introduction to the film as he's done for other
BCI releases.
Via this fine DVD the movie can reach an even
larger audience and I suspect its reception will
be a strong one. Thanks for the great work, BCI.
4/15/08
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