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  • tigerw-860-3954835 October 2010
    let's start to say that this movie is not available in Italy (neither DVD or even VHS). It's incredible if you think that this is an Italian movie and in Italy you can find all the sort of American z movies! (even the Americans realize z movies).

    By the way this is a nice giallo, well directed and well acted, I like very much Alex Cord (he looks like the young Chuck Norris, but Cord seems much more athletic and stunning then Chuck). I think this one has a lot in common with Friday the 13th (the plot, some murders, motivation of the killer...) but it came out almost 10 years before Jason.

    If you like slashers and gialli , you will like this one
  • I saw this for the first time recently and i didn't enjoy this.

    I saw this only aft reading Coventry's glowing review.

    The lead moustachioed actor Alex Cord looks like a poor man's Anthony Quinn.

    The body count is low n the film very lengthy.

    After a while i felt so irritated that i stopped caring who's killing who n why.

    The only good part is the sun soaked settings n the dressing sense of the characters.

    There is a sadistic character who burns spiders n grasshoppers n i expected the guy to at least pay for his karma.

    The English title is very misleading as there ain't any dead coming alive and the movie has absolutely nothing to do with zombies. Its a boring murder mystery.
  • Jason Porter (Alex Cord) is an alcoholic photographer working on an archaeological dig in an Etruscan tomb from the 5th century bc, he has a history of mental illness and violence which seen him locked up in a New York mental hospital, but now he's trying to get some normality back in his life, so when after a rainstorm at the dig he discovers the mutilated bodies of an amorous couple, the police naturally regard him as the main suspect. Some articles recently stolen from the site are found beside the bodies of the victims the only clue to who might be the killer. Porter has his suspicions as to who that might be, but the police interference is hampering his own investigation, added to that, Porter is also distracted by the fact that his former lover Myra Shelton (Samantha Eggar)is now married to a sadistic older man, Nikos, a sadistic old man and music conductor for a local theatre, where there are a number of suspicious characters.

    Right from the start this plays like a horror film, we the viewer are led to believe that the killings are being done as an act of vengeance from a recently disturbed demon god with breathing difficulties, There is some great location work within the Etruscan tombs that adds to the atmosphere, the murals on the walls of the tombs showing the depictions of the actual murders before they happened, but Giallo experts will soon see that there are no supernatural forces behind these atrocities. The film also plays like a classic slasher in that sexual liaisons seem to herald the death of those involved, this is an unusual plot point for a giallo but then this is an unusual film. Riz ortolani provides a decent operatic score, the dubbing on the film is a real low point though, not the actual voices but the editing of them is beyond abysmal, this is still a film I believe would benefit immensely from an official release, considering the settings within the film a glossy new print would certainly bring this to a new audience
  • Just a quick note to all my fellow zombie aficionados out there.. the title of this movie is misleading. While the movie itself is not too bad, sadly there are no living dead here.

    This movie is actually an early 1970's murder mystery, the dialogue at times is very dry, although not bad the whole way through. The directing is o.k however the editing is really quite sketchy (you know the kind where all the sudden an actor is in a new position instantly, or they've abruptly cut to a new scene.)

    So if like me you planned on watching this to add another notch onto your undead movie collection belt let your search continue.
  • This is a good but poorly paced Italian thriller from the 1970's. The plot concerns a series or murders occurring to people connected to a recently discovered Etruscan burial sight. One of the repeated shots is the face of the Etruscan demon god that was found on the wall of the tomb. As the police investigate the lives of everyone involved are revealed and wee see that not everyone is as innocent they would like us to believe.

    A good, but not great mystery with supernatural overtones this movie is graced with good performances across the board. Better is the fact that the characters are very complex with no real clichés in the bunch. The film also keeps you off balance with some interesting camera work and music. The only thing that I'm not a fan of is the fact that the pacing is a bit to slack. There are several times when I would have liked them to move things on and not take a quiet contemplative moment. I'm probably over reacting but the desire to speed things up knocked down the rating a couple of points on this good thriller.
  • Amando Crispino's L'ETRUSCO UCCIDE ANCORA aka. THE ETRUSCAN KILLS AGAIN is an interesting and somewhat unusual Giallo from the greatest Giallo-year 1972. 1972 was the year of several of the greatest genre masterpieces including Sergio Martino's YOUR VICE IS A LOCKED ROOM AND ONLY I HAVE THE KEY, Fulci's DON'T TORTURE A DUCKLING, Massimo Dallamano's WHAT HAVE YOU DONE TO SOLANGE and Emilio Miraglia's THE RED QUEEN KILLS SEVEN TIMES. While L'ETRUSCO UCCIDE ANCORA is not as essential as these aforementioned titles it is highly interesting and creepy as the sight of this Giallo's mandatory murder series is an ancient Etruscan burial ground, which gives this particular Giallo a supernatural atmosphere.

    The American archaeologist Jason Porter (Alex Cord) is head of a team that has discovered an ancient Etruscan burial ground including fascinating and mysterious pieces of mural art. Shortly after the discovery, a young couple is murdered in the same manner as depicted in the Etruscan tomb, which had not been opened for 2,500 years. It seems as if someone is trying to point out Jason, a womanizer with a drinking problem, as the murderer. Is the culprit one of the eccentric people in Jason's surrounding, or has an Etruscan fiend risen from tomb to perform his bloody deeds? As in most good Gialli, almost every character in the movie is a suspect.

    L'ETRUSCO UCCIDE ANCORA is elegantly filmed in nice Northern Italian locations and accompanied by a very good and intense score from the great Riz Ortolani. The murders are quite bloody and well-made, most of them being Giallo-typically filmed from the murderer's perspective. The female cast members are all lovely to look at, especially Samantha Eggar and Christina Von Blanc, who is known for her mostly exhibitionist roles in some of the Spanish Exploitation-icon Jess Franco's movies. Besides Alex Cord, the cast includes several other well-known actors including John Marley (THE GODFATHER) as a sadistic elderly orchestra conductor and the always-sinister Horst Frank who plays a flamboyantly homosexual designer here.

    Overall, L'ETRUSCO UCCIDE ANCORA may not be an outstanding Giallo-masterpiece, but it is definitely an elegant and creepy specimen of the genre that should not be missed by my fellow Giallo- and Eurohorror fans. My rating: 7.5/10
  • An alcoholic archaeologist working on some Etruscan ruins suspects there might be some supernatural basis to a series of ritualistic murders. If you're going to make a movie about a moody alcoholic philanderer and populate it with a cast of surly, unpleasant characters you'd better have a compelling story to tell, otherwise you're going to fall flat on your face - which is exactly what director Armando Crispino does here. A second-rate cast (Alex Cord, Samantha Eggar, John Marley) barely summon up the energy to go through the motions as they wait impatiently for payday and the flight home. It benefits from some nice location photography and a lush, sweeping score but the story is dull and the pay-off inadequate.
  • The reason this being one of the more obscure Giallos (or as purist would say: Gialli), can be blamed on "clever" promoters, who had hoped to cover more bases than were available. In the US they tried to market this off as a Living Dead flick. Needless to say that those expecting zombies were none too happy when no walking corpses appeared in the film. In Germany on the other hand, the film was marketed under the Titel "Das Geheimnis des Gelben Grabes" ("Secret of the Yellow Grave") as a Edgar Wallace movie. True, this novel was written by AN Edgar Wallace but not THE Edgar Wallace, and similarly, the fans of "Kraut Krimis" were disappointed, even though the film counts as final Edgar Wallace flick that was produced by veteran Artur Brauner.

    So we better stick with the alternative English-title, "Etruscan lives again", and yes, the film has all the hallmarks of a Giallo: a mix of Psycho-Thriller, Who-dunnit, mix with gratuitous nudity, sex and violence.

    The story itself is rather simple: An archaeologist Jason Porter discovers an ancient Etruscan grave in Tuscany. The grave features frightening wall-painting to Tuchulcha, an Etruscan demon of death and destruction. The excavation-sight happens to be under the property of the despotic musical-director Samarakis. This creates a great deal of tension, since Samarakis is married to Porters Ex-wife Myra. But jealousy and sexual tension takes a back-step, when a mysterious killer stalks the area, killing couples whom he catches in the process of love-making and disposes his victims with an Etruscan mallet. Soon everybody finds himself on the list of suspects and everyone seems to have their own skeletons in the closet: Jason, who still battles with the demons of alcoholism and having been confined to a mental-ward, the shady Samarakis, the gay Theatre-director Stephen and many other, all who seem to share some seedy background.

    Like with most Gialli, "seedy" is one of the keywords. The Gialli was always considered the dirty cousin of the squeaky clean Kraut-Krimi, laden with lurid psycho-sexual images and sadistic violence, that's constantly pending between art and Slasher. "Etruscan lives again" makes no exception. The cast is well picked, all do a fine job and, as suitable, the viewer is never quiet sure if and which figure deserves any sympathy at all. That includes protagonist Alex Cord, whom the American audience will likely best remember for his role as one-eyed Michael in "Airwolf". Horst Frank, although only having a relatively minor role, steals the show as we had often done in this type of movie. Despite his character being a homosexual, Frank with his burning glare comes across as menacing and threatening as ever. Wonderful soundtrack, as is to be expected from veteran Riz Ortolani (though his sometimes schmaltzy sound isn't everybody's cup of Chianti) and Crispino does an admirable job, despite not counting among the big Giallo-directors like Bava or Argento. Crispino utilizes the wonderful landscape of Tuscany almost like a second actor, making the best of the locations (again, another trademark of any good Giallo).

    Within the confines of it's genre, I'd give it a well-meaning 7/10, as a pure Psycho-Thriller perhaps a little less, since not everybody is comfortable with the Giallo-style, lurid storytelling and choppy structure. Again, I'd like to point out to whoever added the line "The first zombie movie to be filmed in anamorphic wide screen" in the trivia-section, I assure you: there are no Undead to be seen and those who get killed in "Etruscan lives again", stay as dead as a corpse can be.
  • gridoon7 July 2003
    I am not a fan of Armando Crispino's often praised "Autopsy", but the title ("The Dead Are Alive") and the cover of the (allegedly uncut) DVD version of this movie promised some cheap thrills, so I gave it a try. Wrong move! It's a dud. Not only is the story very convoluted, but the director also has a very poor sense of time and place - his failure to clearly establish where a scene is taking place, how the characters got there or even who they are sometimes, leaves you feeling completely disorientated. The interrelationships between some of the characters are also very poorly defined...be prepared for a lot "wait a minute, who's that guy supposed to be again?" questions. The male lead is also very uncharismatic, he seems to be doing most of his acting with his fists. The best thing in the movie is Riz Ortolani's beautiful score. (*1/2)

    P.S. The print used for the DVD is rather severely damaged, and the film is presented in a distracting-as-hell ultra-widescreen aspect ratio.
  • I'm a big fan of Giallo, and The Dead Are Alive has been one of my main targets for some time now. With that in mind, I've got to say that the film is something of a disappointment; but there's more than enough good elements to ensure that Armando Crispino's film is a more than passable Giallo attempt, and it's certainly one of the more unique entries in the genre. The film forsakes many of the common Giallo trademarks such as a black gloved killer and numerous sex scenes in favour of a supernatural angle and a plot that focuses on mystery rather than murder; although the convoluted plot that makes some Giallo and ruins others is very much in place. The central character is Jason; an alcoholic archaeologist forced to turn detective when he discovers an ancient Etruscan tomb and two people are murdered in the same way that is depicted on some ancient drawings inside the tomb, which haven't been seen by human eyes in over two thousand years. The line-up of red herrings is vast, and includes a composer, his fire-scarred wife, a sadistic torturer of insects and a homosexual choreographer. But of course, Jason is the prime suspect...

    I've seen a lot of Giallo's that are happy to merely wallow in the common genre elements, so it is very much to director Armando Crispino's credit that this Giallo breaks rules and develops it's own personality resulting from that. The burial ground central locale provides a good setting for this film, as it's dirty and gritty and suits the mysterious atmosphere. The plot does get a little too convoluted at times, and the film suffers from a few instances where there isn't a lot going on. The first murder takes place only minutes into the film; and it's a brutal affair as a couple are clubbed to death. However, there's not a lot in the way of bloodshed after that first murder; and the mystery plot isn't always enough of a distraction. The acting is a little flat, with Alex Cord not really convincing as an archaeologist, and the fact that the film lacks an established Giallo heroine is a negative point. The supernatural elements are well implemented at first, and it soon becomes obvious the killer is flesh and blood. The fact that the most obvious red herring is the murderer means that the ending isn't a surprise; but as far as atmosphere and absurdity are concerned, The Dead Are Alive is definitely a Giallo highlight.
  • Archaeologist Jason Porter (Alex Cord) becomes the prime suspect after a series of brutal murders at the site of an ancient Etruscan tomb.

    The first double murder in director Armando Crispino's giallo The Etruscan Kills Again is sufficiently bloody, a couple beaten to death with a big metal probe (a piece of Porter's archaeological equipment); however, the scene is shot with little of the pizazz one expects from the genre.

    Subsequent deaths only disappoint further, the actual acts mostly occurring off-screen, the victims' bodies discovered once the killer has left the scene. The Etruscan Kills Again also suffers from an overly complex and dialogue heavy script that is difficult to unravel and features a rather unlikeable protagonist (a sexually aggressive alcoholic).

    A well executed car chase adds a much needed jolt of life to proceedings, the lovely Christina von Blanc delivers the requisite gratuitous nudity, and the final fight scene between hero and killer is well handled, but there's way too much drudgery involved to qualify this as an essential giallo.
  • This movie was so obscure, and the picture on the video box was so lame, that I didn't expect much. It was a nice surprise to have it turn out to be suspenseful, complex, even scary. Many weird characters, weird settings, and plot twists got me involved and created a creepy feeling. It appears to be a routine film in the first ten minutes, but things keep developing, strange characters and subplots appear, flashbacks, etc. It was worth it.
  • The Etruscans seem to have existed in Italy before the Romans, or at the same time - I can't be bothered checking. In this overlong but entertaining Giallo, alcoholic archaeologist Alex Cord finds a buried tomb and starts taking pictures of it using a probe. One sudden rainstorm later, the probe has gone missing and two teenagers have their faces graphically smashed in with that very probe!

    As usual, the suspects are numerous. Alex is in Italy for this dig, but he's also hanging around with his ex-partner Myra, who is now married to John Marley, a jerk composer who is prone to having tantrums and taking out his rage on his assistant Irene. John lives in a huge mansion (do I even have to mention that bit?) with his son Igor, his girlfriend and others. Also, Horst Frank puts in a hilarious over the top performance as the 'faggot' choreographer, who even performs a little pirouette when Alex starts chasing him!

    Someone keeps stealing shows from this show they're all putting on and leaving them with the corpses, but blame naturally falls on Alex, as due to the boozing, he keeps having blackouts. It doesn't help that the security guard on site loves killing insects, is selling the artefacts, and is now blackmailing Alex.

    At first we're led to believe that an Etruscan demon has risen from the dead and is killing folk, but then would a demon announce its presence by playing a Dictaphone of classical music? Someone is a serial killer, but there's a lot of digging to do before Alex can clear his name.

    This is a solid giallo but just a wee bit too long, what with Alex and Myra and John Marley's love triangle thing, and a few of the characters are a bit bland. The blunt trauma killings are a bit shocking, and Horst Frank, with his orange afro(!), helps proceedings.

    The Etruscans would return in more genuinely undead form in Andrea Biachni's Burial Ground!
  • Warning: Spoilers
    After an Etruscan burial tomb is photographed a series of killings occur which are hinted at as being done by some sort of supernatural monster but the explanation is more natural, this being basically a 'giallo' with the usual complicated plot and rushed ending where the killer is eventually revealed. At which point I went, huh? It's much too long (105 minutes) with unsympathetic characters who don't act like real people. No one in the cast stands out except for Horst Frank, always an interesting actor. Unfortunately a stray cat gets killed which wasn't nice. The best things about the movie are the widescreen cinematography, the Italian locations and a fine music score by the ever reliable Riz Ortolani.

    The ending was confusing as it never explained the significance of the red shoes. The character of Igor was traumatised by his mother being attacked by his father but she was wearing white shoes. Actually I couldn't understand why the murders were carried out in the first place. Watched a dubbed version so perhaps it was clearer in the original language. But I doubt it.
  • This film begins with a professor of archaeology by the name of "Jason Porter" (Alex Cord) discovering an underground chamber which turns out to be an ancient Etruscan tomb of sorts. Naturally, this delights him and his team but one local person named "Nikos Samarakis" (John Marley) is not at all pleased with the fact that Jason plans to stay in the area for an extended time to continue his research as his current wife "Myra Shelton" (Samantha Egger) used to be married to Jason and still seems to harbor feelings for him. Things become even more complicated when two lovers are killed in the tomb and their bodies are aligned to make it appear to be sacrifices to the evil Etruscan demon upon which the tomb was initially built. In any case, in my opinion this picture turned out to be more of a mystery film than a horror movie and in that regard it definitely kept my attention for the most part. I must say, however, that the plot was sometimes difficult to follow with several unappealing characters not really helping matters. Even so this wasn't a bad movie overall and I have rated it accordingly. Average.
  • Warning: Spoilers
    An effectively murky and labyrinthine giallo yarn in which those crazy Italians get up to all sorts of tricks. First and foremost is the leading character of Jason Porter, a fairly unlikable anti-hero with a shady background, who gets blamed by the police for the murders and must discover the identity of the killer to prove his own innocence - if you think this set-up is familiar, you may have seen Jon Finch starring in Hitchcock's FRENZY or witnessed one of the many other "wronged man" thrillers made over the years. Director Armando Crispino's direction is efficient and sometimes stylish, and THE ETRUSCAN KILLS AGAIN offers up all the red herrings, twists, turns, suspects, and brutal moments that you could wish for in a giallo yarn.

    However, this is not all this film offers. In an almost slapdash series of plot elements, we are given a screeching car chase (in which you can almost smell the burning rubber) to rival those of the Italian polizia movies; supernatural elements at the beginning of the film, which with the use of heavy, guttural breathing, and a shady presence hint at a zombie returning from the grave to wreak vengeance; a fantastic and surprising car crash stunt; gory scenes of people being beaten to bloody pulps; and finally, the ferocious fight which marks the film's close and is one of the best hero-vs-villain battles I've seen in an Italian flick - short, violent and extremely realistic. All of the above takes place whilst Verdi's Requiem plays intermittently over the soundtrack, deafeningly loud and stylish to boot.

    In the end, THE ETRUSCAN KILLS AGAIN works due to some larger-than-life characters and a stronger cast than usual. Alex Cord's archaeologist may not be the most likable of screen leads but he gives his character a commanding presence which makes you unable to take your eyes off him. Samantha Eggar (THE BROOD) is still sufficiently attractive in her youth to provide a worthwhile woman-in-peril, whilst Horst Frank and Carlo De Mejo flesh out the minor characters of the story. However, the familiar-looking John Marley steals all of their thunder as a sadistic orchestra conductor (!) who frequently flies off the handle to good effect. Although it's sometimes muddled and too murky for its own good, THE ETRUSCAN KILLS AGAIN is a watchable giallo movie, and if it's no classic then at least it whiles away a quiet evening with its heady combination of essential plot ingredients.
  • Plot - below average. Violence/special effects - poor. Music - average. Cinematography - below average. Acting - average.

    Skip this one, even if you are a fan of giallo.
  • A group of archaeologists work on excavating Etruscan tombs. A series of murders start and they seem to be connected to these ancient ruins in some way. Is this the work of the vengeful god Tuchulka? The Dead Are Alive is a giallo/horror hybrid. It follows the conventions of the former but it also incorporates a supernatural horror angle. Like many similar Italian films from the time it's a pretty convoluted affair. Its central story isn't always very well presented and the film meanders a lot of the time. Things aren't helped all that much by an uncharismatic male lead actor who doesn't exactly elicit much sympathy. His character seems to be a bit of a sex pest in fairness. There are better actors in the support roles such as Samantha Eggar - who later starred in David Cronenberg's The Brood - and Horst Frank who plays a slightly sinister homosexual eccentric similar to the role he had in Dario Argento's Cat o' Nine Tails. There is a smattering of bloody violence throughout. And the supernatural angle does offer something different for this type of picture. But overall it's doesn't make very much of a connection.

    Its director Armando Crispino also contributed the later Autopsy, which was another unconventional giallo. Both films deserve some credit for at least trying to bring in different things to the sub-genre but truthfully neither of them are very good. Riz Ortolani contributes another lush score that tries its best to enliven events.
  • Long, boring, bad acting, bad script, bad everything. I wanted to see the film primarily because of the presence of Samantha Eggar, excellent in "The Collector" by William Wyler and in "The Walking Stick" by Eric Till. Then I wanted to see the film because of the presence of Horst Frank, an excellent villain in many other films from the 60s and 70s. Alex Cord, in the main role, is the most embarrassing.

    John Marley, a good actor in "Love Story" and "The Godfather", here is totally exaggerated and unconvincing. Riz Ortolani's music, beautiful in other films, is almost non-existent, it has no value. In conclusion, there is no reason to see this movie. You will count the seconds waiting for it to end faster. A waste of Samantha Eggar's beauty and Nadja Tiller's talent.
  • Warning: Spoilers
    First of all be warned, despite the promising English title The Dead Are Alive you won't get any kind of walking dead, undead, zombies, ghouls but an insane and maybe partially braindead killer. What this little Italian flick got for you is some solid acting, some fine settings, some violence and some nudity (of course, I should add). So you can expect a solid giallo - that blend of mystery, thriller, erotic and a few elements of what could consider horror. Recommended to those who like that kind of Italian cheese.
  • BandSAboutMovies21 February 2020
    Warning: Spoilers
    Originally known as L'etrusco Uccide Ancora (The Etruscan Kills Again), this film comes to us from Armando Crispino, who made the quite enjoyable Autopsy and the fabulously named Frankenstein Italian Style. It's based on a novel by Bryan Edgar Wallace, the son of the man who gave inspiration to both the krimi and giallo genres.

    It was released in Germany as Das Geheimnis des Gelben Grabes (Mystery of the Gold Diggers), in France as Overtime and as El Dios de la Muerte Asesina Otra Vez (The Death God Kills Again) in Spain.

    Two young folks are looking for a place to load the clown in the cannon, but while they're aardvarking they are murdered within an Etruscan tomb. Oh, if only that tomb hadn't recently been violated by Professor Porter (Alex Cord, Chosen Survivors) and his team of archaeologists!

    Because of how the bodies are positioned, it seems as if they were sacrificed to the ancient Etruscan god Tuchulcha. The bodies soon pile up, but soon, as the title says, the dead seem to be alive. This is a giallo, but more on the supernatural side of the genre. If you're looking for a movie that makes sense, you know - you're watching the wrong kind of movies.

    Samantha Eggar (Demonoid) shows up as Cord's ex-wife, as does John Marley (who woke up with a horse's head in his bed in The Godfather) as her rich new husband, as well as Wendi D'Olive from The Bloodstained Butterfly. Riz Ortolani makes it all better with his soundtrack, too.

    The nice thing for non-hardcore fans of giallo is that this movie has the actual dialogue by the original actors, so it doesn't suffer from a bad dubbing. It also has plenty of great locations and 70's fashion, which makes it feel pretty fun once it gets past its initial slow going.
  • "L'etrusco uccide ancora" is one of the duller gialli I've seen. The 'kills' are lame, showing people getting bludgeoned to death with a metal object and really overdoing the fake blood, but not using any other effects.

    Gialli basically exist to show high society types behaving badly. How many gialli have you seen about average people? No, they're always classical composers, high flying scientists, aristocrats. Bad behaviour in beautiful rooms.

    This one has a well-shot conclusion, which sort of made me wish I had paid more attention so that I would have been able to understand it better. But the problem is that the movie was too boring for me to do such a thing, and it really lost me with the lame murder sequence at the beginning.
  • Even though this film is entitled under its German title, 'L'Etrusco Uccide Ancora' - how it is called in Italian - is overall a typical Italian thriller of the Seventies. Directed with style by Armando Crispino, who also directed the breathtaking 'Macchie Solari' (aka Autopsy, The Victim), the film suggests supernatural forces involved in the plot. That makes the whole thing even more atmospheric and will keep you on the edge of your seats. The German video versions are heavily cut concerning the plot (one version is also cut concerning the violent killings), while only the Danish video version appears to be complete (according to the excellent English book 'Blood and Black Lace'). Nevertheless, if you are able to get this gem on video, get it: This giallo truly delivers!
  • The Etruscan murders again: The West German Wallace series finally becomes an Italian Giallo

    Italy, take over! With this pseudo-Bryan Edgar Wallace, the German shocker series is finally approaching its swansong. From now on, the yellow Italo shocker dominated the picture. And 1972 is the flagship year of the Italian giallo genre in general.

    But before that, there's a real showdown: Etruscan graves, murdered lovers, an archaeologist (Alex CORD) and his ex-girlfriend (Samantha EGGAR), who is now married to riches. If only the London fog is missing, the death in Italy is more textile-free and bloodthirsty.

    Oh yes, and then the German CINECITTA divo Horst FRANK as a homosexual choreography master with his dance ensemble and the wonderful GERMAN FILM AWARD winner Nadja TILLER with a shock wig.

    If you're a Wallace and Giallo fan you should definitely see it, but it's not a masterpiece!
  • Discovering a tomb of Etruscan ruins, the lead excavator of the expedition finds himself the main suspect in a series of strange murders in the area due to his previous relationship with his ex-wife who's now living in the area with her abusive new husband, and as the murders continue must clear his name to stop the rampage.

    This was a decidedly enjoyable if flawed giallo effort. What tends to work nicely here is the far more original and creative setup that attempts to mix the supernatural with the giallo. The main setup here involving the discovery of the bodies while he's trying to clear out the remains and the subsequent investigation that begins which unearths all manner of incriminating evidence pointed at him is a solid start to this one. Building up the idea of him as the guilty party through the alcohol-fueled memory loss is a fine way to go about this from a red herring standpoint as well as the other highlighted figure in the orchestra conductor that plays another prominent role here which is a fine touch. It's especially true when added alongside the few bits involving the potential for the spirits of the dead to be the culprits as it produces that option a few times quite logically. That carries over into the solid and somewhat brutal encounters that take place here. The opening attack in the tomb itself is a striking touch that has some fine brutality involved, while later stalking scenes including the attack on the couple who had just engaged in sexual relations around the house into the basement for a solid double-murder sequence or the final battle in the mansion home of the leads where it brings out the thrilling reveal of the killer with the backstory motivation which all have some nice kills as well to bring this along rather nicely. On top of that, there's also the film's really fun and enjoyable car chase that takes place through the crowded city where the foot chase proceeds incredibly well to the chase itself including full-throttle speed battles along cramped streets for a solid time overall. These factors are enough to help hold this one up overall. There are some big issues here holding this one back. One of the main factors to be had here is the wholly unlikable and irritating main group of characters we're supposed to be following. The supposed hero is an alcoholic brute who picks fights with everyone he meets for the slightest indiscretions, his girlfriend is so weak-willed and pathetic for her romantic dalliances that she becomes a non-factor for most of the film, and the conductor husband is a biter miser throwing temper tantrums and verbally berating everyone around him. That we're supposed to care about this particular lot of characters is a gross miscalculation, and it signals the other big factor in the sluggish pacing that drags the film out considerably with the endless scenes of everyone snapping at each other that the majority of this one plays out as. While not completely damaging, these provide enough to lower it significantly.

    Rated Unrated/R: Graphic Violence, Full Nudity, Language, and a sex scene.
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