When his grounds keeper parents go on vacation, a troubled young man fends off the advances of a lascivious Countess while romancing her virginal daughter on a large rural estate...
Made in Spain during Franco's regime, this lop-sided "Lady Chatterly's Lover" may sound like soft-core soap opera but the gardener's son, Paul, hates lovemaking and dons a porcelain doll's mask to murder any woman he catches in the act. The killer's identity is revealed early on with reasons going back to childhood so what suspense there is comes from wondering how the romantic complications could possibly turn out well. Complicating matters is a mixed-message homo-eroticism with the slightly effeminate anti-hero constantly cavorting in either tight short-shorts or his underwear when he isn't in a bed, bath, or shower and his only friend is a like-minded little boy who goes missing, of course. It's set almost entirely in and around a lonely landed manor house with lots of mannequins, doll mutilations and cheesy hallucinations for scenery and may not be very well made but some stabbing, throat-slashing, decapitation, at-home heart surgery, and handsome Helga Liné (a European Alison Hayes) as "The Countess" make this worth a peek. I don't know what I'd call DOLLS besides a silly slice of Eurotrash but "giallo" isn't exactly the first thing that springs to mind even though it's been sold as such. Writer/director Miguel Madrid (aka Michael Skaife) made just three films including the campy NECROPHAGUS (aka GRAVEYARD OF HORROR 1971) and this was the debut of androgynous star David Rocha who went on to not make his mark in such diverse films as Luis Bunuel's THAT OBSCURE OBJECT OF DESIRE (1977), GARY COOPER, WHO ART IN HEAVEN (1980) and NIGHT OF THE WEREWOLF (1981) before fading back into obscurity by the mid-80s.