AVALIAÇÃO DA IMDb
5,5/10
2,5 mil
SUA AVALIAÇÃO
A dona de uma renomada escola de balé em Nova York se une a um modelo para investigar uma série de assassinatos brutais entre suas alunas.A dona de uma renomada escola de balé em Nova York se une a um modelo para investigar uma série de assassinatos brutais entre suas alunas.A dona de uma renomada escola de balé em Nova York se une a um modelo para investigar uma série de assassinatos brutais entre suas alunas.
- Direção
- Roteiristas
- Artistas
- Prêmios
- 1 vitória no total
Geretta Geretta
- Margie
- (as Geretta Marie)
Christian Borromeo
- Willy Stark
- (as Cristian Borromeo)
Carla Buzzanca
- Janice
- (não creditado)
Al Cliver
- Voice Analyst
- (não creditado)
Silvia Collatina
- Molly
- (não creditado)
Lucio Fulci
- Phil, the agent
- (não creditado)
Avaliações em destaque
Murder Rock is one of Lucio Fulci's lesser known films. It was released in the wake of a series of exceptionally violent movies directed by the great man. This one is considerably tamer and not one of his better received critically. It may very well be because it's less intense that it isn't amongst his most popular, I think it's only fair to say that is part of the reason. It's possibly the most blatant attempt by Fulci at making a mainstream movie. He decided to combine the popular horror sub-genre of the time – the slasher – with the 80's fad for fitness. This was the era of Flashdance and Fame, and lycra clad people seemed to be everywhere. I guess it was only a matter of time before a slasher variant on this theme emerged. In keeping with trying to appeal to a wider demographic this one is a relatively bloodless affair as well. It's possible that by trying to appeal to too many people, Murder Rock ended up pleasing fewer.
The story is about a series of murders committed around a dance school in New York. It's one of many early 80's efforts that Fulci set in America. In keeping with its Italian giallo roots though, there is a strong emphasis on the whodunit aspect. This ensures that the story retains a bit of interest and the audience is engaged throughout. There are some moments of giallo weirdness too which always helps such as the recurring dream that the female protagonist has about a sinister stranger trying to kill her. While Keith Emerson is on hand too with an appropriately cheesy soundtrack. It isn't exactly of the standard of the score he did for Dario Argento's Inferno but it does the job. Overall, this is an entertaining movie. A little light-weight perhaps but fun all the same.
The story is about a series of murders committed around a dance school in New York. It's one of many early 80's efforts that Fulci set in America. In keeping with its Italian giallo roots though, there is a strong emphasis on the whodunit aspect. This ensures that the story retains a bit of interest and the audience is engaged throughout. There are some moments of giallo weirdness too which always helps such as the recurring dream that the female protagonist has about a sinister stranger trying to kill her. While Keith Emerson is on hand too with an appropriately cheesy soundtrack. It isn't exactly of the standard of the score he did for Dario Argento's Inferno but it does the job. Overall, this is an entertaining movie. A little light-weight perhaps but fun all the same.
Lucio Fulci wanted to make a giallo. But then Flashdance happened and the producers knew Keith Emerson (yes, the Keith Emerson from Emerson Lake and Palmer) and the result was
Murder Rock! Or Murder-Rock: Dancing Death! Or Slashdance! Or The Demon Is Loose!
We start at the Arts for the Living Center in New York, where Candice (Olga Karlatos, the only actress to be in both Zombi 2 and Purple Rain) watches Margie (Geretta Giancarlo from Demons) choreograph dancers for an upcoming talent agent visit. Only three girls will be selected, so they all need more perfection.
That night, Susan, one of the dancers, is murdered in the locker room. First, she is chloroformed. Then, as if Fulci has simply waited too long for something violent to happen, a giant hatpin is inserted into her breast. I imagine Lucio sitting in his director's chair, saying "Why do I have to show all these pretty girls in leotards when everyone just wants to see me rip out one of their eyeballs?"
Lieutenant Borges (Cosimo Cinieri, The New York Ripper) and Professor Davis (Giuseppe Mannajuolo). show up to investigate, choosing Candice, the head of the academy Dick Gibson (Claudio Cassinelli, What Have They Done to Your Daughters?) and Susan's boyfriend.
We find Candice at her apartment, where Dick shows up to tell her that he isn't sleeping with any of the students. Anyone that tells you this is pretty much telling you that they totally sleeping with the students. The studio DJ also calls her to update her on the murder.
Back at the school and everyone is back to their routine, which upsets Dick, who tells the cops of the rivalries between the dancers. Later that night –after we see on stage by herself, showing off for the crowd — he shows up at her place, wanting to talk. She finds a photo of him with Susan, but when she turns to find him, he is gone. Worse, her bird is dead, stabbed by a hairpin. And soon, so is she, as a hairpin is thrust into her heart.
But what of Candice? Well, she's having nightmares of the killer, who she sees chasing her with the long hairpin. She sees his photo on a billboard and tracks him down. The man is George Webb (Ray Lovelock, The Living Dead at the Manchester Morgue), who isn't the handsome model in the ads any longer. He's now a mess, so she runs from him, leaving her purse in his room.
What would a giallo — or a Fulci movie — be without a red herring? It comes in the form of Bart, a dancer who confesses to the murders because Susan was crazy and Janice was Hispanic (but in a much more racist way). Borges believes that he isn't the killer, but when George comes to the Academy to return Candice's purse, Dick tells the cop that that's their man.
At lunch, Candice tells George about how her dancing career ended after a hit and run accident with a motorcyclist. Now, she can only be a teacher. And she's not convinced that George is on the up and up, as she learns from a talent agent that George once had an affair with a younger girl who died.
Oh yeah — and Margie attacks Candice just like the killer, but Dick saves her.
The killing doesn't stop, though. Jill is killed while Molly, a girl in a wheelchair, takes photos of her. Molly tries to take photos, but the killer escapes. Dick tries to run away, but he's arrested. But again, the killing doesn't stop. Gloria is murdered in the locker room with the trademark hairpin.
It all leads to Candice going back to George's hotel room, where she finds the murder weapon. She runs away and George tries to find her, but she's at the police station, telling the Lieutenant, who agrees to meet her at the Academy.
Ready for the big reveal? When she gets there, she sees a video of every dancer who has died, leaving her screaming their names. George appears with the murder weapon and asks why she set him up. She responds that she knew he was the hit and run driver who cost her so much and that she killed the girls because of her jealousy of them. They had the life she would never know and had to die and he has to pay for all he has done to her. She grabs the murder weapon and kills herself with it, pushing the weapon into George's hand. The police arrive, but they already knew she was the killer, thanks to the buttons on the killer's jacket being on the left side and Candice knowing details about the murders that they never made public.
That's the plot, but please imagine that there is a leotard-clad dance-off every ten minutes or so.
Murder Rock was part of a planned trilogy entitled "Trilogia della musica" and would have been followed by Killer Samba and Thrilling Blues, but Fulci became ill for two years and abandoned the project.
This film looks gorgeous! It has some stunning shots of the killer coming at the camera and while there is some blood, it isn't at the expense of the story. I literally expected nothing and was rewarded with some great fun. Your ability to enjoy flashdancing and 80's outfits may impact your enjoyment of this film, however!
Read more at http://bit.ly/2iwKWcY
We start at the Arts for the Living Center in New York, where Candice (Olga Karlatos, the only actress to be in both Zombi 2 and Purple Rain) watches Margie (Geretta Giancarlo from Demons) choreograph dancers for an upcoming talent agent visit. Only three girls will be selected, so they all need more perfection.
That night, Susan, one of the dancers, is murdered in the locker room. First, she is chloroformed. Then, as if Fulci has simply waited too long for something violent to happen, a giant hatpin is inserted into her breast. I imagine Lucio sitting in his director's chair, saying "Why do I have to show all these pretty girls in leotards when everyone just wants to see me rip out one of their eyeballs?"
Lieutenant Borges (Cosimo Cinieri, The New York Ripper) and Professor Davis (Giuseppe Mannajuolo). show up to investigate, choosing Candice, the head of the academy Dick Gibson (Claudio Cassinelli, What Have They Done to Your Daughters?) and Susan's boyfriend.
We find Candice at her apartment, where Dick shows up to tell her that he isn't sleeping with any of the students. Anyone that tells you this is pretty much telling you that they totally sleeping with the students. The studio DJ also calls her to update her on the murder.
Back at the school and everyone is back to their routine, which upsets Dick, who tells the cops of the rivalries between the dancers. Later that night –after we see on stage by herself, showing off for the crowd — he shows up at her place, wanting to talk. She finds a photo of him with Susan, but when she turns to find him, he is gone. Worse, her bird is dead, stabbed by a hairpin. And soon, so is she, as a hairpin is thrust into her heart.
But what of Candice? Well, she's having nightmares of the killer, who she sees chasing her with the long hairpin. She sees his photo on a billboard and tracks him down. The man is George Webb (Ray Lovelock, The Living Dead at the Manchester Morgue), who isn't the handsome model in the ads any longer. He's now a mess, so she runs from him, leaving her purse in his room.
What would a giallo — or a Fulci movie — be without a red herring? It comes in the form of Bart, a dancer who confesses to the murders because Susan was crazy and Janice was Hispanic (but in a much more racist way). Borges believes that he isn't the killer, but when George comes to the Academy to return Candice's purse, Dick tells the cop that that's their man.
At lunch, Candice tells George about how her dancing career ended after a hit and run accident with a motorcyclist. Now, she can only be a teacher. And she's not convinced that George is on the up and up, as she learns from a talent agent that George once had an affair with a younger girl who died.
Oh yeah — and Margie attacks Candice just like the killer, but Dick saves her.
The killing doesn't stop, though. Jill is killed while Molly, a girl in a wheelchair, takes photos of her. Molly tries to take photos, but the killer escapes. Dick tries to run away, but he's arrested. But again, the killing doesn't stop. Gloria is murdered in the locker room with the trademark hairpin.
It all leads to Candice going back to George's hotel room, where she finds the murder weapon. She runs away and George tries to find her, but she's at the police station, telling the Lieutenant, who agrees to meet her at the Academy.
Ready for the big reveal? When she gets there, she sees a video of every dancer who has died, leaving her screaming their names. George appears with the murder weapon and asks why she set him up. She responds that she knew he was the hit and run driver who cost her so much and that she killed the girls because of her jealousy of them. They had the life she would never know and had to die and he has to pay for all he has done to her. She grabs the murder weapon and kills herself with it, pushing the weapon into George's hand. The police arrive, but they already knew she was the killer, thanks to the buttons on the killer's jacket being on the left side and Candice knowing details about the murders that they never made public.
That's the plot, but please imagine that there is a leotard-clad dance-off every ten minutes or so.
Murder Rock was part of a planned trilogy entitled "Trilogia della musica" and would have been followed by Killer Samba and Thrilling Blues, but Fulci became ill for two years and abandoned the project.
This film looks gorgeous! It has some stunning shots of the killer coming at the camera and while there is some blood, it isn't at the expense of the story. I literally expected nothing and was rewarded with some great fun. Your ability to enjoy flashdancing and 80's outfits may impact your enjoyment of this film, however!
Read more at http://bit.ly/2iwKWcY
Lucio Fulci is one of the best and most underrated directors in history. Though not all of his films were great, at least 7 of this films should be in any horror anthology. This film is hard to find, though it was released here in Argentina. In the beginning I thought this was gonna be Flashdance - The Return, but ends up being a clever thriller. The killer's method is original, and the resolution quite surprising. Not one of Fulci's best, but a very good film indeed. Score: 8.
One of Lucio Fulci's "gentler" films, MURDER ROCK is not very popular among gore fans (largely because of the lack of eye gougings and disembowellments), but it has much to recommend. The story deals with a maniac who is killing the girls at a dance school in New York -- together, a cop and a psychiatrist track the maniac down. Keith Emerson contributes a dated, but enjoyable, soundtrack, and cinematographer Giuseppe Pinori makes fine use of half-lighting, a la Mario Bava's SEI DONNE PER L'ASSASSINO. Fulci cameos as an agent. Recommended for Italian horror buffs. *** out of ****
Nothing very special about this giallo. A bunch of dancers are trying out for parts, and some get murdered by a hatpin stuck into their left breast (where it looks like it would actually pierce a lung and not the heart as intended). Some of the dancing scenes are pretty sexual.
The studio where they do their dancing has a rather odd system at the end of the day whereby a voice comes over an intercom, and the lights flash on and off repeatedly. I guess this is to make for more suspense or to make the killing scenes more exciting? It's more on the annoying side.
One of the women has a dream in which she is pursued by a killer with a pin (it changes sizes throughout the dream, sometimes appearing giant). She later sees the man from her dream on a billboard. She tracks him down, finding him to be a bit of a washed up, alcoholic actor, and starts a relationship with him.
Much more than that I don't remember.
The studio where they do their dancing has a rather odd system at the end of the day whereby a voice comes over an intercom, and the lights flash on and off repeatedly. I guess this is to make for more suspense or to make the killing scenes more exciting? It's more on the annoying side.
One of the women has a dream in which she is pursued by a killer with a pin (it changes sizes throughout the dream, sometimes appearing giant). She later sees the man from her dream on a billboard. She tracks him down, finding him to be a bit of a washed up, alcoholic actor, and starts a relationship with him.
Much more than that I don't remember.
Você sabia?
- CuriosidadesWas supposed to be the start of a trilogy called "Trilogia della musica" and should have been followed by two more gialli titled "Killer samba" and "Thrilling blues". Yet, due to Fulci becoming very ill and being forced to stop working for more than two years, the full trilogy project was eventually abandoned.
- Erros de gravaçãoGloria can be seen moving her eyes while being dead.
- ConexõesFeatured in Fulci Flashbacks: Reflections on Italy's Premiere Paura Protagonist (2011)
Principais escolhas
Faça login para avaliar e ver a lista de recomendações personalizadas
- How long is Murder-Rock: Dancing Death?Fornecido pela Alexa
Detalhes
- Tempo de duração
- 1 h 33 min(93 min)
- Cor
- Mixagem de som
- Proporção
- 1.85 : 1
Contribua para esta página
Sugerir uma alteração ou adicionar conteúdo ausente