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6.5/10
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In 19th century Holland, a professor of fine arts and an unlicensed surgeon run a secret lab where the professor's ill daughter receives blood-transfusions from kidnapped female victims who ... Read allIn 19th century Holland, a professor of fine arts and an unlicensed surgeon run a secret lab where the professor's ill daughter receives blood-transfusions from kidnapped female victims who posthumously become macabre art.In 19th century Holland, a professor of fine arts and an unlicensed surgeon run a secret lab where the professor's ill daughter receives blood-transfusions from kidnapped female victims who posthumously become macabre art.
Dany Carrel
- Liselotte Kornheim
- (as Danny Carrell)
Herbert A.E. Böhme
- Il professore Gregorius Wahl
- (as Herbert Boehme)
Featured reviews
Without question an inappropriate, inane, or pulpy comic book style title has waylaid many a significant and otherwise worthy terror film. "Curse of the Cat People," remains affixed to a story of child psychology, "Kill Baby Kill," remains affixed to a wondrous 19th century European ghost story, and here, perhaps worst of all, "Mill of the Stone Women," is the awkward moniker stuck to this artistically accomplished film.
With a clunky title like "Mill of the Stone Women," it is scarcely any wonder that the film has remained largely unknown,unremarked upon, and unavailable for nearly 50 years ! What a pity, for here is a story produced with such an aesthetically accomplished loving care that each frame breathes a compositional beauty of the highest standard.
The felicitous combination of Arrigo Equini's art direction and Pier Ludovico Pavoni's photography in this picture, recalls the best of Jack Asher, Floyd Crosby, Mario Bava, Bernard Robinson, and Daniel Haller and has, in not a few of the tableaux rendered here, even surpassed these masters. Even Mario Praz would probably approve!
From the opening shot of the windmill on the lake under a leaden sky, to its shadowy, beautifully appointed interior parlors, complete with the anti-heroine, Scilla Gabel, peaking mournfully through the portières--while the soundtrack gives forth with a disquieting numinous wail--the film rarely fails to sound the genuine Gothic note.
Add to that one of the most disturbing, (far more so than "House of Wax") use of a waxworks yet seen on the screen. For here we have, not merely figures of unsettling visage, but figures that mechanically encircle a stage--Joan of Arc, Cleopatra, Mary Queen of Scots, sallying threateningly towards the camera in a nightmarish parade--all to the accompaniment of a tune that might have been composed by Truman Capote! There are many exquisite scenes to savor: Miss Scabra's blood red boudoir, a scene of her beneath the lid of a dusty glass coffin holding yellow roses against her very dead, old ivory like complexion, a laboratory sequence that pulls out all the stops, a charming stop at a beer garden type pub, complete with accordions and pretzel stands, a climactic fire with the dummies melting in grotesque close-ups, not to mention a beautifully costumed, very accomplished, and handsome cast of players.
Miss Gabel seems very much in the Gina Lollobrigida mold, but manages facial expressions of such uncanny yearning that is easy to imagine Mr. Brice falling under her spell. In this sense, she joins company with Barbara Steele, as one of the very few women able to combine beauty and eeriness in equal measure.
Pierre Brice approaches his assignment with convincing earnestness and looks very much like a cross between Stephen Boyd and Horst Buchold.
A special compliment should be paid to the Technicolor here, which never shrieks, but delivers cold blues and unearthly reds in a fashion that favorably recalls Pressburger's "Tales of Hoffmann." And take a good look at the hutch in the ante-room of Mr. Brice's bedroom; it is the same one featured in Jacqueline Pierreux's parlor in Bava's "Black Sabbath"--the one she keeps her liquor in. Perhaps Mr. Brice had a yard sale! In any case, to fans of the genre, this film is highly recommended.
With a clunky title like "Mill of the Stone Women," it is scarcely any wonder that the film has remained largely unknown,unremarked upon, and unavailable for nearly 50 years ! What a pity, for here is a story produced with such an aesthetically accomplished loving care that each frame breathes a compositional beauty of the highest standard.
The felicitous combination of Arrigo Equini's art direction and Pier Ludovico Pavoni's photography in this picture, recalls the best of Jack Asher, Floyd Crosby, Mario Bava, Bernard Robinson, and Daniel Haller and has, in not a few of the tableaux rendered here, even surpassed these masters. Even Mario Praz would probably approve!
From the opening shot of the windmill on the lake under a leaden sky, to its shadowy, beautifully appointed interior parlors, complete with the anti-heroine, Scilla Gabel, peaking mournfully through the portières--while the soundtrack gives forth with a disquieting numinous wail--the film rarely fails to sound the genuine Gothic note.
Add to that one of the most disturbing, (far more so than "House of Wax") use of a waxworks yet seen on the screen. For here we have, not merely figures of unsettling visage, but figures that mechanically encircle a stage--Joan of Arc, Cleopatra, Mary Queen of Scots, sallying threateningly towards the camera in a nightmarish parade--all to the accompaniment of a tune that might have been composed by Truman Capote! There are many exquisite scenes to savor: Miss Scabra's blood red boudoir, a scene of her beneath the lid of a dusty glass coffin holding yellow roses against her very dead, old ivory like complexion, a laboratory sequence that pulls out all the stops, a charming stop at a beer garden type pub, complete with accordions and pretzel stands, a climactic fire with the dummies melting in grotesque close-ups, not to mention a beautifully costumed, very accomplished, and handsome cast of players.
Miss Gabel seems very much in the Gina Lollobrigida mold, but manages facial expressions of such uncanny yearning that is easy to imagine Mr. Brice falling under her spell. In this sense, she joins company with Barbara Steele, as one of the very few women able to combine beauty and eeriness in equal measure.
Pierre Brice approaches his assignment with convincing earnestness and looks very much like a cross between Stephen Boyd and Horst Buchold.
A special compliment should be paid to the Technicolor here, which never shrieks, but delivers cold blues and unearthly reds in a fashion that favorably recalls Pressburger's "Tales of Hoffmann." And take a good look at the hutch in the ante-room of Mr. Brice's bedroom; it is the same one featured in Jacqueline Pierreux's parlor in Bava's "Black Sabbath"--the one she keeps her liquor in. Perhaps Mr. Brice had a yard sale! In any case, to fans of the genre, this film is highly recommended.
Predictable but highly watchable tale of a mad sculptor who is trying to keep his daughter from dying from a horrible disease by giving her a blood transfusion. Donors are in short supply, so the guy has to 'volunteer' women to give their blood, turning the exsanguinated bodies into bizarre wax figures for display to the general public - in a windmill.
This weird set up barely functions as it is, what with the sculptor's doctor buddy totally in love with the daughter, and the daughter totally in love with the new guy hired to work in the library. He's in love with a childhood friend, although he does realise this after bedding the crazy guy's daughter, and he declares his love for her right in front of the sick girl. Pretty tactless. His mate, by the way, is concerned that his model friend has mysteriously disappeared - guess where she's currently tied up?
Things get slightly less predictable when the hero Hans does a really bad job of giving sick girl the brush off and she seemingly dies, but when he goes to confess to her dad the doctor gives him LSD! He spends a good portion of the film tripping out his head and seemingly talking to people who aren't there. After that, things get back into the 'rescue the girl from the mad doctor plot' but filmed very well, especially the shots of the melting wax 'models' at the end.
Was Mario Bava involved? Who knows.
This weird set up barely functions as it is, what with the sculptor's doctor buddy totally in love with the daughter, and the daughter totally in love with the new guy hired to work in the library. He's in love with a childhood friend, although he does realise this after bedding the crazy guy's daughter, and he declares his love for her right in front of the sick girl. Pretty tactless. His mate, by the way, is concerned that his model friend has mysteriously disappeared - guess where she's currently tied up?
Things get slightly less predictable when the hero Hans does a really bad job of giving sick girl the brush off and she seemingly dies, but when he goes to confess to her dad the doctor gives him LSD! He spends a good portion of the film tripping out his head and seemingly talking to people who aren't there. After that, things get back into the 'rescue the girl from the mad doctor plot' but filmed very well, especially the shots of the melting wax 'models' at the end.
Was Mario Bava involved? Who knows.
Vintage and cult Italian movie , an offbeat and creepy story whose important status it retains today . It deals with a sculpture-studying art student called Hans (Pierre Brice) who encounters in Holland a mysterious mill , and inside a carousel , a type of sinister wax museum which showcases amazing figures . There Hans meets the professor's attractive and seductive daughter (Scilla Gabel) , and starts feeling passion for her in spite of his real love for Lisa Lotta (Dany Carrell) . Little by little he becomes aware of the strange experiments being conducted by a deranged mad doctor (Herbert Böhme) and his nefarious helper (Wolfgang Preiss) . UNBELIEVABLE! A Beautiful Girl Becomes a Petrified Monster! In Blazing Technicolor . Chilling : it will scare your pants off . Monstrous : have you been petrified lately ? . Grisly : blood is red in Technicolor . Frightening and wonderful exciting ¡ . Why do warm-blooded beauties suddenly turn to stone?
This is an outlandish chiller story with grisly horror , genuine thrills and shocks . This was reportedly Giorgio Ferroni's one of the biggest success and being well written by notorious writers/filmmakers as Remigio Del Grosso , Ugo Liberatore , Giorgio Stegani and Giorgio Ferroni himself , though taking parts here and there of other films . The eerie story contains bit good fun with killings , chilling interpretations , relentless horror and thrilling events . The chiller version of the 50s films packs scary chills and terrifying deaths . Concerning a strange carousel with beautiful babes rather than horses , and the starring soon finds out that the statues contain shocking secrets . The film blends ¨Roger Corman's Edgar Allan Poe¨ films , ¨Hammer¨ style , and ¨Andre De Toth's House of wax¨ . The Carousel figures are the real stars of this production , being alrightly realized . Some scenes are clumsily shot but the movie has some good moments here and there , the illogical parts in the plot are more than compensated for the excitement provided by the creepy wax models , eerie killings and many other things . This one still has the power to give the audience the creeps , thanks to attractive characters nicely played by protagonists as Pierre Brice -the unforgettable Winnetou- as Hans who despite his true love for his girlfriend Dany Carrell he falls with a mysterious woman : the always gorgeous Scilla Gabel , as well as Wolfgang Preiss who starred several wartime films playing Nazis , Liana Orfei who performed a lot of Peplum and the unknown Herbert A.E. Böhme .
It packs a rousing and suspenseful original music by Carlos Innocenzi . Colorful as well as glimmer cinematography with brilliant colors by Ludovico Pavoni . This creepy and gory horror movie is also titled : ¨Mulino delle donne di pietra¨ , or ¨Horror of the stone women¨ , ¨Drops of blood¨ and was professionally directed by Giorgio Ferroni . He was an expert on Peplum and Western . As he directed ¨Pompei (1936)¨, ¨The war of Troy¨ with Steve Reeves ,¨Hercules against Molock¨ , ¨Il Colosso Di Roma¨ with Gordon Scott and ¨Lion of Tebas¨ (1964) . He also directed Western as "Fort Yuma Gold" , ¨Wanted¨ , "Blood for a Silver Dollar" , and Wartime genre as ¨Battle of El Alamein¨ and Terror in acceptable results , such as : ¨Night of the Devils" and ¨ Mill of the stone woman". Rating . 7/10 . Decent terror movie .
This is an outlandish chiller story with grisly horror , genuine thrills and shocks . This was reportedly Giorgio Ferroni's one of the biggest success and being well written by notorious writers/filmmakers as Remigio Del Grosso , Ugo Liberatore , Giorgio Stegani and Giorgio Ferroni himself , though taking parts here and there of other films . The eerie story contains bit good fun with killings , chilling interpretations , relentless horror and thrilling events . The chiller version of the 50s films packs scary chills and terrifying deaths . Concerning a strange carousel with beautiful babes rather than horses , and the starring soon finds out that the statues contain shocking secrets . The film blends ¨Roger Corman's Edgar Allan Poe¨ films , ¨Hammer¨ style , and ¨Andre De Toth's House of wax¨ . The Carousel figures are the real stars of this production , being alrightly realized . Some scenes are clumsily shot but the movie has some good moments here and there , the illogical parts in the plot are more than compensated for the excitement provided by the creepy wax models , eerie killings and many other things . This one still has the power to give the audience the creeps , thanks to attractive characters nicely played by protagonists as Pierre Brice -the unforgettable Winnetou- as Hans who despite his true love for his girlfriend Dany Carrell he falls with a mysterious woman : the always gorgeous Scilla Gabel , as well as Wolfgang Preiss who starred several wartime films playing Nazis , Liana Orfei who performed a lot of Peplum and the unknown Herbert A.E. Böhme .
It packs a rousing and suspenseful original music by Carlos Innocenzi . Colorful as well as glimmer cinematography with brilliant colors by Ludovico Pavoni . This creepy and gory horror movie is also titled : ¨Mulino delle donne di pietra¨ , or ¨Horror of the stone women¨ , ¨Drops of blood¨ and was professionally directed by Giorgio Ferroni . He was an expert on Peplum and Western . As he directed ¨Pompei (1936)¨, ¨The war of Troy¨ with Steve Reeves ,¨Hercules against Molock¨ , ¨Il Colosso Di Roma¨ with Gordon Scott and ¨Lion of Tebas¨ (1964) . He also directed Western as "Fort Yuma Gold" , ¨Wanted¨ , "Blood for a Silver Dollar" , and Wartime genre as ¨Battle of El Alamein¨ and Terror in acceptable results , such as : ¨Night of the Devils" and ¨ Mill of the stone woman". Rating . 7/10 . Decent terror movie .
This is one of the films that is very atmospheric, stylish, and inventive in the European 60's fashion. The story is somewhat of a cross between Nathaniel Hawthorne's short story "Rappacini's Daughter" and the film House of Wax. An art professor is keeping a secret about his invalid, beautiful, seductive daughter Elfi away from Hans von Arnam, a man sent to write a piece on the centennial of the professor's mill and its famous statues of women that move around on a carousel-like machine. The statues are of famous women through history as well as having local historical murderesses and victims displayed. Living with the professor and Elfi is a strange doctor. Amidst this strange four-sided triangle, women are disappearing. The story is'nt too hard to figure out and much is given away early on. What it does do quite nicely is create a slowly-paced mood that leads to an interesting if not wholly imaginative denouement. The style infused throughout the picture is a credit to Italian director Giorgio Ferroni. The use of colors, the settings, the haunting carousel music, the "waxworks" themselves all help create the oppressive almost hallucinogenic mood. The acting is pretty good overall with Wolfgang Preiss as the complex doctor and especially Robert Boehme as Professor Gregorious Wahl standing out. Scilla Gabel as Elfi is just gorgeous as is Liana Orfei as one of the girls that gets missing. The production looks very German in manner and style - another compliment to the director. There are several scenes which stand out: the first time we see the carousel moving, nay, almost cranking itself away past those that have come to gawk at it, the drug-induced dream sequence Hans goes through, and the ending - a real barn-burner! Mill of the Stone Women isn't a fast-paced horror film but if you like movies like Black Sunday or Bava's work in general - Ferroni seems to have some similar directorial flair.
Based on a Flemish short story by Pieter Van Weigen, Mill of the Stone Women is an excellent slice of Eurocult Gothic horror. The film is along the same lines as films by Mario Bava; most notably Black Sunday and Kill Baby Kill, and just like the aforementioned masterpieces; bathes in its own atmosphere and most of the horror is drawn from that. Horror is a genre that people often mistake for not having many ideas, but films like this prove otherwise. Here, we have a story that couldn't be further away from the 'norm' in horror, and on a technical level, Mill of the Stone Women is both inventive and influential. The macabre plot follows a young journalist named Hans who travels to Holland to write an article on the mysterious sculptor, who lives in a mill, that the locals have nicknamed "The Mill of the Stone Women". While there, he meets the Professor's beautiful daughter; but she's damaged goods, as she suffers from a sinister malady that means she has to remain within the mill. Is there something yet more morbid to this intriguing set up...?
The mill at the centre of the piece makes for an excellent location for this story to take place in. Old castles are a more common location for Gothic horror, so the fact that this one takes place in a mill again differentiates it from the norm, and is yet another example of the imagination behind the story. The colour scheme is largely quite drab, and to be honest, I'd have preferred either more striking colours or a black and white picture...as the in-between doesn't look good in my opinion. That's pretty much the only thing I don't like about this film in regards to the style, however. The plot moves slowly, but this means that the film has time to both build up it's plot and wallow in the atmosphere. One of the trademarks of Italian horror is a muddled plot and things that don't completely make sense; and this film adheres to that. There are several threads within the plot, and a number of them are left unexplained by the conclusion...which is a shame. Still, the final conclusion is fitting and at least it doesn't suffer from bad dubbing! Recommended.
The mill at the centre of the piece makes for an excellent location for this story to take place in. Old castles are a more common location for Gothic horror, so the fact that this one takes place in a mill again differentiates it from the norm, and is yet another example of the imagination behind the story. The colour scheme is largely quite drab, and to be honest, I'd have preferred either more striking colours or a black and white picture...as the in-between doesn't look good in my opinion. That's pretty much the only thing I don't like about this film in regards to the style, however. The plot moves slowly, but this means that the film has time to both build up it's plot and wallow in the atmosphere. One of the trademarks of Italian horror is a muddled plot and things that don't completely make sense; and this film adheres to that. There are several threads within the plot, and a number of them are left unexplained by the conclusion...which is a shame. Still, the final conclusion is fitting and at least it doesn't suffer from bad dubbing! Recommended.
Did you know
- TriviaThis movie is the first Italian horror film to be made in color.
- GoofsThough the credits state that the film is based on a short story by Pieter van Weigen (from the book Flemish Tales), no such author exists.
- Quotes
Opening Credits: From the short story of the same name in "Flemish Tales" by Pieter van Weigen
- Crazy creditsThough the credits state that the film is based on a short story by Pieter van Weigen {from the book "Flemish Tales"}, no such author, or book, exists.
- Alternate versionsDespite listing the runtime as 93 minutes, the U.S. Paragon Video Productions VHS has the edited 85 minute version of the film.
- ConnectionsReferenced in Xenes se xeni hora: 50 ellinikes tainies mystiriou kai fantasias (2009)
Details
- Runtime
- 1h 36m(96 min)
- Sound mix
- Aspect ratio
- 1.66 : 1
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