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A Black Veil for Lisa

Original title: La morte non ha sesso
  • 1968
  • R
  • 1h 35m
IMDb RATING
5.9/10
791
YOUR RATING
A Black Veil for Lisa (1968)
Psychological ThrillerCrimeThriller

While trying to solve a series of murders, a possessive narcotics detective hires a hit-man to kill his unfaithful wife, but the hunter and the hunted soon begin an affair.While trying to solve a series of murders, a possessive narcotics detective hires a hit-man to kill his unfaithful wife, but the hunter and the hunted soon begin an affair.While trying to solve a series of murders, a possessive narcotics detective hires a hit-man to kill his unfaithful wife, but the hunter and the hunted soon begin an affair.

  • Director
    • Massimo Dallamano
  • Writers
    • Giuseppe Belli
    • Vittoriano Petrilli
    • Massimo Dallamano
  • Stars
    • John Mills
    • Luciana Paluzzi
    • Robert Hoffmann
  • See production info at IMDbPro
  • IMDb RATING
    5.9/10
    791
    YOUR RATING
    • Director
      • Massimo Dallamano
    • Writers
      • Giuseppe Belli
      • Vittoriano Petrilli
      • Massimo Dallamano
    • Stars
      • John Mills
      • Luciana Paluzzi
      • Robert Hoffmann
    • 18User reviews
    • 25Critic reviews
  • See production info at IMDbPro
  • See production info at IMDbPro
  • Photos53

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    Top cast20

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    John Mills
    John Mills
    • Inspector Franz Buloff
    Luciana Paluzzi
    Luciana Paluzzi
    • Lisa
    Robert Hoffmann
    Robert Hoffmann
    • Max Lindt
    Renate Kasché
    Renate Kasché
    • Marianne
    • (as Renata Kashe)
    Carlo Hintermann
    • Mansfeld
    Tullio Altamura
    Tullio Altamura
    • Ostermeyer
    Enzo Fiermonte
    Enzo Fiermonte
    • Siegert
    Loris Bazzocchi
    • Kruger
    Jimmy il Fenomeno
    Jimmy il Fenomeno
    • Rabbit
    • (as Jimmy Soffrano)
    Paola Natale
    Paola Natale
    Mirella Pamphili
    Mirella Pamphili
    Vanna Polverosi
    • Ursula
    Rodolfo Licari
    • Olaf
    Bernardino Solitari
    • Muller
    Carlo Spadoni
    • Eric
    Giuseppe Terranova
    • Rabbit
    Robert Van Daalen
    • Dr. Gross
    Massimo Dallamano
    • Gangster
    • (uncredited)
    • Director
      • Massimo Dallamano
    • Writers
      • Giuseppe Belli
      • Vittoriano Petrilli
      • Massimo Dallamano
    • All cast & crew
    • Production, box office & more at IMDbPro

    User reviews18

    5.9791
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    Featured reviews

    dwingrove

    'Gilda' Goes Giallo!

    So few Euro directors have done more to exile themselves from the arthouse pantheon than Massimo Dallamano. His work is slick, trashy and stylish in the manner of a fashion supplement in one of the cheaper Sunday newspapers. Yet at least three of his films are compelling studies in morbid sexuality and erotic obsession. A Black Veil for Lisa is nowhere near as famous as Venus in Furs or Dorian Gray, but it's still an intriguing brew. Imagine a giallo version of Proust's La Prisonniere with sex, drugs and serial killings thrown into the mix.

    Like the other two films, it has a protagonist whose physical beauty and sexual magnetism leave her immune to the qualms of everyday good behaviour. Lisa is played by Luciana Paluzzi - a voluptuous, flame-haired tigress who's best remembered as the bad girl in Thunderball. Like almost every Bond girl since Ursula Andress, she somehow failed to become a great star. Bitterly unjust, as Paluzzi in this film is a femme fatale to rival Rita Hayworth in Gilda. We can well understand the anxieties of her drab and dreary husband (John Mills) who obsessively polices her every move.

    The mystery, of course, is why Lisa married this old dolt in the first place. Suspecting his wife of sleeping around, Mills commits a grave breach of professional ethics (he's a police inspector, no less) and blackmails a hunky hitman (Robert Hoffmann) to kill her. Naturally, Lisa and said hitman fall in love...and there are plenty more twists where that came from. A Black Veil for Lisa could never be mistaken for Art. Still, it's a potent reminder that Trash is often more fun!
    8The_Void

    Character-driven Giallo masterpiece!

    A Black Veil for Lisa is one of the earlier films in the Giallo cycle, and has taken much of its influence from the film noir style of film-making. Directed by Massimo Dallamano, the man behind the unofficial 'Schoolgirls in Peril' trilogy, the film is often seen as trash; but personally, I couldn't disagree more. With this movie, Dallamano takes us on a roller-coaster of emotion and the director does an excellent job of setting out the characters, their situations and motives; which is a great benefit to a film that is very much character driven. The twisted plot emerges from the character's flaws, and follows the themes of jealousy, love and revenge. We follow Inspector Bulov; a man on the case of a murderer that is leaving a trail of bodies in his wake. He polices the streets and also his wife; the buxom and beautiful Lisa. Our leading man has a few years on his beautiful other half, and this combined with her character has lead him to relentlessly follow her every move, even to the point where it interferes with his work. And to say any more about the plot, would spoil the film!

    A Black Veil for Lisa benefits from a trio of great central performances. John Mills gives it his all in the lead role, which sees him looking and acting the part of the jealous husband brilliantly. Mills also brings a distinct British style to the picture, which lends it a classy feel which is unlike other Giallo films. The title role is taken by former Bond girl Luciana Paluzzi, and while she isn't given too much time to shine acting wise; she looks the part and brilliantly offsets Mills' leading performance. Robert Hoffmann rounds off the central cast in the role of the murderer, and while he looks a bit too polished to viciously commit murder, his good looks serve him well after the first twist has been dealt out. This Giallo is unlike others in that there is no mystery surrounding the identity of the murderer; and the focus of the movie is always on the relationship between the central characters. The order of priority regarding this is shown brilliantly by the dubious way that the identity of the killer is revealed; it's not very realistic, but it does relate to the character - and this film is all about its characters. Overall, A Black Veil for Lisa is a great Giallo and one that I hope gets a decent DVD release soon so more people will be able to see it!
    7adrianovasconcelos

    Sexy, fine-featured Paluzzi cheats marriage, death

    I do readily concede that I know close to squat about Director Massimo Dallamano, having only watched his poliziotto entitled COLT 38 SPECIAL SQUAD, which made chases and gory action its main menu.

    By comparison, A BLACK VEIL FOR LISA pays a shade more attention to character building. The ever reliable British actor John Mills plays Hamburg-based Interpol Inspector Franz Bulon who, in spite of his undeniable professionalism, prioritizes keeping an eye on his often absent from home wife, the stunningly dishy, fine-featured Luciana Paluzzi who had come to international notice three years earlier in THUNDERBALL, with Connery's James Bond handing her slippers to cover her nudity.

    In BLACK VEIL FOR LISA, Paluzzi displays fabulous nudity and not just to cuckolded hubby Mills, who she also deceives by passing classified info to a Porsche-driving villain who deals in tulips and murder, in addition to bedding him and handsome hitman Max, smugly played by Robert Hoffmann.

    Competent cinematography from Angelo Lotti, reasonably deft screenplay from Belli and Petrilli, with interesting nuances adding to Paluzzi's sensual survival instinct and sexiness, allowing her to completely steal the show.

    The ending could and should have been more credibly done, difficult to believe that a police inspector and a habitual hitman should put up such innocuous personal defense.

    As a footnote, a word of appreciation for the presence of great, very classy German car models of the 1960s: Mercedes Benz, Porsche, Opel, Volkswagen all there.

    Enjoyable police thriller 8/10.
    7christopher-underwood

    competent and engaging mystery

    Not the wildest of gialli, if indeed, it really does qualify as one, but a most competent and engaging mystery. John Mills is surprisingly good as the ageing husband to the flirty Bond girl, Luciana Paluzzi and although the bad boy seems far too glamorous for the role, Robert Hoffman does well. Decent script, which always helps and what starts simply enough becomes far more involved as we progress. Indeed we quickly learn who the killer is but not why or just how many are involved. That Mills plays as an Englishman gives this a certain slant that helps make the film different from others of the time and though the music is somewhat flat, seems fitting enough for the drab location. I don't know where this was shot but it doesn't look like Italy so is perhaps Germany or even Austria. No stunning set pieces and the flashes of nudity seem added and likely to not be Paluzzi.
    8Weirdling_Wolf

    An engrossing, beauteous-looking, late-60s, Martini-age Giallo classic!

    Regarded by some cult cineastes as a relatively unsung Giallo stylist maestro, Massimo 'What Have They Done to Solange' Dallamano ably directed one of the earlier entries in the soon-to-be-blooming Gialli cycle. 'A Black Veil for Lisa' aka 'La Morte Non Ha Sesso' remains a tremendously engrossing, twist-laden 60s terror treat. Exploiting the prototypically menacing Giallo motif of darkly glistering, black gloved killer, it eschews much of the gruesome hysteria, providing a more sombre examination of debilitating paranoia, sexual infidelity and the toxic jealousies it inevitably engenders.

    ''A Black Veil for Lisa' has a gripping, Krimi-like narrative, wherein a slick, shadowy hit-man (Robert Hoffman)is hired by vicious drug dealers to bump off all those who might expose their malign activities. His executions come to the attention of troubled, increasingly paranoid Inspector, Franz Bulon (John Mills). Bulon's valiant investigations fatefully propose a coolly logical, devastatingly immoral solution to his marital torment! John Mills is on compellingly terse form as the cuckolded inspector, and, Robert Hoffman is sinfully suave as the blue-eyed libidinous hitman. The preternaturally luscious, dazzlingly beautiful starlet, Luciana Paluzzi making for memorably luminous eye candy! Doing little more than sultrily slink about in a salacious serenade of risqué regalia, this tantalizing auburn-haired temptress does it with an eye-boggling élan!

    Maestro, Dallamano directs his engaging 60s Giallo with real cinematic verve, and the garotte taut narrative wickedly wends its thrilling way to a genuinely desperate, nerve-flayingly dramatic conclusion! Evocatively shot in picturesque Hamburg, 'A Black Veil for Lisa' remains a rewardingly refined late-night entertainment. This visually stylish, stiletto cool, psychologically tweaked thriller has credible performances and is all together cinematic. A Black Veil for Lisa's somewhat incongruent obscurity belies an engrossing, beauteous-looking Martini-age Giallo classic!

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    Related interests

    Rosamund Pike in Gone Girl (2014)
    Psychological Thriller
    James Gandolfini, Edie Falco, Sharon Angela, Max Casella, Dan Grimaldi, Joe Perrino, Donna Pescow, Jamie-Lynn Sigler, Tony Sirico, and Michael Drayer in The Sopranos (1999)
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    Storyline

    Edit

    Did you know

    Edit
    • Trivia
      Paul Frees does several of the voices in the U.S. dubbed version.
    • Goofs
      Bulon learns of the Rabbit's death in broad daylight, cut to a split second shot of a woman being drowned, cut back to Bulon and it's dark night.
    • Quotes

      Inspector Franz Bulon: [learning of his wife's meeting with Max] Did she let you in?

      Max Lindt: I'll say!

    • Connections
      Featured in 42nd Street Forever, Volume 1 (2005)
    • Soundtracks
      Melodie de Lisa
      Words and Music by Alan Gordon and Gary Bonner

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    FAQ13

    • How long is A Black Veil for Lisa?Powered by Alexa

    Details

    Edit
    • Release date
      • August 1969 (United States)
    • Countries of origin
      • Italy
      • West Germany
    • Languages
      • Italian
      • English
    • Also known as
      • Das Geheimnis der jungen Witwe
    • Filming locations
      • Alsterpavillon, Jungfernstieg 54, Hamburg, Germany(Buloff looks for Lisa at the restaurant)
    • Production companies
      • Filmes Cinematografica
      • PAN Film
      • Top-Film
    • See more company credits at IMDbPro

    Tech specs

    Edit
    • Runtime
      • 1h 35m(95 min)
    • Sound mix
      • Mono
    • Aspect ratio
      • 1.78 : 1

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