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The Weekend Murders

Original title: Concerto per pistola solista
  • 1970
  • R
  • 1h 38m
IMDb RATING
6.1/10
648
YOUR RATING
The Weekend Murders (1970)
Dark ComedyParodyComedyCrimeMysteryThriller

A family goes to a British estate to hear the reading of a will and while there they are murdered one by one.A family goes to a British estate to hear the reading of a will and while there they are murdered one by one.A family goes to a British estate to hear the reading of a will and while there they are murdered one by one.

  • Director
    • Michele Lupo
  • Writers
    • Fabio Pittorru
    • Massimo Felisatti
    • Sergio Donati
  • Stars
    • Anna Moffo
    • Lance Percival
    • Ida Galli
  • See production info at IMDbPro
  • IMDb RATING
    6.1/10
    648
    YOUR RATING
    • Director
      • Michele Lupo
    • Writers
      • Fabio Pittorru
      • Massimo Felisatti
      • Sergio Donati
    • Stars
      • Anna Moffo
      • Lance Percival
      • Ida Galli
    • 16User reviews
    • 27Critic reviews
  • See production info at IMDbPro
  • See production info at IMDbPro
  • Photos49

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    Top cast16

    Edit
    Anna Moffo
    Anna Moffo
    • Barbara Ward
    Lance Percival
    • Inspector Grey
    Ida Galli
    Ida Galli
    • Isabelle Carter
    • (as Eveline Stewart)
    Peter Baldwin
    Peter Baldwin
    • Anthony Carter
    Giacomo Rossi Stuart
    Giacomo Rossi Stuart
    • Ted Collins
    Christopher Chittell
    Christopher Chittell
    • Georgie Kemple
    Marisa Fabbri
    Marisa Fabbri
    • Aunt Gladys Kemple
    Beryl Cunningham
    Beryl Cunningham
    • Pauline Collins
    Quinto Parmeggiani
    • Lawrence Carter
    Orchidea De Santis
    Orchidea De Santis
    • Evelyn - The Maid
    Robert Hundar
    Robert Hundar
    • Arthur - The Valet
    Franco Borelli
    • Tom - The Stranger
    Ballard Berkeley
    Ballard Berkeley
    • Peter - The Butler
    Gastone Moschin
    Gastone Moschin
    • Sergeant Aloysius Thorpe
    Richard Caldicot
    Richard Caldicot
    • Mr. Thornton - The Lawyer
    Harry Hutchinson
    • Harry - The Gardener
    • Director
      • Michele Lupo
    • Writers
      • Fabio Pittorru
      • Massimo Felisatti
      • Sergio Donati
    • All cast & crew
    • Production, box office & more at IMDbPro

    User reviews16

    6.1648
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    Featured reviews

    Dethcharm

    "Please Forgive Me, I'm A Little Overwrought!"... "Explain Yourself, Sonny Jim!"...

    THE WEEKEND MURDERS gets underway as a body is discovered buried in a sand trap at a posh, private golf club. The police reveal that it is the latest in a series of murders.

    A flashback introduces us to the Carter family, gathered at the vast Carter estate for the reading of their dearly departed relative, Sir Henry Carter's will. Of course, the inheritance isn't distributed in a manner that pleases everyone. Well, okay, it pleases no one, except for an inept, flower-loving policeman, Sergeant Aloisius Thorpe (Gastone Moschin), and Sir Henry's Niece, Barbara Worth (Anna Moffo). The rest of the family is bitter to say the least, and it's not long before the bodies start popping up all over the grounds!

    With greed, jealousy, and treachery in the air, a mansion full of suspects, and a pair of bungling coppers on the case, this movie is enjoyable on several levels. Part "old dark house" mystery, part giallo, and all comedy, this movie manages to parody its subject matter while still respecting it.

    Co-stars Ida Galli as Isabelle Carter, and Giacomo Rossi Stuart as Ted Collins.

    On a personal note: I didn't figure it all out until the very end. I like that in a movie!...
    lazarillo

    Interesting blend of genres--and a great cast

    Agatha Christie mysteries and Italian gialli may have some things in common, but they're also very different. First off, gialli are really "mass-murder mysteries", whereas only a few Agatha Christie mysteries really fit that description(the most famous being her seminal "Ten Little Indians"). Moreover, Agatha Christie mysteries are very mannered and British while Italian gialli are very over-the-top and usually chock-full of lurid sex and violence. This movie is impressive, therefore, because it manages to successfully combine the two styles (much like Mario Bava's "Five Dolls for an August Moon"). It has a typical Agatha Christie set-up with various grasping relatives gathered at a remote country estate to hear a will, but like a giallo, it's also full of ridiculously shifty characters, sexual perversity, OTT crash-zooms, and overly dramatic music.

    Perhaps, even more impressive, it's one of the few gialli to successfully incorporate (completely intentional) black comedy. It really plays with the conventions of the mystery genre--the first person killed is the butler (so he didn't do it), and the Scotland Yard detective (Lance Percival) turns out to be an inept bumbler while the thick-looking local bobby (Gaston Moschin) turns out to be quite clever. Being a giallo though, it also has certain stock "giallo-esque" characters like an impotent, virginal mama's boy (Chris Chittel) who likes fake bloody suicides and a black woman(Beryl Cunningham)who is married to one of the family members and (naturally) is the most sexually predatory of the characters--with the possible exception of the saucy maid (Orchidea DeSantis).

    This has a great cast including Eveline Stewart, Giacomo Rossi-Stuart, and American Peter Baldwin who were in any number of 60's and 70's Italian films. Gaston Moschin (who is GREAT here) was usually in Italian crime thrillers, but also had an important part in the "The Godfather 2". The sexy Beryl Cunningham was in "Crimes of the Black Cat", and the even sexier Orchidea DeSantis played all kinds of sexy roles in all kinds of sexy Italian movies. Even the English actors are familiar--Lance Percival was a big comedy actor in Britain at the time and Christopher Chittel was in another movie very much like this called "Erotic Inferno", except that it was a softcore porn movie with Mary Millington! (VERY few actors have ever appeared in both Italian giallo thrillers AND Mary Millington sex comedies). This has just received a superior release by Code Red. I would definitely check it out.
    7The_Void

    Largelly successful Agatha Christie spoof Giallo

    Weekend Murders is one of the more hard to find Giallo films, and I find that rather surprising as the English countryside setting as well as the mystery plot that spoofs Agatha Christie stories means that it's actually one of the more accessible films of the genre. Despite the fact that Weekend Murders is an Italian production, director Michele Lupo has done a great job of creating a distinctly British atmosphere, and this could easily have been a British film were it not for the poor dubbing. Michele Lupo has a great sense of humour and he succeeds several times in lampooning the tradition that the film is spoofing, and Weekend Murders is a very funny film throughout. We open on a golf course where a leisurely game is interrupted by the discovery of a hand sticking out of a sandpit. It soon becomes obvious that the butler didn't do it because, contrary to the norm, he is the first to go! We soon move on to the first real plot building scene, which takes form in a will reading to the members of a wealthy estate. Aside from getting a few laughs, we are also given the knowledge that the owner of the estate's favourite daughter is to inherit everything, much to the dismay of the rest of the house.

    Most of the humour in the film comes from the seemingly inept local policeman played by Gastone Moschin. His character soon hooks up with the self proclaimed ace Scotland Yard Superintendent Grey (Lance Percival), and their double act forms the backbone of the movie. The two pair up well actually, and their exchanges work because the two characters are so different. Unfortunately, the rest of the support cast isn't so memorable; and while none of them put in particularly bad performances - there isn't a real standout either. The film also has a few plot problems, as the focus isn't always on the mystery and the exchanges between the members of the house are often redundant and not relevant to the central theme. The mystery itself is rather bare, and although clever at the conclusion - the plot is not the labyrinth that I have come to expect from Giallo's. After spoofing just about every mystery cliché in existence, it is fitting that the common revealing scene at the end is also lampooned by Lupo, and while the identity of the murderer is actually rather obvious; at least the reasons behind it make some sort of sense. Worth tracking down!
    6thalassafischer

    Homage to Agatha Christie

    The Weekend Murders is disconcertingly British. It's not just that this Italian giallo is in UK English but that the setting, style and even the lame quaint humor are all indicative of a mid-century cozy English mystery-comedy.

    I must say that i was completely taken by surprise by who the murderer is and what method they used. However, this isn't unusual in Agatha Christie mysteries which totally cheat and throw so many red herrings at the reader that the end is usually a nice surprise. Either you get it or you don't, no review on Earth will talk someone into the sheer relaxing enjoyment of watching a formulaic mystery set on a European estate where you'll never be able to figure out the murderer by discerning the clues.

    This effort is solid, the cinematography and musical score are lovely, but in a very mainstream MGM sort of way.
    8Coventry

    Well, at least the butler didn't do it

    "Weekend Murders" perfectly summarizes all the reasons why Italian gialli-movies made between 1970 and 1980 are my absolute favorite type of horror flicks! Surely this little flick steals ideas of several other classics, surely it's incredibly absurd and far- fetched, and surely it isn't that well-made… But, come on, you just have to discover how much fun and exhilaration this crazy little whodunit thriller provides! "Weekend Murders" is basically a spoof of an Agatha Christie story, particularly "Ten Little Indians/And Then There Were None", and thus definitely not your standard type of giallo, however the highly imaginative murder methods and bizarrely eccentric characters are maintained. And then there's something else that usually never features in gialli, namely lots and lots of humor! Director Michele Lupo – mostly known for his numerous Terence Hill & Bud Spencer action/comedy vehicles – marvelously succeeds in narrating the tale of jealousy, family hatred and murder in a very light-headed fashion, with special thanks to a handful of delightfully funny dialogs and a cast full of respectable names with (hidden) comedy talents. Gastone Moschin, for example, whom I only knew from the raw and violent crime thriller "Milano Calibro .9", here demonstrates his comedy skills together with the textbook British Lance Percival. Speaking of textbook British, "Weekend Murders" is probably the only Italian film that successfully manages to look authentically British (aside from the dubbing) with gloomy land houses, stereotypically well-mannered characters and oppressed humor. The film creatively opens somewhere halfway in the plot, in fact. When a lifeless body is discovered in the sandpit of a golf course, local police sergeant Aloisius Thorpe reminds his Scotland Yard colleague that this is already the third vicious murder in three days. So we go back in time and get acquainted with the remaining members of the Carter family and their partners. They have gathered in the old family home for the reading of the will of their deceased patriarch. Like often the case with inheritances and greedy relatives, most of them aren't too happy with the outcome. Soon after the first murder takes place and this indirectly leads to what I personally find the most hilarious part of the movie. For you see, the first victim is Peter butler, so one of the characters makes the incredibly dry and witty remark: "Well, at least this time nobody can say that the butler did it". Anyways, more murders follow, but Sergeant Thorpe certainly isn't as dim-witted as he looks and impressively gets closer and closer to capturing the killer. For my liking, the body count easily could (and should) have been a bit higher, but I was pleasantly surprised by the ingenious unfolding of the mystery and by the revelation of the killer's identity + modus operandi. If all this isn't persuasive enough just yet, "Weekend Murders" also has an awesome score, with a fantastic reworking of the catchy classical music by Pyotr Tchaikovsky, and stars a few couple of really ravishing actresses (Ida Gallo, Anna Mofo, Beryl Cunningham, Orchidea de Santis). It exists on DVD, what are you waiting for?

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    Storyline

    Edit

    Did you know

    Edit
    • Trivia
      Francesco de Mari's score under the introductory credits is virtually identical--orchestrations, chord progressions, measure for measure, rhythmic figures--everything except melodic line, to Tchaikovsky's famous 1st piano concerto, the opening chords of which reverberate throughout the film score, reflecting the translation of the Italian title "Concerto for Solo Pistol".
    • Goofs
      The tagline says the butler was the first body found. Wrong. Previously a body had already been found in the sandpit at the golf course.
    • Quotes

      Aunt Gladys Kemple: Little Miss Florence Nightingale had it all figured out, she did! The sneaky bitch!

      Georgie Kemple: [shocked at his mummy's outburst] Mummy!

      Aunt Gladys Kemple: Drop Dead!

    • Crazy credits
      Francesco de Mari's score under the introductory credits is virtually identical--orchestrations, chord progressions, measure for measure, rhythmic figures--everything except melodic line, to Tchaikovsky's famous 1st piano concerto, the opening chords of which reverberate throughout the film score.
    • Alternate versions
      A censored version was created by MGM for American and international markets, removing zooms and close-ups of bloody content as well some as sexual interplay and dialogue. Only the original Italian version was uncensored.
    • Connections
      Featured in Eurotika!: So Sweet, So Perverse (1999)
    • Soundtracks
      Piano Concerto No. 1
      Music by Pyotr Ilyich Tchaikovsky

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    FAQ13

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    Details

    Edit
    • Release date
      • October 15, 1970 (Italy)
    • Country of origin
      • Italy
    • Language
      • Italian
    • Also known as
      • Ubojstva na vikendu
    • Filming locations
      • Somerleyton Hall, Suffolk, England, UK(location)
    • Production company
      • Jupiter Generale Cinematografica
    • See more company credits at IMDbPro

    Tech specs

    Edit
    • Runtime
      • 1h 38m(98 min)
    • Sound mix
      • Mono
    • Aspect ratio
      • 2.35 : 1

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