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4.9/10
381
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In this version of the famous story of the London serial killer, Jack not only likes to kill prostitutes but he is a cannibal as well.In this version of the famous story of the London serial killer, Jack not only likes to kill prostitutes but he is a cannibal as well.In this version of the famous story of the London serial killer, Jack not only likes to kill prostitutes but he is a cannibal as well.
Marina Ferri
- Diana
- (as Maika)
Featured reviews
A serial killer is on the loose in modern day London, committing a series of murders that echo the work of Jack the Ripper from the previous century. Scotland Yard is once again on the case and their no. 1 suspect is Peter Dockerman (Paul Naschy), a drunk former trapeze artist (!) whose wife was one of the earliest victims.
This Naschy vehicle is a real snoozer. A majority of the time is comprised of stuffy Brits talking up their theories over and over. This is the kind of movie where you will guess the killer 20 minutes in (a small cast and telling line of dialog helps out here) and then you wait the next hour as they try to mislead you. It also doesn't help that the TeleVista DVD appears to be a clothed version (although sharp-eyed viewers will note that a flashback by the killer features a quick snippet of nudity). The DVD is nice though in that it is widescreen. The crew did a few days of actual shooting in London as Naschy limps around various tourist spots. It is quite fun watch the polite Brits always duck out of the way real quick as the camera pans to them.
This Naschy vehicle is a real snoozer. A majority of the time is comprised of stuffy Brits talking up their theories over and over. This is the kind of movie where you will guess the killer 20 minutes in (a small cast and telling line of dialog helps out here) and then you wait the next hour as they try to mislead you. It also doesn't help that the TeleVista DVD appears to be a clothed version (although sharp-eyed viewers will note that a flashback by the killer features a quick snippet of nudity). The DVD is nice though in that it is widescreen. The crew did a few days of actual shooting in London as Naschy limps around various tourist spots. It is quite fun watch the polite Brits always duck out of the way real quick as the camera pans to them.
7 Murders For Scotland Yard? There might have been
to be honest, I wasn't keeping a tally of the killings; instead, I was counting down the minutes to the end of this dreadfully dull Spanish giallo starring Iberian horror icon Paul Naschy as Pedro, an ex-trapeze artist (sh'yeah right!) with a manky leg who is suspected of committing a series of grisly London murders in which the young female victims have their organs surgically removed, Jack the Ripper style.
With way too much in the way of boring police procedure, repetitive killings that deliver minimal (and unconvincing) gore, and very little of the style to be found in many Italian giallos, about the only thing that the film really has to offer fans of '70s Euro horror are a few reasonably attractive women in various states of undress (although there's no actual nudity, quite the rarity for this kind of film) and some authentic location work (that said, the scene where Naschy has a knife fight with three men clearly wasn't shot in London—we don't have crickets chirping loudly in the evenings).
3.5 out of 10, generously rounded up to 4 for the hilarious scene in which a victim's severed head is delivered to a police inspector, and then casually passed around the station so that everyone can take a look.
With way too much in the way of boring police procedure, repetitive killings that deliver minimal (and unconvincing) gore, and very little of the style to be found in many Italian giallos, about the only thing that the film really has to offer fans of '70s Euro horror are a few reasonably attractive women in various states of undress (although there's no actual nudity, quite the rarity for this kind of film) and some authentic location work (that said, the scene where Naschy has a knife fight with three men clearly wasn't shot in London—we don't have crickets chirping loudly in the evenings).
3.5 out of 10, generously rounded up to 4 for the hilarious scene in which a victim's severed head is delivered to a police inspector, and then casually passed around the station so that everyone can take a look.
1971's "7 Murders for Scotland Yard" (Jack el Destripador de Londres) appears to have been the first Paul Naschy vehicle in which the star moves away from the shadow of El Hombre Lobo, though it was shot on the same London locations as 5th entry "Dr. Jekyll and the Werewolf." This Spanish-Italian coproduction finds the beefy actor as downtrodden suspect in a series of baffling knifings that deliberately echo the brutality of 1887's Jack the Ripper, the culprit using incriminating notes and various body parts to taunt the admittedly hapless police. Naschy's Bruno is a former circus acrobat whose career ended after a fall, and our first on screen victim is his own wife, whose meager earnings as a prostitute allowed him to frequent Soho pubs for yet another beverage of choice. There are shades of Hitchcock with authorities fingering the wrong man, and the influence of Peter Lorre's 1931 "M" crops up when even the underworld frowns on such a dastardly killer making things more difficult for them. Alas, the whole thing simply plods along in perfunctory fashion, the killings staged identically with graphic closeups of the phallic blade conducting its penetrations with no nudity and very little blood shown, comparable more to German krimi than Italian Giallo, none of the female targets developed to any likable degree (only a small child escapes the mayhem). Like his 1973 film "The Blue Eyes of the Broken Doll," Naschy's surly protagonist may not be guilty but he's hardly innocent, leaving behind his share of corpses as he successfully evades the cops (the lack of suspects makes the killer's identity painfully easy). Director Jose Luis Madrid would collaborate with Naschy on two more obscure features, 1973's "The Crimes of Petiot" and 1977's "Comando Txikia: Muerte de un Presidente."
This Spanish Giallo contains suspense , thrills , chills , intrigue and plot twists . In this peculiar version of the famous story of the London serial killer set in contemporary time , here Jack the Ripper not only likes to kill prostitutes but also other beautiful women . Naschy movie with usual elements of the ¨Gialli¨ sub-genre : suspenseful intrigue , twisted killings executed by a brutal killer , violence , sadism , physical abuse , sensationalist murder pieces and nudism . Dealing with a series of murders are happening in London , these killings seem connected to a hunk gammy named Bruno Dorlani (Paul Naschy or Jacinto Molina). The frustrated and bitter ex-acrobat Bruno tries to exculpate himself by sending a letter to the police superintendent via his friend (Patricia Loran) , resulting in fateful consecuences . Meanwhile , the police commissioner , Inspector Henry Campbell (Renzo Marignano) and his agents are investigating the heinous crimes , helped by a handsome schoolteacher of noble birth called Winston Darby Christian (Andrés Resino) married to a beautiful wife (Orchidea De Santis) , all of them being drawn into a twisted criminal plot and hot on Bruno's heels as prime suspect , as they can bring down the killer to the justice .
This is the typical European co-production , a giallo style which copies usual ingredients with a number of suspect people , red herrings and grisly murders against unfortunate victims , being committed by an unknown assassin who executes macabre killings on the body his victims by slashing , cutting or hacking . This is a whodunit in which there are various suspicious people who , as usual , happen to be the protagonists , as the main question of the movie results to be to find out the following : who is the murderer ? .There're various candidates, it may be a wise , well-considered teacher (Andrés Resino) or his vindictive spouse (Orchidea De Santis) or a lame former trapeze artist (Paul Naschy or Jacinto Molina) whose wife is among the victims or even the commissioner Inspector Campbell (Renzo Marignano) himself . Lurid and gut-wrenching criminal drama made during the Francoist period in which abounded co-productions especially in horror and Spaghetti Western genres . As in Terror genre excelled Jacinto Molina who created his particular style where most of his raids would be perpetrated by the emblem of his own company in Spain , this actor, screenwriter and director Jacinto Molina - Paul Naschy , at times , collaborated with writer/filmmaker José Luis Madrid ; the result of whose collaboration are 'Jack the Ripper of London / Sette Cadaveri per Scotland Yard' (1971) and crimes of 'Petiot' (1972). Here Paul Naschy is an ex-circus artist who helps his friend a police inspector to discover who is the ominous murderer , resulting in himself to be the prime suspect . Filmmaker José Luis Madrid designs an average thriller , including some regularly staged murders plenty of startling visual content with blood similar to tomato and adding gore scenes , as well as brief nakedness, though in Spain it was submitted to limited censorship.
It contains atomspheric cinematography by cameraman Diego Úbeda , showing Swinging London locations from the Seventies , as well as some Madrid places , though a perfect remastering being extremely necessary because of the film copy is worn-out . Along with thrillling and intriguing musical score by Italian composer Piero Piccioni , an expert on Giallo soundtracks . The motion picture was regularly directed by José Luis Madrid. He was a craftsman who directed all kinds of genres. As he made Españoladas such as : ¨Lucecita¨ or ¨Strip-tease a la Inglesa¨ ; Spaghetti/Paella Westerns such as ¨The Ballad of Johnny Ringo¨ , ¨Seven Jackals¨, ¨The revenge of Clark Harrison¨ , ¨A Tomb for an outlaw¨; Eurospy movies such as : ¨Chineses and minishorts¨, ¨Ok Yetvtushenko¨ ; Crime movie such as ¨The Hyena¨ , and for the famous Spanish Werewolf , Paul Naschy , directed 2 movies : ¨Jack Ripper of London¨ and ¨Crimes of Petiot¨ and political/historical films such as : ¨Memorias del General Escobar¨ and ¨Command Txiquia¨ concerning the assassination of President Carrero Blanco . He also worked for the powerful German producer Arthur Brauner from Constantine Films with whom José Luis Madrid made a lot of uncredited films . Most of them were Krimis , a subgenre very popular in Germany . Throughout his long career he also showed a sense of opportunism with sensationalistic productions , such as : ¨The motorway Vampire¨ , about a vampire killer and ¨Last Tango in Madrid¨, there badly imitating ¨Bertolucci's Last tango in Paris¨. Rating : 5.5/10 . Average but passable Giallo .
This is the typical European co-production , a giallo style which copies usual ingredients with a number of suspect people , red herrings and grisly murders against unfortunate victims , being committed by an unknown assassin who executes macabre killings on the body his victims by slashing , cutting or hacking . This is a whodunit in which there are various suspicious people who , as usual , happen to be the protagonists , as the main question of the movie results to be to find out the following : who is the murderer ? .There're various candidates, it may be a wise , well-considered teacher (Andrés Resino) or his vindictive spouse (Orchidea De Santis) or a lame former trapeze artist (Paul Naschy or Jacinto Molina) whose wife is among the victims or even the commissioner Inspector Campbell (Renzo Marignano) himself . Lurid and gut-wrenching criminal drama made during the Francoist period in which abounded co-productions especially in horror and Spaghetti Western genres . As in Terror genre excelled Jacinto Molina who created his particular style where most of his raids would be perpetrated by the emblem of his own company in Spain , this actor, screenwriter and director Jacinto Molina - Paul Naschy , at times , collaborated with writer/filmmaker José Luis Madrid ; the result of whose collaboration are 'Jack the Ripper of London / Sette Cadaveri per Scotland Yard' (1971) and crimes of 'Petiot' (1972). Here Paul Naschy is an ex-circus artist who helps his friend a police inspector to discover who is the ominous murderer , resulting in himself to be the prime suspect . Filmmaker José Luis Madrid designs an average thriller , including some regularly staged murders plenty of startling visual content with blood similar to tomato and adding gore scenes , as well as brief nakedness, though in Spain it was submitted to limited censorship.
It contains atomspheric cinematography by cameraman Diego Úbeda , showing Swinging London locations from the Seventies , as well as some Madrid places , though a perfect remastering being extremely necessary because of the film copy is worn-out . Along with thrillling and intriguing musical score by Italian composer Piero Piccioni , an expert on Giallo soundtracks . The motion picture was regularly directed by José Luis Madrid. He was a craftsman who directed all kinds of genres. As he made Españoladas such as : ¨Lucecita¨ or ¨Strip-tease a la Inglesa¨ ; Spaghetti/Paella Westerns such as ¨The Ballad of Johnny Ringo¨ , ¨Seven Jackals¨, ¨The revenge of Clark Harrison¨ , ¨A Tomb for an outlaw¨; Eurospy movies such as : ¨Chineses and minishorts¨, ¨Ok Yetvtushenko¨ ; Crime movie such as ¨The Hyena¨ , and for the famous Spanish Werewolf , Paul Naschy , directed 2 movies : ¨Jack Ripper of London¨ and ¨Crimes of Petiot¨ and political/historical films such as : ¨Memorias del General Escobar¨ and ¨Command Txiquia¨ concerning the assassination of President Carrero Blanco . He also worked for the powerful German producer Arthur Brauner from Constantine Films with whom José Luis Madrid made a lot of uncredited films . Most of them were Krimis , a subgenre very popular in Germany . Throughout his long career he also showed a sense of opportunism with sensationalistic productions , such as : ¨The motorway Vampire¨ , about a vampire killer and ¨Last Tango in Madrid¨, there badly imitating ¨Bertolucci's Last tango in Paris¨. Rating : 5.5/10 . Average but passable Giallo .
This had been shown on late-night Italian TV some years back and, later, I recall it being mentioned favorably online; hence, given its theme of an updated version of Jack The Ripper and the fact that it starred Euro-Cult icon Paul Naschy, I decided to check it out this time around. However, it turned out to be quite a mess: not so surprising when considering that the only other J.L. Madrid film I've watched was the similarly dispiriting THE HORRIBLE SEXY VAMPIRE (1970)!; as in that film, the women here are mainly on screen in order to disrobe and get butchered.
The plot provides three possible suspects of the serial killings: a crippled and bitter ex-trapeze artist (Naschy) whose wife is among the victims, a handsome schoolteacher of noble birth but who's actually impotent and, surprisingly, a police commissioner who just happens to be the latter's boyhood chum and is also secretly in love with his wife (Orchidea De Santis, whom I saw in the flesh and on screen in Luciano Salce's equally obscure but infinitely superior political satire, COUP D'ETAT [1969] at the 61st Venice Film Festival)!
The Swinging London locations are just about the only authentic element here: both the gore and the occasional action scene look extremely phony; another clear measure of the film's lack of budget is that Naschy's accident (which continues to haunt him) is hilariously depicted simply by having the actor throw himself in front of the camera and utter a couple of none-too-convincing groans!
The plot provides three possible suspects of the serial killings: a crippled and bitter ex-trapeze artist (Naschy) whose wife is among the victims, a handsome schoolteacher of noble birth but who's actually impotent and, surprisingly, a police commissioner who just happens to be the latter's boyhood chum and is also secretly in love with his wife (Orchidea De Santis, whom I saw in the flesh and on screen in Luciano Salce's equally obscure but infinitely superior political satire, COUP D'ETAT [1969] at the 61st Venice Film Festival)!
The Swinging London locations are just about the only authentic element here: both the gore and the occasional action scene look extremely phony; another clear measure of the film's lack of budget is that Naschy's accident (which continues to haunt him) is hilariously depicted simply by having the actor throw himself in front of the camera and utter a couple of none-too-convincing groans!
Did you know
- TriviaAlong the maniac's walk through Soho, he passes The Windmill Cinema, where "Alyse and Chloe" is playing, and the Lyric Theatre, where Robert Morley and Mary Miller are starring in a play acclaimed with "all the makings of a West End success. One of the funniest"
- GoofsThe lead character is listed as "Bruno Doriani", but he is called Pedro Dorian throughout the film.
- Quotes
Soho Porn Movie Poster: Wild Willing and Sexy!
- ConnectionsReferences Naughty Roommates (1969)
Details
- Release date
- Countries of origin
- Languages
- Also known as
- 7 Murders for Scotland Yard
- Filming locations
- Production companies
- See more company credits at IMDbPro
- Runtime
- 1h 27m(87 min)
- Sound mix
- Aspect ratio
- 2.35 : 1
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