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Evil Eye

Original title: Malocchio
  • 1975
  • R
  • 1h 46m
IMDb RATING
4.7/10
420
YOUR RATING
Jorge Rivero and Luis La Torre in Evil Eye (1975)
Folk HorrorCrimeHorrorMysteryThriller

The police has to face some extremely brutal murders. How is the rich playboy Peter Crane (Jorge Rivero) involved in this? He suffers from horrible nightmares that make him believe that he i... Read allThe police has to face some extremely brutal murders. How is the rich playboy Peter Crane (Jorge Rivero) involved in this? He suffers from horrible nightmares that make him believe that he is responsible for these murders.The police has to face some extremely brutal murders. How is the rich playboy Peter Crane (Jorge Rivero) involved in this? He suffers from horrible nightmares that make him believe that he is responsible for these murders.

  • Director
    • Mario Siciliano
  • Writers
    • Julio Buchs
    • Federico De Urrutia
    • Ted Rusoff
  • Stars
    • Anthony Steffen
    • Richard Conte
    • Pilar Velázquez
  • See production info at IMDbPro
  • IMDb RATING
    4.7/10
    420
    YOUR RATING
    • Director
      • Mario Siciliano
    • Writers
      • Julio Buchs
      • Federico De Urrutia
      • Ted Rusoff
    • Stars
      • Anthony Steffen
      • Richard Conte
      • Pilar Velázquez
    • 14User reviews
    • 28Critic reviews
  • See production info at IMDbPro
  • See production info at IMDbPro
  • Photos18

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    Top cast14

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    Anthony Steffen
    Anthony Steffen
    • Inspector Ranieri
    Richard Conte
    Richard Conte
    • Dr. Stone
    Pilar Velázquez
    Pilar Velázquez
    • Dr. Sarah Turner
    • (as Pilar Velasquez)
    Jorge Rivero
    Jorge Rivero
    • Peter Crane
    Eduardo Fajardo
    Eduardo Fajardo
    • Walter, the majordomo
    • (as Eduardo Fayardo)
    Pia Giancaro
    Pia Giancaro
    • Tanya
    Luis La Torre
    Luis La Torre
    • Robert Gifford
    Eva Vanicek
    • Sonja
    Luciano Pigozzi
    Luciano Pigozzi
    • Derek Stevens
    • (as Alan Collins)
    Lone Fleming
    Lone Fleming
    • Yvonne Chevrel
    • (as Lane Fleming)
    Flora Marrone
      Terele Pávez
      Terele Pávez
      • Walter's wife
      • (as Terele)
      Daniela Giordano
      Daniela Giordano
      • Elizabeth Stevens
      Álvaro de Luna
      Álvaro de Luna
      • Police Officer
      • (uncredited)
      • Director
        • Mario Siciliano
      • Writers
        • Julio Buchs
        • Federico De Urrutia
        • Ted Rusoff
      • All cast & crew
      • Production, box office & more at IMDbPro

      User reviews14

      4.7420
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      Featured reviews

      6movieman_kev

      weird curiosity

      Peter Crane (Jorge Rivero, star of the later "Conquest") is a rich womanizing playboy who suffers from a string of vivid nightmares. Peter may or may not also be a murderer in this strange, off-beat, and wildly disjointed Grindhouse curiosity. While a tad hard to follow simply for the logic (or rather lack of), the movie is strangely compelling none the less and is probably best viewed as a product of a bygone era. It more than made up for the sheer tedium that I had experienced when I sat through the previous "Black Candles" skin-flick fiasco.

      My Grade: B-

      Region 1 DVD Extras: Trailers for "Pick Up", "Legend of Eight Samurai", "Don't Answer the Phone", "Prime Evil", & "Sister Street Fighter" (also the same DVD holds a second feature movie "Black Candles")
      2jfrentzen-942-204211

      Copycat EXORCIST is Ripe With Inanities

      This Italian-made copycat EXORCIST mixes in a bit of "Oedipus Rex."

      "Satan is present and active in the world," a narrator intones in the opening shots, as the camera travels through a group of blank-faced extras gathered near a nameless Italian square. The action moves without explanation to a Black Mass ceremony in a cave, where a robed disciple declares in a badly-dubbed voice, "Fill thy hearts with violence and perversion," inciting his followers to gambol in an R-rated orgy.

      When the story proper begins, Peter, a young archaeology student, finds an evil medallion that burns his skin at the touch, but he wears it anyway. Gradually, his complexion and eyes change color, and he begins acting bedeviled.

      Director Pannaccio adds what he can to the tired devil-possession plot. For example, during a disco sequence Peter's girlfriend is gorily killed on the dance floor by unseen hands, while at the same time Peter is off killing one of the females seen earlier in the Black Mass sequence. After Peter torments and murders his mother (Francoise Prevost), his nun sister summons a priest (Richard Conte) for exorcist duties. In the inane non-ending, the nun takes the medallion and jumps to her death.

      Recommended only for devil-movie completists, EVIL EYE contains some diverting nonsense -- a possessed dart board, actors staring into space while the soundtrack blares spooky music, and an insane asylum sequence that looks pilfered from another movie.

      A very uncomfortable looking Conte probably wished he were back in THE BROTHERS RICO or THE GODFATHER. This quickie was also shown in U. S. theaters as NAKED EXORCISM.
      lazarillo

      Especially bizarre, supernatural giallo

      Although this movie is categorized by some as a giallo, it goes beyond having a plot that is merely delightfully absurd, like most films in the genre, to one that is almost completely non-sensical, including even several possibly supernatural nods to "The Exorcist". The plot involves a wealthy playboy and swinger who begins to have strange dreams where he murders people (one of whom actually calls him up at the beginning of the movie and tells him SHE had a dream that he was going to murder her!). When the same people actually end up dead, he begins to think he is going crazy or is being controlled by a satanic cult (or something), so he checks himself into a psychiatric clinic under the care of a doctor (Richard Conte) who bears more than a little resemblance to Dr. Caligari. But then he runs off with a pretty nurse to her isolated villa. . . There is all manner of other weirdness happening, including things moving by themselves a la a low-grade version of "The Exorcist". There's also a cop (Anthony Steffens) investigating, but he seems to be in a completely different movie. I don't want to spoil the ending (although it spoils itself pretty well), but it's both a cliché and a cop-out.

      The lead actor (Jorge Rivero) is a good-looking guy, which ALMOST explains why every woman he meets immediately throws herself at him, even if they are married, they have just had a dream he murdered them, or he just checked into their clinic as a potentially homicidal schizophrenic. As typical for the genre there are a lot of pretty women on display including former Miss Italy Daniela Giordana, who's virtually unrecognizable (and spends all her screen time NOT quite getting naked), and Lone Fleming, a fixture in Amando Ossorio "Blind Dead" and Paul Naschy horror films.

      I'm not really sure whether or not I'd recommend this. Oh well, I've reported, you decide.
      7Hey_Sweden

      Sort of like a Giallo, but more offbeat than most.

      The handsome Jorge Rivero ("Rio Lobo") is cast as a playboy named Peter Crane, who loses his grip on reality, often believing himself to be murdering people. Determined to get some help, he checks into a hospital where he's watched over by psychiatrist Dr. Stone (Richard Conte of "The Godfather"). Stones' associate Dr. Sarah Turner (the stunning Pilar Velazquez, "The Flower with Petals of Steel") falls in lust with him, and they run off to a cabin together, despite his predicament.

      Co-writer / director Mario Siciliano ("Lions of St. Petersburg") doesn't concern himself very much with the story making *sense*, really. Where he succeeds the most is in creating a very lurid, and very *surreal* atmosphere, designed to have viewers thinking, "WTF?" on numerous occasions. One scene near the end is particularly indicative of this style, and that involves slimy butler Walter (Eduardo Fajardo, "Django") and a frog.

      "Evil Eye" starts out as if it is going to be more of a horror film, with a decidedly creepy feel. But, by and large, it takes place in a "reality" that keeps shifting. An inspector on the case (Anthony Steffen, "Viva Sabata") is kind of off in his own movie, but he experiences some of the weirdness, too: like a moment involving a body buried under rubble.

      Aided and abetted by a wonderful soundtrack by Stelvio Cipriani ("A Bay of Blood"), Siciliano gets solid performances out of his cast, which includes other familiar faces such as Luciano Pigozzi a.k.a. Alan Collins ("Yor: The Hunter from the Future") and Daniela Giordano ("Violent Rome").

      The film is loaded with sexy ladies, and bare female flesh, but never gets all that gory, making it fairly sleazy but never all that unpleasant. It's recommended to fans of Euro genre features who want something a little off the beaten path. The only real disappointment lies in that ending.

      Seven out of 10.
      5BA_Harrison

      Make of it what you will.

      Evil Eye is a very strange film. A very, very strange film. But it keeps the viewer watching to the end, if only to see how director Mario Siciliano can possibly bring it all together and make sense of the weirdness. In short: he doesn't even try, excusing the lack of logic throughout with a clichéd cyclical ending, finishing things as they began - with a nightmare interrupted by a telephone call.

      After one of his wild, orgiastic parties, playboy Peter Crane (Mario Siciliano) is woken by a phone call from a beautiful French woman named Yvonne Chevrel (Lone Fleming), whose dead husband warned her that Cray would kill her. Despite the warning, Yvonne meets with Peter, and - surprise, surprise - is strangled by the lothario (but only after he has made out with her).

      Unable to recall what happened, Peter visits his psychiatrist Dr. Stone (Richard Conte), but is unable to find the answer to his problem. He does, however, come away with a date with the doc's sexy assistant Sarah Turner (Pilar Velázquez), so the visit isn't a total waste of time.

      Anyway, to cut a long and very confusing story short, Peter is unsure whether he is really a killer or if he's going mad. And he's not the only one: I defy anyone to come to a satisfactory conclusion, given the strangeness that occurs. The freaky nightmares continue, Peter gets mysterious phone calls from someone who says he saw what he did, inanimate objects come to life, a crane load of building blocks fall and crush a woman (whose body disappears), a cop keeps losing his hearing, and Crane's servant Walter (Eduardo Fajardo) coughs up a frog.

      Still, as perplexing as the whole thing is, I can't say I was bored, which must count for something I suppose.

      4.5/10, rounded up to 5 for Peter's bold double-denim outfit (bleached denim flares and matching jacket).

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      Related interests

      Florence Pugh in Midsommar (2019)
      Folk Horror
      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)
      Crime
      Mia Farrow in Rosemary's Baby (1968)
      Horror
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      Mystery
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      Thriller

      Storyline

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      Did you know

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      • Trivia
        The films Spanish title is Más allá del exorcismo, meaning "Beyond the Exorcism" in English. Though the film features no exorcism at all it was released under this title in Mexico in hopes of following the success of The Exorcist (1973).
      • Connections
        Referenced in The Lost Sartana Trilogy: Actor recalls lost trilogy of Sartana Spaghetti Westerns (2023)

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      Details

      Edit
      • Release date
        • February 6, 1975 (Italy)
      • Countries of origin
        • Mexico
        • Italy
        • Spain
      • Language
        • Italian
      • Also known as
        • Blutige Magie
      • Filming locations
        • RPA - Elios Studios, Rome, Lazio, Italy(studios, as R.P.A.-Elios Film)
      • Production companies
        • Emaus Films S.A.
        • Metheus Cinematografica
        • Producciones Gonzalo Elvira S.A.
      • See more company credits at IMDbPro

      Tech specs

      Edit
      • Runtime
        • 1h 46m(106 min)
      • Aspect ratio
        • 1.85 : 1

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