A jazz pianist and a wisecracking journalist are pulled into a complex web of mystery after the former witnesses the brutal murder of a psychic.A jazz pianist and a wisecracking journalist are pulled into a complex web of mystery after the former witnesses the brutal murder of a psychic.A jazz pianist and a wisecracking journalist are pulled into a complex web of mystery after the former witnesses the brutal murder of a psychic.
- Director
- Writers
- Stars
- Awards
- 1 win & 1 nomination total
- Young Carlo
- (as Iacopo Mariani)
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Featured reviews
One of the best ¨Giallo¨with oneiric,effective esthetics packs lots of gore, guts and twists plots. This is a trademark terror work for the Horrormeister Argento with high tension quotient and equally high suspense by means of an ever-fluid camera that achieves colorful shots similarly to Giorgio De Chirico paintings. Noteworthy for intelligent edition work that tightens the mystery, glimmer use of color and distinctive utilization of shock images. Sometimes weak screenplay is added by nice but gory special effects by Carlo Rambaldi(ET).Screeching musical score by Goblin with stereophonic whispers combining to fortissimo soundtrack which help achieve incredible creepy moments.The terror pieces are well staged with eye-opening flair-play and contain obscure tracks to the denouement of the script.As trivia, Argento appears as murderer's hand. The motion picture is originally directed by Dario Argento, one of those film-makers(other examples are Mario Bava and Riccardo Freda ) who set off simple for frightening us to death. His period of biggest hits were the 70s when he directed the animals trilogy: ¨Four flies over gray velvet,The cat of nine tails, Bird with the crystal plumage¨, after he directed ¨Suspiria, Inferno, Tenebre¨ and of course ¨Deep red¨. This bloody fun plenty of graphic gore and weirdness may not be for all tastes but to be liked for Argento connoisseurs especially.
Though this movie has got a really good suspense and a top notch imagery, I was put off by the abrupt cuts when a scene transitions to its next immediate scene. I felt the editing could have been more crisp because for most part of the film I felt this way which broke the free flow of the movie. Adding to that there are few plot holes too which made me think at times "How in the world did the killer know where most of the main characters who were trying to solve the murders are going to be?" And when in the final act the killer was revealed I thought to myself "No way! There's no way that the killer could have committed all these murders!" But yeah, sometimes you just have to not worry too much about the logic/reasoning behind some of the scenes and all you have to do is just sit back and enjoy the movie, which is what I did.
The other thing from the movie which kept me interested apart from the suspense is the score. Goblin did a fantastic score in this, for most part of the movie I was waiting when the director would introduce the score rather than when he would reveal his next clue and eventually the killer LOL! Though at times the score was not in sync with the scene that we see on screen, I was never put off by it but rather I found myself enjoying that funky upbeat 70s rock music. Give this movie a try because it's by Dario and for its score and suspense, you wouldn't be disappointed.
"Sometimes what you actually see and what you imagine get mixed up in your memory like a cocktail where you can no longer distinguish one flavour from another. You think you're telling the truth from what you saw but you're only telling your version of the truth."
My rating - 7/10 5 - Goblin's Score 1 - Suspense 1 - Atmosphere.
Did you know
- TriviaCo-writer Bernardino Zapponi said the inspiration behind the murder scenes came from him and Dario Argento thinking of painful injuries that the audience could relate to. Basically, not everyone knows the pain of being shot by a gun, but everyone has at some point accidentally struck furniture or been scalded by hot water.
- GoofsWhen Helga Ulmann is introduced during the séance, she is said to be Lithuanian. When her murder is announced on the TV later in the film she is said to be German, which would explain her talking in German on the telephone just before the murder.
- Quotes
Helga Ulmann: It was - I can't explain it - something strange and sharp, like the prick of a thorn. It upset me, but it's all right now.
[Gasps]
Helga Ulmann: I can feel death in this room! I feel a presence, a twisted mind sending me thoughts! Perverted, murderous thoughts... Go away! You have killed! And you will kill again!
- Crazy credits"You have just seen Deep Red."
- Alternate versionsOriginal Italian version is 120 minutes long. Most US versions remove 22 minutes worth of footage mostly for pacing, including some graphic violence, all humorous scenes, almost all of the romantic scenes between David Hemmings and Daria Nicolodi and part of the subplot regarding the house of the screaming child.
- ConnectionsFeatured in Dario Argento's World of Horror (1985)
- SoundtracksSchool At Night (Lullaby)
(uncredited)
Composed by Giorgio Gaslini
Orchestrated by Giorgio Gaslini
Conducted by Giorgio Gaslini
[Played by killer on tape recorder]
Details
Box office
- Gross worldwide
- $68,473
- Runtime
- 2h 7m(127 min)
- Sound mix
- Aspect ratio
- 2.35 : 1