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The Doll of Satan

Original title: La bambola di Satana
  • 1969
  • 1h 30m
IMDb RATING
5.1/10
625
YOUR RATING
Erna Schürer in The Doll of Satan (1969)
After two teenagers from abusive households befriend each other, their lives take a dark adventure into existentialism, despair, and human frailty.
Play trailer2:02
1 Video
79 Photos
Horror

A couple inherits a castle from her late uncle's will. Despite pressure to sell, she hesitates. Unexplained occurrences target her as strange events unfold at the castle.A couple inherits a castle from her late uncle's will. Despite pressure to sell, she hesitates. Unexplained occurrences target her as strange events unfold at the castle.A couple inherits a castle from her late uncle's will. Despite pressure to sell, she hesitates. Unexplained occurrences target her as strange events unfold at the castle.

  • Director
    • Ferruccio Casapinta
  • Writers
    • Ferruccio Casapinta
    • Giorgio Cristallini
    • Carlo M. Lori
  • Stars
    • Erna Schürer
    • Roland Carey
    • Aurora Battista
  • See production info at IMDbPro
  • IMDb RATING
    5.1/10
    625
    YOUR RATING
    • Director
      • Ferruccio Casapinta
    • Writers
      • Ferruccio Casapinta
      • Giorgio Cristallini
      • Carlo M. Lori
    • Stars
      • Erna Schürer
      • Roland Carey
      • Aurora Battista
    • 14User reviews
    • 27Critic reviews
  • See production info at IMDbPro
  • Videos1

    Official Trailer
    Trailer 2:02
    Official Trailer

    Photos79

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    Top cast13

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    Erna Schürer
    Erna Schürer
    • Elizabeth Ball Janon
    • (as Erna Schurer)
    Roland Carey
    Roland Carey
    • Jack Seaton
    Aurora Battista
    • Claudine
    • (as Aurora Batista)
    Ettore Ribotta
    • Paul Reynaud
    Lucia Bomez
    • Miss Carol
    • (as Lucie Bomez)
    Manlio Salvatori
    • Edward
    Franco Daddi
    • Mr. Cordova
    Beverly Fuller
    • Blanche
    • (as Beverley Fuller)
    Eugenio Galadini
    • Andrea
    Giorgio Gennari
    • Gérard
    Domenico Ravenna
    • Prof. Shinton
    Teresa Ronchi
    • Jeanette
    Giovanni Ivan Scratuglia
      • Director
        • Ferruccio Casapinta
      • Writers
        • Ferruccio Casapinta
        • Giorgio Cristallini
        • Carlo M. Lori
      • All cast & crew
      • Production, box office & more at IMDbPro

      User reviews14

      5.1625
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      Featured reviews

      5Wuchakk

      An Italian castle and the human vultures who want it

      A beautiful blonde (Erna Schürer) inherits her uncle's castle outside of Rome, but the governess (Lucia Bomez) insists that he intended on selling the property and various characters pressure her in this path. She's hesitant while strange things start to occur, such as ghostly happenings and satanic nightmares. Her beau (Roland Carey) smells something fishy.

      "The Doll of Satan" (1969) is Italian Gothic horror and could fit in the giallo category. It was helmed by a one-shot director, but the star said it was the assistant director who did the work on set, describing the director as an "idiot who couldn't do anything." As the story progresses, a few James Bond-isms manifest, which are eye-rolling, but at least they stir up amusing interest. The two main female stars are arguably the main highlight, along with the authentic castle setting. There's some tasteful nudity involving blonde Erna, which some versions block out (like the one I viewed).

      I was disappointed by the overwrought story though. Despite the entertaining bits and entertaining histrionics, it failed to absorb me. For superior Italian/Spanish horror from that general time period, see "The Devil's Nightmare," "Murder Mansion," "The Vampires Night Orgy" and "Count Dracula's Great Love," all of which were released between 1971-73. As with "Murder Mansion," parallels can be drawn to Scooby-Doo. This production even features a dog in the cast, but it actually came out a few months before Scooby-Doo debuted.

      Despite the title and some of the advertising stills, it isn't an occult-oriented movie, like "Devils of Darkness," "The Witches" (aka "The Devil's Own") or "The Crimson Cult." Also, it has never been dubbed into English, so English-speakers who don't know Italian will have to settle for subtitles.

      It runs 1 hour, 30 minutes, and was shot at Castle Borghese in Pomezia, which is a dozen miles southwest of Rome; as well as Pratica di Mare and in Abruzzo.

      GRADE: C.
      5jordondave-28085

      Quite bland and forgettable

      (1969) The Doll of Satan/ La bambola di Satana (In Italian with English subtitles) THRILLER/ MYSTERY

      Co-written and directed by Ferruccio Casapinta that has a young man being scolded by a servant, Edward (Manlio Salvatori) and then by governess, Miss Carol (Lucie Bomez) for bringing groceries late before some place else viewers see an old man being dragged away. We then see a niece, Elizabeth Ball Janon (Erna Schurer) coming to visit to a castle after finding out she is the last remaining relative after her uncle's recent unfortunate departure. At this point viewers are oblivious how he died, he is just is. And coming along with Elizabeth is her fiance, Jack Seaton (Roland Carey) and a couple of friends of theirs of Blnache (Beverley Fuller) and Gérard (Giorgio Gennari), and a friend of the family, Mr Shinton (Domenico Ravenna). Meanwhile, Elizabeth already got a buyer interested into buying the castle as he has a villa next door, his name is Paul Reynaud (Ettore Ribotta). And sometime during the night, Elizabeth's drink gets spiked so that she can get assaulted by the unknown intruder, viewers often wonder how come her fiance is not sleeping in the same room with her. Living in the castle with them is mentally disturbed, Jeanette (Teresa Ronchi) and a painter, Miss Claudine (Aurora Batista).

      I agree with one reviewer who said it was like watching a Scooby Doo cartoon, but only some parts of it since the ending ended up with the bad buy wearing a mask that happened in many of the cartoons, and that their was a reason for the main bad guy for wanting to own the castle that has valuable minerals that is buried underneath it. But spiking a lady's drink with the bad guy continuing to assault her would not be like the cartoon at all and the nude scenes of Elizabeth;s breats. And for some weird coincidence both were released on the same year, except that "The Doll of Satan" was released months before the first Scooby Doo cartoon had aired.
      8Weirdling_Wolf

      A vastly underappreciated, sweetly sadistic Gothic fantasy.

      With a cob-webbed plot creakier than Miss Marple's bowling shoes, and a deliciously Scooby Doo'd twist, director Ferruccio Casapinta's audacious hybrid of Gothic black-gloved giallo, and pulpy Edgar Wallace castle-set calamity proves to be a bit of a camp classic in spite of itself! While nowhere near as phantasmagorically perverse as, Polseli's 'Black Magic Rites!', or Bianchi's sleazy 'Satan's Baby Doll', it has a engagingly skewed Gothic vibe many Euro-schlock seekers may find irresistible! Distractingly perky blonde Elizabeth Ball Janon (Erna Schurer) inherits a forbidding castle estate worthy of Frederick Usher himself, and even before the delectable Schurer has sinuously slinked into her slinkiest of nighties, some sinister, castle-creeping creep has slipped poor Elizabeth a mickey, and she suffers the most terrible visions, her S&M tormented think sponge begins to soak up all these saucy shenanigans as some prototypically elusive Giallo misfit attempts to surreptitiously snuff out all the guests; but just who is the shadow stalking snuffer, and what exactly might their murderous agenda be?

      'La Bambola Di Satana' aka 'The Doll of Satan' is a wickedly warped, captivatingly kitsch whodunnit, while ultimately a little tame, its satanic nature, no less diminutive than petite scream dream Schurer, but Ferruccio Casapinta's swinging sixties, ominously outlandish, pop-gothic mystery, with its en suite, fully loaded torture chamber, hot and cold running lunatics, 24hr meth lab, conveniently located burial plots, and tantalizingly torrid terror plots guarantees your shuddersome stay in the hysterically horror-haunted Ball Janon castle will be a far from uneventful experience! Beguilingly steeped in kinky atmosphere, this endearingly quirky 60s Italian creepshow is certainly not without its charming eccentricities, and the fabulously funky, ear-wormingly groovy score by Franco Potenza is one of the more maddeningly compelling aspects to Casapinta's vastly underappreciated, sweetly sadistic Gothic fantasy.
      8HumanoidOfFlesh

      Colorful and atmospheric Italian giallo.

      Elisabeth visits the ancestral castle for the reading of her late uncle's will.But the legend of the castle's ghost is only one of her problems-she starts having disturbing erotic nightmares and is abducted by a hooded figure who imprisons her in the torture dungeon.These vivid dreams are in fact nightmares and not a carefully stage-managed reality designed to drive her mad or to her death.Her boyfriend Jack suspects that someone is after her inheritance and begins his own investigation...Very colorful and atmospheric Italian giallo set in a medieval Italian castle with catacombs and torture devices.The killings are very tame and bloodless,there is a black-gloved killer stalking his victims and a little bit of soft eroticism.The wolves howling outside in the dark add a lot to the atmosphere.8 out of 10.
      7Milk_Tray_Guy

      Fun, and a bit Scooby-Doo-ish!

      Italian gothic horror/suspense, written and directed by Ferruccio Casapinta (his sole directing credit). Elizabeth (Emma Costantino, here as 'Erna Schürer') inherits a castle in the Italian countryside following the unexpected death of her uncle. When she arrives she meets the house administrator/former assistant to her uncle, Miss Carol (bespectacled hottie Lucie Bomez), who informs her that shortly before his death her uncle had decided to sell the castle, and that Paul Renaud - the owner of a neighbouring villa - had expressed an interest. Miss Carol also tells Elizabeth that the castle is said to be haunted by an ancestor, who can sometimes be heard in the night calling for his lost love - who was also called Elizabeth. Although initially reluctant to sell, a series of seemingly supernatural events - including the ghostly calling of her own name at night - begin to change Elizabeth's mind, as well as cause her to start doubting her own sanity.

      Although promoted as a horror, an anonymous, black-gloved killer also hints at the giallo wave to come. The location (actually two real castles near Rome) and sets are fantastically atmospheric, and the supernatural happenings and visions are pretty effective. Some of the dialogue is a bit clumsy, although that may be down to the English subtitles. And the fight choreography is weirdly inconsistent, with one character who's 'ordinary bloke' one minute, suddenly able to fight like a cross between Douglas Fairbanks and Jason Bourne (I was expecting some reveal to explain this, but no). But the cast are pretty good, one death towards the end involving a dog and an implement of ancient warfare is pretty damn awesome, and saying Emma Costantino and Lucie Bomez are easy on the eye is a criminal understatement.

      This would make a fun double-bill with The Night Evelyn Came Out of the Grave. Some topless nudity. 7/10.

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      Related interests

      Mia Farrow in Rosemary's Baby (1968)
      Horror

      Storyline

      Edit

      Did you know

      Edit
      • Trivia
        While at the catacombs the eyes of the "corpse" move.
      • Goofs
        While at the catacombs the eyes of the "corpse" move.
      • Quotes

        Elizabeth Ball Janon: [of Jeanette] I remember her very well. She was very devoted to my uncle. She was quite close to him.

        Carol: This is why, after the accident, your uncle wanted to keep her in the castle, like a member of the family, even though she was hopelessly insane.

      • Connections
        Referenced in Emma and I - A Portrait by Marcello Avallone (2021)

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      Details

      Edit
      • Release date
        • June 12, 1969 (Italy)
      • Country of origin
        • Italy
      • Language
        • Italian
      • Also known as
        • Куколка Сатаны
      • Filming locations
        • Palazzo Ruspoli, Piazza Umberto, Nemi, Rome, Lazio, Italy(castle seen in long shots)
      • Production companies
        • Cinediorama
        • Rewind Film
      • See more company credits at IMDbPro

      Tech specs

      Edit
      • Runtime
        • 1h 30m(90 min)
      • Aspect ratio
        • 1.85 : 1

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