A group of dropouts find an old man (Sir Christopher Lee) in a castle. The old man subsequently turns into the Devil and seizes them.A group of dropouts find an old man (Sir Christopher Lee) in a castle. The old man subsequently turns into the Devil and seizes them.A group of dropouts find an old man (Sir Christopher Lee) in a castle. The old man subsequently turns into the Devil and seizes them.
Christopher Lee
- Mephistoles
- (as Cristopher Lee)
Bella Cortez
- Frie
- (as Alice Paneque)
Ulderico Sciaretta
- Padre Guardiano
- (as Ulderico Sciarretta)
Lilli Parker
- Jenny
- (as Vittori Centroni)
Anita Cacciolati
- Maga
- (as Anita Dreyver)
Mario Zakarti
- Gianni
- (as Mario Zacarti)
Piero Vida
- Padre Peo Remigio
- (as Pietro Vidali)
Sonia Scotti
- Sonia - Singer
- (as Sonia)
Maria Bandiera
- Ragazza
- (uncredited)
- Director
- Writer
- All cast & crew
- Production, box office & more at IMDbPro
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Featured reviews
Castle of illusion.
"Katarsis" tells a simple story of six Italians stranded in the castle of illusion.The owner of the castle is Mephisto himself played by Christopher Lee.Three men and three women drink,dance and behave loudly.Suddenly Mephistopheles appears.The fun is over and the nightmare begins...Extremely obscure and moody Gothic romp which begins as a spy thriller and ends in a truly nightmarish fashion.The labyrinth of mirrors welcomes our sextet of protagonists.This is a Gothic tale of Faust,curses,ghosts and spiders that will have a cathartic effect on the lives of six unlucky Italians.The sequence of orgiastic dance is fun to watch and Christopher Lee appears for about ten minutes of screen time.The script is badly written,but I had a blast watching this ultra-obscure and unknown Italian horror flick.8 out of 10.
KATARSIS (Giuseppe Veggezzi, 1963) *1/2
This is definitely Christopher Lee's most obscure European genre effort and, in retrospect, one of the weakest from any phase in his prolific career – in fact, I would even venture to name it the worst entry in the Gothic Horror cycle emanating from Italy! Incidentally, the copy I watched was culled from a recent late-night screening on Italian TV – its first ever broadcast (where the on-screen title was the alternate one SFIDA AL DIAVOLO) which, given the dire results, is not surprising! Truth be told, the genre icon's presence (or its three stages, since he goes from the reclusive pathetic owner of a decaying mansion – his fair hair unintentionally evoking Shakespeare's Hamlet, in whose celebrated 1948 film version Lee had actually appeared in a bit-part! – to a dark Mephistophelean figure and, finally, revealed to be the previously imperceptible victim of a mugging) within the film hardly amounts to 10 minutes of its 76-minute running-time!
The film starts off as a lame chase thriller with pious undertones, is stopped dead in its tracks by a slew of pointless musical numbers, then turns into a hedonistic drama on the lines of (but a long way after) THESE ARE THE DAMNED (1963) – with the best-known member of the younger cast, Giorgio Ardisson, actually the one to ham it up most relentlessly! – before settling into some typical haunted-house antics (with some cob-webbed interiors and scuttling creatures notching up a few points for Cocteau-like atmosphere). The mix could have actually proved quite interesting but, since director Veggezzi (whose name was unfamiliar to me – and it did not take long to discover why) displayed remarkable incompetence throughout, the end result is almost on a par with the notorious work of Ed Wood!
The film starts off as a lame chase thriller with pious undertones, is stopped dead in its tracks by a slew of pointless musical numbers, then turns into a hedonistic drama on the lines of (but a long way after) THESE ARE THE DAMNED (1963) – with the best-known member of the younger cast, Giorgio Ardisson, actually the one to ham it up most relentlessly! – before settling into some typical haunted-house antics (with some cob-webbed interiors and scuttling creatures notching up a few points for Cocteau-like atmosphere). The mix could have actually proved quite interesting but, since director Veggezzi (whose name was unfamiliar to me – and it did not take long to discover why) displayed remarkable incompetence throughout, the end result is almost on a par with the notorious work of Ed Wood!
Tame with nothing else happens
(1963) Challenge The Devil/ Sfida Al Diavolo/ Katarsis
(In Italian with English subtitles)
HORROR/ ART HOUSE
It opens with a guy waiting to pick up another guy named Carlos from Beruit from the airport. It turns out Carlos is a professional killer, brought over to Italy to assassinate a guy named Carlo. Carlos does get shot while attempting to run away but manages to seek refuge toward a monastery requesting to see a monk named Pejo Renigio (Piero Vida). And while Carlos is relapsing, he then tells him about a deal that has gone wrong that has something to do with some incriminating documents, and that a lady by the name of Alma Del Rio stole and kept them to prevent him for sell them for four million dollars. The monk, Pejo decides to go down and see Alma himself for the purpose of persuade her to change her mind. It was at this point he tells her the reason he became a monk and it has something to do with what happened when he was rowdy, hanging around with two other guys and three different girls riding around on three different cars. Causing mischief until they decide to break into a castle with a lone man (Christopher Lee) living in it, requesting the group to search for his diseased wife. If anyone want to see a movie which not much happens this happens to be one of those movies.
It opens with a guy waiting to pick up another guy named Carlos from Beruit from the airport. It turns out Carlos is a professional killer, brought over to Italy to assassinate a guy named Carlo. Carlos does get shot while attempting to run away but manages to seek refuge toward a monastery requesting to see a monk named Pejo Renigio (Piero Vida). And while Carlos is relapsing, he then tells him about a deal that has gone wrong that has something to do with some incriminating documents, and that a lady by the name of Alma Del Rio stole and kept them to prevent him for sell them for four million dollars. The monk, Pejo decides to go down and see Alma himself for the purpose of persuade her to change her mind. It was at this point he tells her the reason he became a monk and it has something to do with what happened when he was rowdy, hanging around with two other guys and three different girls riding around on three different cars. Causing mischief until they decide to break into a castle with a lone man (Christopher Lee) living in it, requesting the group to search for his diseased wife. If anyone want to see a movie which not much happens this happens to be one of those movies.
A mostly uninvolved and barely worthwhile genre effort
After meeting with an old friend, a monk goes to visit a former member of his friend group for help in recalling an experience years ago, where he and his friends decided to visit an eerie castle while out looking for some fun, and discover the demonic host and his deadly plans.
Overall, this was a generally dull and lifeless Gothic horror effort. What tends to be the best part here is the general atmosphere of the castle once the group arrives and sets about staying there. After the first half, getting to the point of the story where it's all revealed in flashback, where the group barges into the castle and begins to explore it, which is what allows this one to meet the requirements of the gene involving the presence of the dark, empty castle filled with thick cobwebs, barely-lit candelabras, and a thick air of neglect. Spurned on by this and the rampant food and drink available, their party seems all the more understandable as they fail to realize their host is in the room with them and sending them out on a quest to uncover a specific body within the castle as this provides the bulk of the film where they wander around the various rooms and hallways, lit only by their candles and filled with cobwebs and medieval decorations, looking for the spectral figure of their quest. This is chilling and atmospheric and comes together well enough to be quite likable, but beyond that, there isn't much to this one. The main issue here is the utterly inconsequential and useless padding that goes on before the film even comes close to getting started. While this is mostly explained by background information on the production, that still doesn't excuse the mindnumbing sequences placed here to counteract the lack of running time with the scenes being uninteresting and unimportant to the final film since there's no reason why we're forced to follow this spy thriller stalking the one guy, the trips to the nightclub to meet up with the girlfriend, or the scenes involving the priest trying to explain what's going on. It all makes for a difficult time caring about anything when it's not that important to the film proper, and with the group initially portrayed as the careless thugs they are before they arrive at the castle, this is even more apparent. Moreover, the reason why they should undertake the mission in the castle is quite flimsy and makes little sense, and the scenes have an atmospheric touch through the location and concept, for the actual execution is interminably overlong without much of anything happening. With a cheap look that doesn't help matters, this is a slow and generally unimpressive genre effort.
Today's Rating/PG-13: Violence and Language.
Overall, this was a generally dull and lifeless Gothic horror effort. What tends to be the best part here is the general atmosphere of the castle once the group arrives and sets about staying there. After the first half, getting to the point of the story where it's all revealed in flashback, where the group barges into the castle and begins to explore it, which is what allows this one to meet the requirements of the gene involving the presence of the dark, empty castle filled with thick cobwebs, barely-lit candelabras, and a thick air of neglect. Spurned on by this and the rampant food and drink available, their party seems all the more understandable as they fail to realize their host is in the room with them and sending them out on a quest to uncover a specific body within the castle as this provides the bulk of the film where they wander around the various rooms and hallways, lit only by their candles and filled with cobwebs and medieval decorations, looking for the spectral figure of their quest. This is chilling and atmospheric and comes together well enough to be quite likable, but beyond that, there isn't much to this one. The main issue here is the utterly inconsequential and useless padding that goes on before the film even comes close to getting started. While this is mostly explained by background information on the production, that still doesn't excuse the mindnumbing sequences placed here to counteract the lack of running time with the scenes being uninteresting and unimportant to the final film since there's no reason why we're forced to follow this spy thriller stalking the one guy, the trips to the nightclub to meet up with the girlfriend, or the scenes involving the priest trying to explain what's going on. It all makes for a difficult time caring about anything when it's not that important to the film proper, and with the group initially portrayed as the careless thugs they are before they arrive at the castle, this is even more apparent. Moreover, the reason why they should undertake the mission in the castle is quite flimsy and makes little sense, and the scenes have an atmospheric touch through the location and concept, for the actual execution is interminably overlong without much of anything happening. With a cheap look that doesn't help matters, this is a slow and generally unimpressive genre effort.
Today's Rating/PG-13: Violence and Language.
The meanest trick the Devil ever pulled was unleashing this unfathomable and surreal piece of rubbish on the world!
Words almost fail to describe my enthusiasm when I stumbled upon a copy of this "Katarsis", aka "Challenge the Devil". A fully restored version on BluRay is available in the fancy boxset "The Eurocrypt of Christopher Lee". It's quite expensive, but hey, an ultra-rare gothic Italian movie from the early sixties, and starring the almighty Lee can't be bad, right? Well, unfortunately not, and even a film like this is obscure and forgotten for a good reason.
All the main issues of this film, and they are quite plentiful, can basically be brought back to one major and incomprehensible default. "Katarsis" - seemingly - didn't have a script. During the credits, and nor here on IMDb, there isn't anyone listed as writer. So, what I imagine, is that director Giuseppe Veggezzi (who apparently never did anything else in the film industry) gave instructions to his cast like: "Just do something. Whatever. Improvise, people!".
The absence of a script would explain a lot, though. "Katarsis" is - hands down - the world champion of useless, endless, and irritating padding footage! Although barely 80 minutes long, minimally 20 minutes of those are pure filler. Boring dance acts, entire songs, random party footage... all lasting for several long minutes. Even the process of going up a flight of stairs is stretched eternally. Ironically enough, the group going up the stairs also says: this seems to take forever! Even worse, however, is the unfathomable and surreal narrative structure of "Katarsis". It makes absolutely no sense, whatsoever.
It starts with two hired assassins going after a man. They shoot him, and the wounded man seeks refugee in a monastery where he knows one of the monks. The man tells the monk the killers were after him for documents that his ex-girlfriend stole. The monk goes to the nightclub where the ex-girlfriend (a hideous woman) works. Out of the blue, the monk starts telling her why he became a monk via a flashback. Apparently, he used to be a ruthless thug, and together with five others, they broke into a castle and stumbled upon an old man. Hey, there we finally have Christopher Lee! But he's gone again after five minutes... At the request of the old man, who may be the Devil himself, they roam around the castle in search for a woman. And, surprise, the six hoodlums turn into remorseful young people.
Seriously, what is this?!? Craziest. Trash. Ever.
I'm nevertheless giving "Katarsis" one point extra, solely because Christopher Lee has three different faces in hardly five minutes of screentime. Oh, and the little twist-ending about Lee's character real identity is reasonably ingenious, but it doesn't save anything.
All the main issues of this film, and they are quite plentiful, can basically be brought back to one major and incomprehensible default. "Katarsis" - seemingly - didn't have a script. During the credits, and nor here on IMDb, there isn't anyone listed as writer. So, what I imagine, is that director Giuseppe Veggezzi (who apparently never did anything else in the film industry) gave instructions to his cast like: "Just do something. Whatever. Improvise, people!".
The absence of a script would explain a lot, though. "Katarsis" is - hands down - the world champion of useless, endless, and irritating padding footage! Although barely 80 minutes long, minimally 20 minutes of those are pure filler. Boring dance acts, entire songs, random party footage... all lasting for several long minutes. Even the process of going up a flight of stairs is stretched eternally. Ironically enough, the group going up the stairs also says: this seems to take forever! Even worse, however, is the unfathomable and surreal narrative structure of "Katarsis". It makes absolutely no sense, whatsoever.
It starts with two hired assassins going after a man. They shoot him, and the wounded man seeks refugee in a monastery where he knows one of the monks. The man tells the monk the killers were after him for documents that his ex-girlfriend stole. The monk goes to the nightclub where the ex-girlfriend (a hideous woman) works. Out of the blue, the monk starts telling her why he became a monk via a flashback. Apparently, he used to be a ruthless thug, and together with five others, they broke into a castle and stumbled upon an old man. Hey, there we finally have Christopher Lee! But he's gone again after five minutes... At the request of the old man, who may be the Devil himself, they roam around the castle in search for a woman. And, surprise, the six hoodlums turn into remorseful young people.
Seriously, what is this?!? Craziest. Trash. Ever.
I'm nevertheless giving "Katarsis" one point extra, solely because Christopher Lee has three different faces in hardly five minutes of screentime. Oh, and the little twist-ending about Lee's character real identity is reasonably ingenious, but it doesn't save anything.
Did you know
- TriviaFilmed as a gothic movie under the title of "Katarsis" in 1963. Its production company, I Films della Mangusta, went bankrupt shortly after filming. The movie, which was about 90 minutes long, was bought by Eco Film, which cut out a half-hour and added newly shot scenes involving gangsters, a monk and a cabaret dancer. The finished product was 78 minutes long, retitled "Challenge the Devil" and released in 1965.
- ConnectionsFeatured in The Life and Deaths of Christopher Lee (2024)
- SoundtracksTi Hanno Visto
Performed by Sonia
Published by Phonogram S.P.A.
- How long is Challenge the Devil?Powered by Alexa
Details
- Runtime
- 1h 19m(79 min)
- Color
- Sound mix
- Aspect ratio
- 1.66 : 1
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