The Embalmer (1965 film)

The Embalmer (Italian: Il mostro di Venezia, lit. 'The Monster of Venice') is a 1965 film directed by Dino Tavella, and starring Gino Marturano, Alcide Gazzotto, and Alba Brotto.[3] Critic Adrian Luther Smith called the film an "Edgar Wallace-inspired horror giallo"[4]

The Embalmer
Directed byDino Tavella
Produced byAntonio Walter[1]
Screenplay by
  • Dino Tavella
  • Giovan Battista Mussetto
  • Paolo Lombardo
  • Antonio Walter[2]
Story byDino Tavella
Antonio Walter[1]
Starring
  • Maureen Lidgard Brown
  • Gino Marturano
  • Alcide Gazzotto
  • Alba Brotto
Music byMarcello Gigante[2]
CinematographyMario Parapetti[2]
Edited byGiovan Battista Mussetto[2]
Production
company
Gondola Film[2]
Distributed byIndipendenti Reiongali[2]
Release date
  • 1965 (1965)
Running time
85 minutes[1]
CountryItaly[1]

Plot

A serial killer dressed in scuba gear and a wet suit is on the loose in the canals of Venice. The skull-faced murderer kills women by drowning them in the canals and taking their bodies back to his underwater lair (a submerged monastery) where he embalms them to preserve their beauty. The lunatic keeps their perfectly preserved bodies in a row of glass display cases in his lair. A handsome young reporter is assigned to cover a group of visiting college girls on a class trip to Venice and when one of them disappears, he becomes involved in trying to find her. He falls in love with one of the girls, not realizing that the Embalmer has her marked as his next victim. The reporter manages to enter the killer's underwater cave (a submerged monastery) and chases the killer up onto the streets of Venice. The police shoot the lunatic dead as he is strangling the hero in a maniacal grip.

Cast

  • Maureen Lidgard Brown
  • Gino Marturano (credited as Gin Mart)
  • Luigi Martocci
  • Luciano Gasper
  • Anita Todesco
  • Francesco Bagarin
  • Maria Rosa Vizzina
  • Paola Vaccari
  • Alba Brotto
  • Alcide Gazzotto
  • Pietro Walter
  • Vicky Del Castillo
  • Jti Janne (nightclub singer of the song "Il medium")[1]

Release

The Embalmer was first released in 1965.[5] It played in Atlanta, Georgia on May 2, 1966.[6] It played on double bills in the United States with The She Beast.[7][8]

The Embalmer was released on DVD by Alpha Video on August 31, 2004. Alpha Video would later re-release the film on August 17, 2010 in its 12-disk "Pure Terror: 50 Movies Pack". In 2005 the film was released by Vintage Home Entertainment and Image Entertainment on July 12, and September 13, respectively. Mill Creek Entertainment released the film a total of four separate times. Mill Creek first released it as a part of two separate multi-feature movie packs in July and October 2007. The following year they would re-release the film as a part of its 24-disk "Tales of Horror: 100 Movie Pack", and lastly on August 28, 2009, as a part of yet another multi-film collection.[9]

Reception

TV Guide gave the film 0 out of 5 stars, calling it "stupid".[10] Dave Sindelar from Fantastic Movie Musings and Ramblings stated that, while the film had good ideas, it's "lethargic" pacing, bad dubbing, annoying comic relief, and bad fight choreography sank the film.[11] HorrorNews.net offered similar criticism towards the film's poor dubbing, comic relief, as well as criticizing the film's "cardboard cutout characters", musical numbers, and inappropriate soundtrack.[12]

David Steigman from DVD Drive-In gave the film a positive review, writing, "The Embalmer is a very chilling, creepy, atmospheric movie combining the elements of both an early Giallo, an Italian Gothic horror... and a German Edgar Wallace Krimi film."[13]

Adrian Luther Smith called the film creepy but still a "run-of-the-submerged-monastery affair", adding "The filmmakers obviously received a great deal of assistance from the Venice tourist department because the movie is jam-packed with sly plugs for a gorgeous city which surely needs no promotion."[14]

gollark: Hmm. Apparently service discovery has an XEP number *after* various others. Worrying.
gollark: Which is long and inconvenient versus just saying "yes, this is an osmarkshypotheticalchatprotocolâ„¢-v2.1-capable system".
gollark: There's no particular benefit to it, and it makes it hard/unuseful to say you have a server/client supporting "XMPP" if that might mean a ton of different combinations of modules.
gollark: Putting core features into extensions brings nothing but more complex negotiations and fallbacks, and makes it a bit more annoying to depend on in other features.
gollark: … what 44 things did they do before that?

References

  1. Luther-Smith 1999, p. 43.
  2. "Il mostro di Venezia". Archioviodelcinemaitaliano.it (in Italian). Retrieved January 18, 2019.
  3. Luther-Smith 1999, p. 68.
  4. Luther-Smith 1999, p. 42.
  5. McCallum 1998, p. 68.
  6. "The Embalmer". American Film Institute. Archived from the original on April 3, 2014. Retrieved February 17, 2019.
  7. Hughes 2011, p. 92.
  8. Hughes 2011, p. 93.
  9. "The Monster of Venice (1966) - Dino Tavella". Allmovie.com. Allmovie. Retrieved 20 May 2019.
  10. "The Embalmer - Movie Reviews and Movie Ratings". TV Guide.com. TV Guide Staff. Retrieved 20 May 2019.
  11. Sindelar, Dave. "The Embalmer (1966)". Fantastic Movie Musings.com. Dave Sindelar. Retrieved 20 May 2019.
  12. Honeybone, Nigel. "Film Review: The Embalmer (1965)". HorrorNews.net. Nigel Honeybone. Retrieved 20 May 2019.
  13. Steigman, David. "The Embalmer/The Red-Headed Corpse". DVD Drive-In.com. David Steigman. Retrieved 20 May 2019.
  14. Luther-Smith 1999, p. 44.

Bibliography

  • Hughes, Howard (2011). Cinema Italiano - The Complete Guide From Classics To Cult. London - New York: I.B.Tauris. ISBN 978-1-84885-608-0.CS1 maint: ref=harv (link)
  • McCallum, Lawrence (1998). Italian Horror Films of the 1960s. McFarland. ISBN 0786404353.CS1 maint: ref=harv (link)
  • Luther-Smith, Adrian (1999). Blood and Black Lace: The Definitive Guide to Italian Sex and Horror Movies. Stray Cat Publishing Ltd.CS1 maint: ref=harv (link)</ref>
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