“A RIVETING HORROR FILM.”

SLANT MAGAZINE.

Generally regarded as one of Italian horror maestro Dario Argento‘s finest films, the terrifyingTenebrae marked the director’s return to the “giallo” (mystery-thriller) genre in which he first made his name, after making two supernatural themed films, “Suspiria” (1977) and “Inferno” (1980). Banned on video in the UK until 1999, when it was released in a cut form, the film was finally passed uncut and uncensored in 2002. Now, this definitive version of Tenebrae comes to DVD and for the first time in the UK, Blu-ray, boasting a brand new HD restoration of the film and a host of extra features.

Shortly after American mystery-thriller novelist Peter Neal arrives in Rome to promote his new book (the “Tenebrae” of the title) an attractive young woman is murdered by a razor-wielding maniac who stuffs pages of Neal’s latest novel into the mouth of his victim before slashing her throat. So begins a bizarre series of horrific murders, the details of which strangely resemble the fictional murders in Neal’s book. Baffled by the killings, the local police believe the author may hold the key to solving the case and turn to him for help. Circumstances change, however, when Neal himself begins to receive death threats from the killer.

Speaking about Tenebrae, Argento said it was his intention to put on film a “gory rollercoaster… full of fast and furious murders.” There is no question about whether or not he succeeded. As well as being a superbly orchestrated and inventive suspense thriller, Tenebrae is a shockingly horrific orgy of graphic violence, set to a pounding score by Argento regulars Goblin (credited as Simonetti-Morante-Pignatelli) and beautifully shot by “Suspiria” cinematographer Lucio Tovoli making the film a perfect showcase for Argento’s inimitable trademark visual style.

Starring Anthony Franciosa (Death Wish II), John Saxon (From Dusk Till Dawn; Cannibal Apocalypse; Black Christmas; Enter The Dragon), Daria Nicolodi (Opera; Phenomena; Inferno; Deep Red) and the stunning Veronica Lario (the real-life estranged wife of multi-billionaire Italian prime minister Silvio Berlusconi), Tenebrae also features cameo appearances by cult directorsLamberto Bava (Macabre; Demons) and Michele Soavi (The Sect; The Church), both of whom also worked as assistant directors on the film.

Tenebrae (Cert. 18) will be released on Blu-ray (£21.99) and DVD (£15.99) by Arrow Video on27th June 2011.

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Special Features

  • Brand new HD restoration of the film
  • Introduction by Daria Nicolodi
  • Audio commentary with Argento experts, journalists and writers Kim Newman and Alan Jones; audio commentary with Argento expert Thomas Rostock
  • “Screaming Queen!” – Daria Nicolodi remembers “Tenebrae”
  • “The Unsane World of Tenebrae” – an interview with Dario Argento
  • “A Composition for Carnage” – Claudio Simonetti on “Tenebrae”
  • Goblin: Tenebrae and Phenomena Live from the Glasgow Arches
  • Exclusive collector’s booklet featuring brand new writing on “Tenebrae” by Alan Jones, author of “Profondo Argento”
  • Four sleeve art options with original and newly commissioned artwork
  • Double-sided fold-out poster
  • Original trailer
  • English and Italian mono audio options
  • Optional English subtitles.
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Fantastic Factory Presents… (cert. 18), featuring Beyond Re-Animator, Faust: Love Of The Damned, Arachnid and Romasanta: The Werewolf Hunt, will be released on DVD (£39.99) by Arrow Video on 18th April 2011.

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Of the four titles in upcoming Arrow Video collection The Fantastic Factory the one that stands out for me personally is Romasanta. While the other movies are good horror titles – Beyond Reanimator splashes the gore, Arachnid scratches the monster movie itch and Faust is colourful, over the top fun – Romasanta, from the director of the Rec movies, is the lupine sleeper hit in this box set.

As an iconic horror creature, the werewolf is the trickiest to get right. Vampires can be created with a little gothic white slap and a pair of fangs, Lucio Fulci rolled local tramps in the mud to make his zombies and Frankenstein is so open to interpretation that a few well placed scars can carry the day. A werewolf is a little tougher to pull off which is probably the reason why American Werewolf in London and Company of Wolves still burn brightly in the collective imaginations of fantastic cinema lovers. They nailed the transformation and the torment of being half man, half beast.

Romasanta comes at the werewolf myth afresh as it deals in how legends are born. It makes perfect sense that in times past the crimes of a particularly vicious serial killer could be attributed to a supernatural monster. After all, brutal murders are hard to fathon, particularly when scientific and medical knowledge about the workings of a psychotic mind are at best extremely limited.

ROMASANTA IS AVAILABLE AS PART OF THE FANTASTIC FACTORY DVD COLLECTION FROM ARROW VIDEO. CLICK HERE TO READ MORE ABOUT THE BOX SET, AVAILABLE ON UK DVD: 18.04.2011

The movie deals in such abiguity. Could the slayings portrayed have been committed by a man or is something more sinister and infinitely more terrifying responsible? Our suspect is a travelling man, moving between towns and villages as he trades. He shares this wanderlust with infamous killers like Ted Bundy and Henry Lee Lucas; Predators who killed and moved on, leaving a mystery in their wake.

The Fantastic Factory collection has hours of great, gore drenched entertainment to enjoy and I’ll be returning to the ugly world of Herbert West and reliving the spider invasion of Arachnid some time soon, but Romasanta is the movie that made me think just a little bit more.

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