|
Mill Of The Stone Women
Dir: Giorgio Ferroni
Mondo Macabro
I’m not sure if you are familiar with old style Gothic movies like
Black Sabbath Directed by Mario Bava or even Roger Corman’s Edgar
Allan Poe series involving Fall Of The House Of Usher than this
would fly just great with you. Pure old school ambience. This one
can surely chock up a few scares reverting to the cinema of
yesteryear.
A young journalist is sent to this macabre and decrepit Mill were
statues of women are parading on a sort of carousel within the walls
of this chilling place which the Professor Gregorius Wahl (Wolfgang
Preiss-The Devilish Dr. Mabuse or most of the Mabuse films, Cave of
the Living Dead) inhabits.
Locals deem the place spooky but still find their morbid curiosity
to find the better of them. As Hans tours the place a little more
closely since he is staying there, the Professors even more recluse
daughter begins to make herself more noticed and soon falls in love
with the young stud. He is attached to another women and she soon
finds out all about her love and becomes quite obsessed. In a fit of
rage with Hans, she dies right on the spot, in his arms. In
exhaustive desperation, he lays her back in her bed for the father
to find in hopes he does not get caught. After that, strange things
literally begin to happen and the young hotty soon finds himself in
the middle of some serious spooky going on. He sees her once again
after witnessing her demise, now he really can’t believe what is
going on. Now the puzzle needs to be put together and what he finds
out could very well put him over the edge.
A story not so hot in the originality factor but the mood and
atmosphere within these walls are sure to deem itself right up there
with the greats. The ghostly figures? The downward spiral Hans gets
himself into? Everything that happens within this fright fest plays
itself very well. I had a heart for these styled movies since the
Euro scene is quite a big part of my life, the way they handle the
atmosphere so for this to win me over was not a hard feet at all. A
little slow at the beginning but as soon as it gets going, it’s a
hard one to stop.
Thanx to Mondo Macabro for bringing up this lost gem to the
forefront of DVD marketing and showing us that the oldies are still
the goodies. Technicolor beauty with barely any original scratches
in the film itself. Wonderfully shot and acting played out quite
nicely. They have included a few extra audio tracks, deleted and
alternate scenes and some other fine tasty treats. A gem in my book.
|
|
The Horror Review © Copyright
2005/2006 - Present. All rights reserved.
All Reviews on this website are
strictly the opinion of The Horror Review team and do not express the
opinion of any one else but their own.
All films reviewed are copyrighted with their respected owners
and the United States Copyright Office.
Please
do not take anything from this site without the permission of The
Webmaster
|