Dir. Renato Polselli
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Its every obsession within
European horror, from the psychedelic to the erotic, and unlike a Jean Rollin film or other Italian made
films of the time with a measured pace, this is a tonal mess that's compelling
for this reason. It writhes with titillation and fake paint red blood, but acts
like a prog rock filled art house film, and unlike a Jean Rollin film, it's not a measured atmospheric pace being
presented to cohere it together. Its diffusion of time and reality, right to
the end, is a mass of chaotic moments that suddenly happen. People being in two
places at the same time. Random village folks attack two women suddenly for
being witches. Random comedy moments take place. Said comedy moments involve Steffy
(Stefania Fassio), who fully evokes
the bizarre nature of the film; a thin brunette who is over exaggerated in her
behaviour, always falling over, and completely impervious (and blissfully
ignorant) of the gothic horror events around her in favour of romping around in
a bed with a blonde female friend and her boyfriend with an excessive facial
tick. The film around is as oblivious to its content as these characters, a
series of non-sequiturs, as exaggerated and ridiculous as her. Almost every
actress onscreen is seen topless. No idea, such as a trap involving a crushing
door mechanism with knives on it, is rejected for not making sense for that
moment. It ends as one expect the story to, but how it gets there is a tangent
in on itself, flighty and very camp to the point of being ridiculous.
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It works as it belongs to that
rare breed of films that cannot be called "so-bad-they're-good"
because there is a silver of real virtue to them to put them above being incompetent.
Black Magic Rites has a few at
least. With its music, and its willingness to go completely dreamlike to the
bafflement of this viewer, it will stay on the mind for at least a while where
other better made films wouldn't. A highlight is when a character is buried
alive, but what's great about it is that I haven't spoilt the weirdly
compelling convolutions that set it up or how the scene plays out. It would
have been great if there was some control or focus to the material, but it has
virtues in its mess. As for its unintended effects, it redeems a slow start
quickly. A pointlessly long flashback moment nearly killed my interest in the
film, but its cheesy peculiarities eventually intermingle with its erratic tone
and gets interesting quickly. Is it a good film? To be honest no, but it's not
bad either. It has goodness in how it is so removed from dull, plodding horror
films made from the same period that sadly outbalance the good ones. There is
so much to gain from just watching a film so unruly, so unpredictable, that you
can't guess obvious plot points or how they have gotten there in the story. And
unlike films that are random for no point, chasing after this crazed film's
tone is rewarding because everything does have an effect. Randomness if done
badly, or trying too hard, becomes predictable and dull, why intentional
attempts at something like this fail miserably. This sort of film itself is
speaking a new language and someone like me gets a high from its atonal
mutterings that feel fresh as well as ridiculously silly.
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