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Mario Bava Collection Volume 1 (1960-1966) [2007] [ReUp]

Posted By: Someonelse
Mario Bava Collection Volume 1 (1960-1966) [2007] [ReUp]

The Mario Bava Collection: Volume One (1960-1966) [2007]
Black Sunday / Black Sabbath / The Girl Who Knew Too Much / Knives of the Avenger / Kill Baby Kill
5xDVD5 | VIDEO_TS | NTSC 16:9 | Complete Scans | 430 mins | 20,12 Gb
Audio: English or Italian or English and Italian (see below)
Subtitles: English on all films except Black Sunday

More than a quarter of a century after his death, director Mario Bava remains one of international cinema’s most controversial icons. Today his influence — marked by stunning visuals, daring sexuality and shocking violence — can still be seen in the works of Martin Scorsese, David Lynch, Tim Burton, Dario Argento and countless others in a legacy that extends far beyond the horror genre. This collection brings together 5 landmark movies from the first half of Bava’s career — encompassing the original giallo, a bold Viking epic, and his three gothic horror masterpieces — featuring new transfers, original European versions, and exclusive featurettes to create the definitive celebration of one of the most important filmmakers of all time.

Amazon

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Mario Bava Collection Volume 1 (1960-1966) [2007] [ReUp]

Black Sunday (1960)
DVD5 | VIDEO_TS | NTSC 16:9 | Cover + DVD Scan | 01:26:43 | 3,81 Gb
Audio: English AC3 2.0 @ 192 Kbps | Subs: None
Genre: Horror | Italy

Before she is burned at the stake by her brother for being a witch, Princess Asa Vajda (Barbara Steele, Nightmare Castle) casts an evil curse on her family name. Centuries later, the bodies of Asa and her evil henchman Javutich (Arturo Dominici, Caltiki) are accidentally revived by Dr. Kruvajan (Andrea Checchi, A Bullet for the General) and his assistant Dr. Gorobec (John Richardson, She), allowing the cunning witch to begin plans to possess the body of her lookalike descendant Katia (Steele) and kill the remaining Vajdas.

IMDB

When this masterpiece of gothic horror begins, a witch named Katia Vajda (Barbara Steele) has the Mark Of Satan pounded on to her face before she's burned at the stake. As she's about to be burnt the skies open up and the rain pours down. Though she is killed, her body does not burn and is instead laid to rest in a coffin with a cross on top to ensure that her evil dies with her corpse. Before she passes, however, she swears she will destroy the Vajda family.

Mario Bava Collection Volume 1 (1960-1966) [2007] [ReUp]

Shortly after, Doctor Kruvajan (Andrea Checchi) and his assistant Gorobec (John Richardson) inadvertently spill some blood on Katia's tomb and she's resurrected. Meanwhile, a beautiful girl who turns out to be Princess Asa Vajda (Barbara Steele again) shows up. Kati's ghost, with the help of her trusty man servant (Arturo Dominici), attempts to possess Asa's body so that she can fulfill her promise and kill off Asa's father, Prince Vajda (Ivo Garrani).

Widely considered one of Bava's best pictures and a milestone in Italian gothic horror, Black Sunday (also known as The Mask Of Satan) is a fantastic exercise in mood, atmosphere and suspense. A few remarkably sinister set pieces punctuate the film (Katia's initial death scene and her subsequent resurrection) and the creepy black and white cinematography really captures the macabre atmosphere of the many more subtle moments in the film. Small details in the set design, the lighting, the effects and the backgrounds all work together to enrich the tone that Bava has created here and the results are visually stunning.

Mario Bava Collection Volume 1 (1960-1966) [2007] [ReUp]

While the supporting cast is adequate, it's Barbara Steele who really makes this picture. In an interesting double role she's an eerie amalgamation of all things sexy and sinister and the clever cinematography really does an amazing job of accentuating her piercing dark eyes and distinctive features to the point that the audience can completely buy her in the role. There are some quirks in the storyline where it slows down a little more than it has to or where maybe things feel a little forced but the movie just looks so fantastic and makes such excellent use of its leading lady that it's more difficult to concentrate on the film's small flaws then to simply bask in the imagery.

Mario Bava Collection Volume 1 (1960-1966) [2007] [ReUp]

American International Pictures distributed this film in North America and when they did, the film was dubbed and the original Roberto Nicolesi score was replaced with a very different one from Les Baxter. It would have been nice to see the Italian language option presented here along with the original English language dub rather than they hybrid that we get here (which takes the Italian score and puts the English dubbing over top of it), even if that hybrid does more or less constitute the best of both worlds. For completions sake fans certainly would have appreciated having the two original mixes included for the film.

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Mario Bava Collection Volume 1 (1960-1966) [2007] [ReUp]

Black Sabbath (1963)
DVD5 | VIDEO_TS | NTSC 16:9 | Cover + DVD Scan | 01:32:21 | 4,47 Gb
Audio: Italian AC3 2.0 @ 192 Kbps | Subs: English
Genre: Horror | Italy, France, USA

Bava's horror anthology packs in three tales of terror, narrated by Boris Karloff (Frankenstein). In "The Telephone," Rosy (Michèle Mercier, Iron Hand) is haunted by the incessant late-night calls that threaten to drive her over the edge. "The Wurdulak" stars Mark Damon as Vladimire d'Urfe, a traveler who discovers a headless corpse out in the woods before arriving at a small cabin where a family awaits the return of Gorca (Karloff), the vampire-hunting patriarch who has warned his kin that he may return as a blood-sucking beast. Finally, in "A Drop of Water," nervous nurse Helen (Jacqueline Pierreux, Three Penny Opera) steals a ring from the body of a medium who died during a séance, and pays an evil price.

IMDB

A French-Italian co-production released in North America by American International Pictures (better known as AIP), Black Sabbath is Bava's take on the horror anthology film that would later become very popular thanks to the efforts of Amicus Studios in England. Bava's film takes three very different horror stories and used some segments with Boris Karloff to bookend them. The results are, in short, excellent.

Mario Bava Collection Volume 1 (1960-1966) [2007] [ReUp]

The first story is The Telephone and it follows a lovely woman named Rosy (Michele Mercier) who receives some unusual and frightening late night telephone calls. Since Rosy helped the cops nab Frank (Gustavo De Nardo), her ex-pimp who has recently been let out of jail, she figures it's probably him on the other end of the line. She calls her ex-girlfriend, Mary (Lidia Alfonsi), to come over and comfort her completely unaware that Mary could very well be the one behind the phone calls, setting up an elaborate scheme to win back her lover's heart.

Mario Bava Collection Volume 1 (1960-1966) [2007] [ReUp]

Considered in some circles to be the first color giallo, The Telephone is a nice, tense little film with some stylish direction and a few fun twists. Bava would certainly go on to make better thrillers than this but for an early stab at the genre, this is a pretty solid attempt. The lighting and the direction is solid throughout and the performances are all fine.

The Wurdulak is up next, and when it begins we meet Count Vladimir d'Urfe (Mark Damon) who is riding through the woods with a corpse that has recently been decapitated which he stumbled across in the woods. He arrives at the home of Gorka (Boris Karloff) who, after a few days on the road, has returned to his family. When Vladimir arrives, Gorka produces the missing head and tells him that the body actually belonged to a Wurdulak, or, a vampire. Vladimir and Gorka's family take comfort in the old man's actions but soon realize that he didn't necessarily escape the conflict completely unscathed…

Mario Bava Collection Volume 1 (1960-1966) [2007] [ReUp]

Not surprisingly, Karloff is what makes this second story as effective as it is. With some unusually creepy overtones of child molestation and a few jolting moments, this is a very well thought out and well directed short. It builds up nicely and the ending is a bit of a surprise. Karloff is simply majestic here, bringing his intense and instantly recognizable screen presence to the forefront to excellent effect.

The third and final story is The Drop Of Water. A young nurse named Helen Chester (Jacqueline Pierreux) is sent to prepare the body of an elderly woman who worked as a medium and who passed away during a séance. She arrives and sets about her duties, with the corpse seemingly starring at her the entire time. When Helen notices a gorgeous ring on the body's finger she decides no one will miss it and so she takes it off of the corpse to keep as her own and in process of doing so manages to knock a glass of water off of a side table. As the water drips, a fly swarms around the body but Helen pays it no mind and heads home for the night. When she settles in for the evening she soon learns that she's made a very dire mistake indeed and that the dead do not take kindly to thievery.

Mario Bava Collection Volume 1 (1960-1966) [2007] [ReUp]

The best of the three stories in the film is also, not surprisingly, the scariest. The look on the corpse's face is completely horrifying and the ending, while a little predictable, packs quite a punch even now, more than forty years since the film was made.

What will surely be disappointing to fans of this particular film is that the AIP version of the movie that was originally announced as included on this set had to be pulled. That means you won't get Karloff's voice and instead have only the version of the film that was issued on Image's previous DVD. While it's a superior version of the film in this reviewer's opinion, it really is a shame that both versions couldn't have been included as they both definitely have their merits and they are quite different indeed. Not only are the stories told in a different order but also the music has been changed, and the lesbian overtones of the first story have been replaced with a more pedestrian approach. The Italian cut included here is more effective but the AIP version holds a special place in the hearts of many fans.

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Mario Bava Collection Volume 1 (1960-1966) [2007] [ReUp]

The Girl Who Knew Too Much (1963)
DVD5 | VIDEO_TS | NTSC 16:9 | Cover + DVD Scan | 01:25:40 | 3,95 Gb
Audio: Italian AC3 2.0 @ 192 Kbps | Subs: English
Genre: Mystery, Thriller | Italy

Nora Davis (Letícia Román, G.I. Blues), a young American tourist in Rome, accidentally witness a cold-blooded murder. Everyone else is convinced it was just a dream, and even Nora isn't sure it was real until she stumbles across newspaper clippings about a series of "alphabet murders" which have all taken place in the same street. Fearing she is next on the killer's list, she tracks down the culprit with the help of Dr. Bassi (John Saxon, Black Christmas).

IMDB

When the film begins, a mystery novel fanatic named Nora Davis (Leticia Roman) hops on a plane to Rome where the man sitting next to her offers her a cigarette. She accepts, not realizing it's laced with marijuana until the man is arrested. When she gets off of her plane and heads into the city, she witnesses a brutal murder, which she immediately reports to the local police. They look at her like she's off her rocker, as the events she describes to them match perfectly a killing that happened exactly a decade ago. Being a mystery novel buff, she takes it upon herself to solve the mystery seeing as the police don't intend to do much, brushing her off and figuring her for a lunatic.

Mario Bava Collection Volume 1 (1960-1966) [2007] [ReUp]

Eventually Nora falls in with a doctor named Marcello Bassi (John Saxon) and the cops come around but before that happens the poor woman becomes targeted by the murderer only she saw.

Mario Bava Collection Volume 1 (1960-1966) [2007] [ReUp]

Borrowing rather heavily from the Hitchcockian style, The Girl Who Knew Too Much is a playful and early giallo (Anchor Bay's packaging claims that this is technically the first one!) that periodically stumbles over some unnecessary sight gags and strangely placed bits of comedy. These aren't so frequent as to ruin the film but they are a little jarring when set opposite darker moments that play out in the hospital or in the morgue. Bava puts his camera in truly strange places here, giving the film a very quirky feel that would be imitated throughout the genre's run but rarely done with such masterful style as we see here and in Bava's other giallos such as Blood And Black Lace. In addition to the insane amount of style that Bava infuses into the film, we're treated to some fun performances from pretty Leticia Roman and particularly from a very young and completely charming John Saxon.

Mario Bava Collection Volume 1 (1960-1966) [2007] [ReUp]

As with the version of Black Sabbath included in this set, the version of The Girl Who Knew Too Much is the Italian cut of the film. Much like with the last film, AIP distributed their own cut of this picture in North America under the alternate title of The Evil Eye. As with many Italian genre films made with the export market in mind, it was dubbed in post production but it's obvious that at least Saxon if not other cast members are speaking English in front of the camera, which leads to some dubbing/synch issues that might not have been as obvious in its English version.

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Mario Bava Collection Volume 1 (1960-1966) [2007] [ReUp]

Knives of the Avenger (1966)
DVD5 | VIDEO_TS | NTSC 16:9 | Cover + DVD Scan | 01:24:38 | 4,09 Gb
Audio: English AC3 2.0 @ 192 Kbps; Italian AC3 2.0 @ 192 Kbps | Subs: English
Genre: Action, Adventure | Italy, France, USA

With her husband presumed lost at sea, Queen Karen (Elissa Pichelli) and her son Moki (Luciano Pollentin) are protected by blade-wielding Viking warrior Rurik (Cameron Mitchell, Space Mutiny). When the sinister and traitorous Hagen (Fausto Tozzi, A Man Called Sledge) tries to take the absent King's place and plunge his people into a fruitless war, it's up to Rurik to stop him.

IMDB

Mario Bava Collection Volume 1 (1960-1966) [2007] [ReUp]

The only film in the boxed set that isn't a horror movie, Knives Of The Avenger follows a warrior named Rurik (Cameron Mitchell) who finds himself protecting a queen named Karen (Elissa Pichelli) and her son Moki (Luciano Pollentin) from the sinister general Hagen (Fausto Tozzi) while her husband, King Harald (Giacomo Rossi-Stuart) is at sea. What Karen and Moki don't realize is that Rurik was at one time an ally of Hagen but that was a long time ago, before Hagen killed his family. They also don't know that Rurik was at one time one of Harald's sworn enemies for reasons that he would rather forget.

Mario Bava Collection Volume 1 (1960-1966) [2007] [ReUp]

Definitely a lesser entry in Bava's filmography, Knives Of The Avenger is a good looking and well shot film that is ultimately hampered quite severely by what is essentially a rather dull story. Cameron Mitchell is rather uninspired in the lead role and his obviously dyed blonde hair doesn't so much make him look like a Viking as it does simply out of place. The story borrows quite heavily from George Stevens' Shane, in which Alan Ladd plays the lead in a similar story set in the American west.

Mario Bava Collection Volume 1 (1960-1966) [2007] [ReUp]

In Bava's defense, it isn't all his fault. The movie was shot on a very low budget and supposedly only had a week for principal photography. Adding to that, the rumor is that Bava was brought on board to replace the original director and that he had to re-shoot the vast majority of the picture. As such, the film lacks many of the details that make a lot of his other films so enjoyable and it doesn't feel like a Bava film, rather, it feels like a work for hire project, which it probably was. Bava proved with Hercules In The Haunted World that he could make a great sword and sandal epic when he was allowed to, it's just that here we're left with a picture that is made up of clichés. Some of the scenes in which Mitchell's Rurik gets into his knife throwing are interesting and a few of the action scenes are fun but for the most part the film suffers from bad pacing, unnecessary padding by way of too many location and beach shots, and a truly uninspired story.

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Mario Bava Collection Volume 1 (1960-1966) [2007] [ReUp]

Kill Baby…Kill! (1966)
DVD5 | VIDEO_TS | NTSC 16:9 | Cover + DVD Scan | 01:23:24 | 3,79 Gb
Audio: English AC3 2.0 @ 192 Kbps; Italian AC3 2.0 @ 192 Kbps | Subs: English
Genre: Horror, Mystery | Italy

Coroner Dr. Eswai (Giacomo Rossi-Stuart, Crimes of the Black Cat) arrives in a small village to investigate a series of mysterious deaths. Working with the local police inspector (Piero Lulli, My Name Is Nobody), Eswai learns that the villagers live in mortal fear of the ghost of Melissa Graps (Valeria Valeri, A Gun for a Cop), a young girl who was killed 20 years ago by a drunken mob in the streets.

IMDB

Widely recognized as one of the finest Italian gothic horror films ever made, the late, great Mario Bava's Kill, Baby… Kill! is a testament to the director's skill at combining painterly and atmospheric visuals with unusual and otherworldly storytelling. A ghost story at it's core, on the surface the film might seem to be little more than a well made exercise in style over substance but a bit of digging and it's obvious that there's a lot more going on in the movie than simply a little blonde ghost making trouble for a small town.

Giacomo Rossi-Stuart (of The Crimes Of The Black Cat) plays Doctor Paul Eswai is a coroner who has been sent to a small, run down village where he is to investigate a bizarre series of deaths which he suspects could be murder. With the help of Inspector Kruger (Piero Lulli of Sergio Leone's My Name Is Nobody), it isn't long before the good doctor meets up with the lovely Monica (Erika Blanc of The Night Evelyn Came Out Of The Grave) who has just returned to her hometown with some medical training. Eswai, in order to carry out his investigation, decides he'll have to perform an autopsy on one of the victims, a maid who was impaled on a sharp fence when she feel from above, but the villager's protest. He carries on, thinking them to be primitive, and soon finds that the corpse has had a golden coin pushed into its heart.

Mario Bava Collection Volume 1 (1960-1966) [2007] [ReUp]

Eswai soon hears of a young girl named Melissa Graps (Valeria Valeri) who, years earlier, was killed in the streets of the town by a gang of drunks and, as legend tells, she has returned to exact her revenge. The townsfolk, including the Burgomeister (Luciano Catenacci of Crime Busters, credited here as Max Lawrence), all believe that if her ghost appears and looks at you, then you are not long for this world. Unfortunately, a young woman named Nadine (Micaela Esdra) saw the ghost recently and both she and her parents are convinced that soon she's going to die. Eswai meets up with Ruth (Fabienne Dali of Lenzi's Desert Commandos), a witch, and then later a strange older woman named Baroness Graps (Gianna Vivaldi) who ties into the strange happenings, and slowly but surely starts trying to put the pieces of this macabre puzzle together – but is the ghost real or simply local superstition?

Proof positive that creative filmmaking is far more important than a big budget, Bava (whose budget was so low for this picture that it forced him to pillage soundtrack bits from his own earlier films) keeps things looking spooky right from the start and never lets up. Decrepit old buildings, strange colored lighting, plenty of smoke and fog and some genuinely macabre looking interiors give Kill, Baby… Kill! more atmosphere than a movie made on the cheap over a couple of weeks has any right to have. The film is a non-stop visual feast for the eyes and perhaps it was because he was working without the aid of big financial backing that Bava here makes every shot count for all its worth. In addition to the lighting and the art direction the cinematography is also fantastic and quite creative. The camera follows Melissa as she plays on her swing set and periodically zooms in, Leone style, right into the character's eyes to emphasize certain key moments in the movie.

Mario Bava Collection Volume 1 (1960-1966) [2007] [ReUp]

As beautiful looking as the film is, however, Kill, Baby… Kill! isn't perfect. The story isn't particularly original (though oddly enough one could reasonably argue that it's had a big impact on a lot of recent Japanese horror films which play with many of the same ideas and there are similarities here to Stuart Gordon's Dagon as well – this has become a film of some influence!) in that it simply places a more sophisticated and educated man in amongst some superstitious rural types only to have him find the error of his ways. Like in The Wicker Man, we have a central character attempting to convince a secluded group of people with beliefs different from his own that their ways are wrong. It works and it's certainly sufficient but Dr. Eswai just sort of wandering around the town makes up a large portion of the story. Adding to that is the fact that Rossi-Stuart doesn't exactly set the screen ablaze with his charisma (though in his defense part of this could be the English dubbing more than his actual performance).

Mario Bava Collection Volume 1 (1960-1966) [2007] [ReUp]

With that said, Kill, Baby… Kill! still gets a lot more right than wrong. There is some truly chilling imagery here, particularly when the Melissa character presses her small hands and face against the dirty glass and curses those she looks upon. Bava foreshadows much of her diabolic activity by cleverly using a white ball that bounces around the town. It's interesting to see how the director uses an innocent child's toy to foreshadow the sinister acts to come. The story builds nicely to a satisfactory if somewhat predictable conclusion and the last twenty-minutes or so of the film really go get quite tense. Dr. Eswai's reality collides with that of the townspeople and he's forced to confront a reality which he doesn't truly understand and which the rational part of his brain tries hard to reject. It's this ending that ties the film up so well and which adds a certain level of surrealism to the picture, giving it considerably more depth than you might have expected it to have based on the first two thirds of its running time.

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Special Features:
- Audio Commentary by Mario Bava expert and biographer Tim Lucas on Black Sunday, Black Sabbath and The Girl Who Knew Too Much
- Featurette: Remembering The Girl With John Saxon on The Girl Who Knew Too Much
- Featurette: A Life In Film: An Interview With Mark Damon on Black Sabbath
- Cast & Crew Bios
- Theatrical Trailers
A great many of the themes and story lines might seem a bit too dated for today's music-video-fed theatergoers, yet all five of these films are prime examples of the legitimate brilliance of Mario Bava. The opening scene of "Black Sunday" alone has become one of the most iconic moments in horror history. It´s the image of Barbara Steele's beautiful face twisted in terror as the spike-coated mask gets lowered onto her head, as a shirtless muscle-bound giant swings towards it with a hammer. And that's just the first five minutes of Bava's official first film as a director! The additional four hundred and twenty-five minutes spread across these five discs are just as delightful.

Huge Thanks to franco8102


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