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Saturday, July 11, 2026

Beauty and the Beast (1991) – Review

There’s a special category of movie that makes you feel slightly embarrassed for every other film that tried and failed to be timeless. Disney’s Beauty and the Beast sits there, arms crossed, quietly judging them. It’s polished, heartfelt, and annoyingly close to perfect for something about a guy who gets turned into a very angry shag carpet.

In a faraway land, possibly France, if you ignore the wildly inconsistent accents, a young prince learns the hard way that being a jerk to strangers has consequences. When an old beggar woman offers him an enchanted rose in exchange for shelter, he reacts like someone who’s never been told “no” and gets turned into the Beast (Robby Benson), while his entire staff is transformed into household décor. Now he has to learn to love and be loved before the last petal falls, which feels like a lot of emotional growth for someone who couldn’t even manage basic politeness.

 

Yeah, this could take some work.

Ten years later, we meet Belle (Paige O’Hara), the village’s resident bookworm and walking scandal because she… reads. Her father Maurice (Rex Everhart) is an inventor whose creations mostly scream “fire hazard,” and the town heartthrob Gaston (Richard White) is a human monument to ego. Maurice wanders into the Beast’s castle and gets locked up, because apparently this place runs on a strict “no trespassing, eternal imprisonment” policy. Belle shows up, sees the dungeon situation, and volunteers to take his place, which is either noble or wildly impulsive depending on how you look at it.

 

Winner of Best Daughter of the Year.

Inside the castle, Belle meets the cursed staff: Lumière (Jerry Orbach), Cogsworth (David Ogden Stiers), Mrs. Potts (Angela Lansbury), and Chip (Bradley Pierce), all of whom are one musical number away from aggressively staging an intervention. They push the Beast toward basic human decency, but he mostly responds with yelling. After he scares Belle into the woods, she’s attacked by wolves, and the Beast rescues her, getting injured in the process. This is the film’s way of saying, “Look, he’s not all bad, just… mostly bad with moments of accidental heroism.” From there, they bond, read together, and slowly develop feelings that feel surprisingly earned. It’s nice that they can find a common bond, other than the fact that most people suck.

 

They can start a book club.

Back in the village, Gaston hears Maurice ranting about a monster and immediately decides this is his moment. He teams up with Monsieur D’Arque (Tony Jay), a man whose entire job seems to be locking people away for convenience, and plots to declare Maurice insane unless Belle agrees to marry him. Meanwhile, Belle and the Beast share that iconic ballroom dance, which practically screams, “Oscar voters, are you watching?” When Belle learns Maurice is in trouble, the Beast lets her go, because he’s finally learned the radical concept of caring about someone else.

 

The Beast gets a little emo at this point.

Naturally, Gaston responds to rejection by forming an angry mob. Belle proves the Beast exists via magic mirror, which somehow doesn’t make people less violent. She and Maurice get locked up anyway, because logic has left the building, but Chip saves them using Maurice’s invention, which finally works when the plot demands it. The villagers storm the castle, the enchanted objects fight back like a home décor uprising, and Gaston confronts the Beast. The Beast, now too sad to fight, perks up when Belle returns, spares Gaston, and is immediately rewarded by being stabbed. Gaston then falls to his death because gravity is the only moral authority in this town.

 

Brash, strong and dumb as a box of rocks.

Belle confesses her love just as the last petal falls, reversing the curse in the most dramatically convenient timing imaginable. The Beast turns back into a prince, the staff become human again, and the castle gets a full magical renovation that would bankrupt any real-world contractor. Everyone celebrates with a ball, presumably forgetting that half the village just tried to commit murder five minutes ago, because nothing says closure like a waltz and selective amnesia.

 

Belle wisely keeps quiet about how he looked better as a beast.

Stray Observations:

• The village bookseller has possibly the worst business model in France, generously lending and outright giving away inventory to his one loyal customer like he’s running a charity instead of a shop.
• That torn portrait of the Beast as a human is doing some heavy lifting, because there’s no universe where that’s a ten-year-old boy. Puberty hit early and with a vengeance.
• The villagers pivot from “That old man is clearly unwell” to “Grab the torches, we’re doing a homicide” with the emotional stability of a flipped coin.
• The castle staff decide singing and choreographed dinner service is the best way to solve a centuries-old curse. Not wrong, somehow.
• After an entire musical number dedicated to feeding her, Belle somehow gets sent to bed without actually eating. Five-star entertainment, zero-star meal service.
• Chip is roaming the castle like he’s got diplomatic immunity, while his siblings are locked in a cupboard like they’re grounded indefinitely. Favouritism, but make it porcelain.
• Belle casually walks past an army of enchanted suits of armour during her castle tour, yet when the villagers attack, those guys are nowhere to be found. Took the night off, apparently.

 

Did no one watch Bedknobs and Broomsticks?

It should be noted that Walt Disney himself tried to crack Beauty and the Beast in the 1930s and again in the 1950s, and couldn’t make it work. Which makes sense. The story is basically “Stockholm Syndrome but make it romantic,” and that’s not the easiest sell. Fast forward to the late 80s, The Little Mermaid hits big, and suddenly Disney remembers it can make people feel things again. Enter Richard Purdum, who initially envisioned the film as a straight, non-musical period drama. Try imagining this story without songs. Go ahead. It feels wrong, like a sandwich without bread.

 

“Be our guest.”

Jeffrey Katzenberg apparently had the same reaction and ordered a complete overhaul into a musical. That decision is the difference between “interesting experiment” and “instant classic.” Bringing in Howard Ashman and Alan Menken was the real masterstroke. Ashman’s lyrics are sharp, character-driven, and somehow manage to make exposition fun, while Menken’s compositions carry emotional weight without feeling heavy-handed. “Belle” introduces an entire world in minutes, “Gaston” turns a villain into a punchline and a threat, and “Be Our Guest” is pure spectacle with a Broadway-level sense of showmanship.

 

Then “Beauty and the Beast” itself shows up and quietly wrecks you.

Directors Gary Trousdale and Kirk Wise took what The Little Mermaid started and pushed it further. The animation is richer, more ambitious, and more cinematic. The ballroom sequence alone, with its early use of computer-assisted animation, feels like Disney testing the limits of what it could do and then immediately deciding to exceed them, gliding the camera through space in a way hand-drawn films rarely dared at the time. It’s not just pretty, it’s purposeful. The visuals support the emotional arc instead of distracting from it, enhancing the romance rather than overwhelming it with empty spectacle.

Note: Disney’s Beauty and the Beast became the very first full-length animated feature film in cinema history to be nominated for the Academy Award for Best Picture.

There’s also a clear influence from Jean Cocteau’s 1946 La Belle et la Bête, especially in the living objects and the eerie, enchanted atmosphere of the castle. The addition of a swaggering, narcissistic suitor like Gaston echoes Cocteau’s Avenant, but Disney cranks the absurdity up to eleven, turning him into both a legitimate threat and a punchline at the same time. Gaston isn’t just a rival, he’s a walking satire of toxic masculinity before that phrase became a daily headline, embodying entitlement and insecurity in equal measure while somehow still thinking he’s the hero of the story.

 

“And every last inch of me is covered with hair!”

The voice cast deserves its own standing ovation. Paige O’Hara gives Belle warmth and intelligence without turning her into a cliché. Robby Benson brings surprising vulnerability to the Beast, making his transformation feel earned rather than convenient. Angela Lansbury’s Mrs. Potts is basically comfort in audio form, Jerry Orbach’s Lumière is charm personified, and David Ogden Stiers somehow makes a neurotic clock lovable. The fact that Laurence Fishburne, Val Kilmer, and Mandy Patinkin were all considered for the Beast is fascinating, but Benson’s performance hits that perfect balance of menace and heartbreak.

 

This Beast has his own kind of beauty.

Compared to earlier adaptations, which often leaned heavily into the gothic or the moral lesson, this version finds a balance that actually works. It respects the darker elements but wraps them in humour, music, and emotional clarity, making the story accessible without sanding off its edges completely. Audiences didn’t just appreciate that balance; they showed up in droves, turning the film into a box-office powerhouse and proving that Disney’s fairy-tale formula was not only alive but thriving. It’s not the first Beauty and the Beast, but it’s the one everyone remembers, and the one that translated critical acclaim into serious commercial success without breaking a sweat.

 

“The hills are alive with the sound of cash registers ringing.”

In conclusion, Disney’s Beauty and the Beast is what happens when a studio stops second-guessing itself and commits fully to craft, story, and emotion. Between the lush animation, the unforgettable songs by Alan Menken and Howard Ashman, and a voice cast that somehow feels both theatrical and natural, it earns its reputation without breaking a sweat. It’s the kind of film that makes you believe, briefly and against your better judgment, that maybe everything can come together perfectly if the right people are in charge.

Thursday, July 9, 2026

The She Beast (1966) – Review

This is a wild little loopy horror flick that’s half Gothic grudges, half absurd B-movie antics. It’s rough around the edges, deeply weird, and often more entertaining for its missteps than its successful scares. But tucked inside the chaos is the seed of a young Michael Reeves experimenting with horror form and Barbara Steele, doing what she does best.

Also known as Revenge of the Blood Beast, this film kicks off in present-day Vaubrac, Transylvania. We find Count Von Helsing (John Karlsen) flipping through a dusty old manuscript that recounts the fate of Vardella, a witch who was drowned two centuries earlier for crimes that probably boiled down to “existing while weird.” As she sank beneath the waves, she didn’t just die quietly; she spat out a curse promising revenge on everyone involved and their unlucky descendants. It’s the kind of melodramatic, centuries-spanning vendetta horror movies thrive on, and Von Helsing treats it like gospel. While most people would shrug this off as a creepy bedtime story, he’s clearly decided it’s his sacred duty to obsess over every grim detail, waiting for the day when the curse comes home to roost.

Is his name “Von Helsing” so he doesn’t get sued by the Van Helsing family?

Meanwhile, newlyweds Philip (Ian Ogilvy) and Veronica (Barbara Steele) check into a local inn run by Ladislav Groper (Mel Welles), a drunk, lecherous innkeeper whose name alone screams “Do not book here.” While Groper huffs and puffs their luggage upstairs, the couple enjoys some tea, only to be ambushed by Von Helsing, who won’t stop blathering about Dracula, local curses, and other honeymoon-ruining small talk. Veronica, ever the diplomat, tells him to drop by tomorrow at noon, knowing full well they’ll be long gone at sunrise. Of course, fate (and bad writing) has other plans.

“What, you didn’t check your TripAdvisor before coming here?”

That night, Philip discovers Groper peeping through the window like it’s amateur hour in Transylvania. He beats the creep bloody, but Veronica insists they still spend the night because… logic? The next morning, their car mysteriously swerves into a lake, and instead of his wife, Philip finds himself staring at the waterlogged corpse of Vardella. The truck driver (Ennio Antonelli) who fishes her out panics, Philip freaks, and Von Helsing pops up like a horror tour guide to calmly say, “Relax, I’ve dealt with witch resurrections before.”

If you can’t trust a Von Helsing, who can you trust?

Vardella, wearing Veronica’s face, slashes her way through the descendants of her killers until Von Helsing jabs her with a syringe and hides her at the hotel. The truck driver, angling for freedom, tips off the police, who find the body and schedule an autopsy…the fastest way to wreck a resurrection. Philip and Von Helsing steal it back, hijack a police van, and race to the lake, drugging Vardella (and a few cops) along the way. Exactly two centuries to the minute after her execution, they perform the ritual. However, the ending leaves it dangling: did Veronica return, or is the witch still grinning in the shadows?

“I told you we should have gone to Niagara Falls.”

Stray Observations:

• The villagers have a very large and elaborate dunking device to drown the witch. And I have to ask, “Was it built just for Vardella, or are witches a continuing problem around here?”
• Groper is a name you would not choose if your goal is subtlety. He’s also an alcoholic voyeur innkeeper who tries (in one subplot) to sexually assault his own niece. That’s… textbook B-movie villainy.
• Sometimes characters act like idiots (e.g. Veronica insisting on staying the night after the Groper spy business, or Philip not simply burning everything down and running). But that’s part of the fun.
• The timing of the final ritual (exactly 200 years to the minute) is such a dramatic device, but the film never really gives you faith that it’s going to work or that our heroes know exactly what they’re doing.
• Vardella may be a witch, and she certainly looks the part, but once resurrected, her “curse” appears to consist of her running around strangling or hacking people to death. That doesn’t seem all that witchery to me.

Did she lose her book on Black Magic?

By 1966, the Gothic horror tradition (Hammer, Italian Gothic, etc.) was starting to feel a bit threadbare, and younger directors were looking to push things toward mood, atmosphere, or even psychological edge. The She Beast sits awkwardly on that cusp: part Hammer-style curse vengeance, part proto-giallo weirdness, part B-movie oddity. Not to mention featuring a car chase right out of the Keystone Cops. As Michael Reeves’s debut feature, it’s messy and raw, but you can see the impulse to break from formulaic monsters and lean into unease.

This was definitely a break from formula.

Reeves doesn’t fully control the tone as the movie veers from camp to attempted dread, from exposition dumps to sudden bursts of violence, from awkward local satire to gothic curse narrative. But what’s interesting is his willingness to let scenes breathe (sometimes too much), and to inject visual awkwardness — odd framing, slow zooms, strange cut geometry — which hint at a director trying to find his voice, a sensibility he would sharpen in the later Witchfinder General. In that sense, She Beast is a learning ground: you see the ambition, the misfires, the rough edges, and the occasional flash of cunning.

Also, some of the funniest process shots ever put to film.

It goes without saying that Barbara Steele is the undeniable star (even if she’s absent or subdued much of the time). Her face, presence, and aura give the film the glue it desperately needs. Even in modern dress, even in short screentime, she carries weight; you believe (or at least want to believe) that she’s more than the sum of the strange plot machinery. Her beauty, her intensity, and her Gothic lineage lend the film a gravitas that its script can’t always sustain. Because she’s working under severe time constraints (rumoured to have shot most of her stuff in one marathon day), she doesn’t always get full character beats. Still, her performance feels like she is channelling a kind of haunted dignity and allowing the curse plot to ride on her shoulders. In weaker hands, the movie would collapse completely, but with Steele, it tilts, wobbles, but stays upright.

“I shall be back.”

In conclusion, The She Beast is a messy, uneven, occasionally absurd excursion into witch-revenge horror, but it holds a special fascination precisely because of its faults. Michael Reeves shows flashes of visual daring, though he hasn’t yet fully tamed the beast of tone, pacing, and coherence. The film’s silly character decisions, slapstick detours, and odd satirical flourishes make it as much a curiosity as a fright piece. Yet Barbara Steele’s gravitas and the weird energy that crackles in certain moments elevate it above mere campy junk. For anyone interested in the roots of Reeves’s later work, or just a weird night in with a cult horror oddity, The She Beast is worth the plunge.

Monday, July 6, 2026

Nightmare Castle (1965) – Review

When it comes to 1960s Italian gothic horror, Nightmare Castle isn’t exactly in the top tier with Mario Bava’s Black Sunday or Riccardo Freda’s The Horrible Dr. Hichcock, but it holds a special place in the Barbara Steele canon. Directed by Mario Caiano, the film mixes science, sadism, and supernatural revenge in a way that’s equal parts moody and melodramatic. It’s lurid, cheap, and occasionally clunky, but with Barbara Steele at the centre, it’s hypnotic all the same.

Dr. Stephen Arrowsmith (Paul Müller) is a scientist who probably should’ve stuck to frogs instead of spying on his wife. When he catches Muriel (Barbara Steele) in the arms of gardener David (Rik Battaglia), he doesn’t storm off in a huff; he whips out medieval torture devices. David gets branded, Muriel gets an acid bath, and both are finished off in a laboratory spectacle equal parts science experiment and horror sideshow. Before she dies, though, Muriel drops a dagger of truth: Stephen won’t inherit a penny, because her fortune is going to her identical half-sister Jenny (also Steele, this time blonde).

 

“I also told all our friends that you have a small penis.

Stephen, being both ambitious and shameless, solves this little problem by marrying Jenny and setting out to drive her insane. His accomplice is Solange (Helga Liné), his ancient maid conveniently restored to youthful beauty with Muriel’s blood, who glides around the castle like a rejuvenated vampire in couture gowns. The plan is simple: drug Jenny’s brandy, trap her in locked rooms, and surround her with sinister whispers until she’s carted back to the asylum. But Jenny proves more resilient than expected. Her nightmares of beating hearts, ghostly laughter, and her sister’s jewellery appearing out of nowhere start to feel less like madness and more like haunting. Even Dr. Derek Joyce (Marino Masé), summoned to offer psychiatric help, begins to suspect that something supernatural is unfolding.

 

“Are you by any chance being possessed by the spirits of the dead?”

Sure enough, the dead aren’t resting easy. Stephen’s trophies—Muriel and David’s preserved hearts—still beat in the shadows, fuelling a vengeful return. Muriel rises in scarred glory to set her husband ablaze, while David drains the life from Solange until she collapses into a skeleton. With the castle in chaos, Dr. Joyce finally does what horror protagonists rarely do: he burns the hearts, breaks the curse, and gets Jenny the hell out. By the end, Stephen’s grand plan is reduced to ashes, and Nightmare Castle earns its title as a gothic house of betrayal, ghosts, and very bad marital choices.

 

Basically, the dead will have their revenge.

Stray observations:

• Stephen marries his wife’s half-sister to snatch the inheritance, but how does that even pass as legal? Since he murdered and cremated Muriel, leaving no body behind, the law would still technically consider him married to her.
• I’m no scientist, but I’m pretty sure an “identical half-sister” is about as possible as a square circle—either you share both parents, or you don’t, there’s no half-credit in genetics.
• Why would you continue to live in the Murder Castle? Stephen and Solange stay in the same castle where they committed all their crimes. Ghosts love unfinished business, buddy, maybe try an Airbnb?
• Jenny is constantly told she’s “Mentally unstable,” but compared to everyone else in this castle, she’s practically the sanest one.
• The disembodied hearts in the urn are simultaneously gross and hilarious. They’re supposed to be terrifying, but they look more like Valentine’s Day leftovers from a butcher shop.
• Muriel’s ghost makes a grand return with acid scars, and somehow, she still looks fabulous. Barbara Steele could sell a line of “undead chic” cosmetics, and it would be a hit.

 

She’s undead and loving it.

Like a lot of mid-’60s Italian gothic horror, Nightmare Castle is a mixed bag. The atmosphere is certainly there—stormy skies, cavernous castles, and an excess of cobwebs—but the film often gets bogged down in stretches of melodrama that sap its momentum. Mario Caiano’s direction, while competent, lacks the painterly lighting and visual poetry that Mario Bava brought to Black Sunday or the luxuriant morbidity that Riccardo Freda infused into The Horrible Dr. Hichcock. At times, the movie feels more like a chamber play padded into feature length, with characters endlessly pacing down corridors and wringing their hands. What rescues it from slipping into monotony, though, is its style: Caiano has a sharp eye for presenting Barbara Steele as both goddess and ghoul, always highlighting her angular features and those enormous, haunted eyes. Add to that Ennio Morricone’s moody, organ-laced score—equal parts gothic requiem and surreal soundscape—and you get a film that feels far more operatic and atmospheric than its modest budget suggests.

 

They couldn’t even afford a decent mad scientist laboratory.

And speaking of Steele: she’s incandescent here. Whether she’s playing the venomous Muriel, all cruel sneers and vengeance incarnate, or the fragile Jenny, wide-eyed and trembling on the brink of madness, her presence dominates every frame. Steele had a unique ability to look simultaneously ethereal and sinister, as if she were born to wander fog-drenched castles in a perpetual state of doom. Her dual performance here gives the film a mythic charge; it’s less about the plot and more about watching her radiate gothic energy in two completely different registers. Nobody did horror quite like Barbara Steele; her eyes alone could carry an entire movie, and in Nightmare Castle, they practically do. She elevates what might otherwise have been a disposable slice of pulp into something strangely hypnotic, a film remembered not for its story beats but for the sheer power of her screen presence.

 

A truly haunting beauty.

In conclusion, Nightmare Castle may not be a perfect gothic masterpiece, but it’s a juicy slice of 1960s horror melodrama elevated by Barbara Steele’s powerhouse performance and Ennio Morricone’s moody score. It has clunky pacing, a few head-scratching plot turns, and more screaming than subtlety, but for fans of Steele—or of vintage Italian spook shows—it’s a must-see. It’s not the castle you want to live in, but it’s one you’ll be glad to haunt for 90 minutes.

Thursday, July 2, 2026

Castle of Blood (1964) – Review

Italian Gothic horror doesn’t get much more gloriously moody than Castle of Blood, or Danza Macabra if you’re feeling fancy and prefer your titles in the original Italian. Directed by Antonio Margheriti (sometimes moonlighting under his Anglo pseudonym, Anthony M. Dawson), it’s a chilly black-and-white fever dream where superstition, Poe, and Barbara Steele’s haunting eyes all collide in the kind of ghost story that makes you want to watch it at midnight with a flickering candle and a blanket pulled to your chin.

We kick things off with none other than Edgar Allan Poe (Silvano Tranquilli), lounging in a London tavern and casually claiming that his macabre tales aren’t works of fiction but firsthand accounts. This revelation rattles the smug confidence of journalist Alan Foster (Georges Rivière), who laughs off the idea of ghosts and ghouls. Enter Lord Thomas Blackwood (Umberto Raho), who ups the stakes with a wager: spend one night in his delightfully cursed family castle on All Souls’ Eve, a place where guests have a nasty habit of not seeing morning. Being the kind of reporter who treats “You might die horribly” as a dare, Alan shrugs and says, “Yeah, sure, what’s the worst that could happen?”

 

“If the cash is there, I do not care.”

Inside the castle, Alan meets Elisabeth Blackwood (Barbara Steele), a pale beauty with the kind of eyes that could launch a thousand Hammer knock-offs. She seems gentle, even kind, and he clings to her like a lifeboat in the sea of increasingly spectral weirdness. Because sure enough, the castle isn’t just creaky old furniture; it’s filled with the ghostly former residents, still obsessed with reliving their violent deaths like dinner theatre on repeat. Alan gets front-row seats to this parade of stabbing, strangling, and melodramatic betrayals, while Elisabeth keeps whispering cryptic warnings like a goth tour guide.

 

“You’ll be dead by dawn.”

Enter Julia Alert (Margarete Robsahm), the castle’s enigmatic blonde-haired siren. Julia glides around like she’s part phantom, part femme fatale, and her presence rattles Elisabeth. It turns out Julia was part of the same tangled web of lust, jealousy, and betrayal that doomed everyone in the castle. Elisabeth’s attraction to Alan is obvious, but Julia clearly wants him too, though less out of love, more because it’s fun to torment her rival. Their jealous tension hangs over every scene, and Alan, poor sap, is caught in a supernatural love triangle where both options end in death.

 

“Have you ever heard of the term Succubus?”

Adding another layer to the tale is Dr. Carmus (Arturo Dominici), who serves as a kind of Gothic Ghost of Christmas Past, leading Alan like a scholar of doom and pointing out that the castle’s halls are haunted not just by shadows but by the echoes of countless murders gone by. By dawn, Alan finally learns the terrible truth: these spirits need fresh blood to sustain their fragile hold on existence, and who better to provide it than the one idiot who agreed to sleep over? Cue Alan running, pleading, and attempting escape with Elisabeth’s help. But here’s the twist…she’s a ghost too, doomed to play both saviour and betrayer. When the sun rises, Alan doesn’t. Poe was right all along, and Lord Blackwood wins the bet and collects his money from Alan’s corpse.

 

“Eh, it’s a living.”

Stray Observations:

• Nothing screams “Trust me, I’m serious” like Poe casually chilling in a pub, sipping wine, and telling strangers his stories are true crime reports from Hell.
• If all the guests who attempted to stay at Lord Blackwood’s castle have died, at what point would the police look into him as a potential serial killer?
• Alan Foster’s journalistic skepticism basically boils down to: “Sure, ghosts don’t exist, but I’ll still spend the night in your cobweb deathtrap castle for a pint and bragging rights.”
• Immediately upon arriving, Foster gets tangled up in some tree branches and panics. This is not a good start for our hero, acting like a Disney princess in Snow White and the Seven Dwarfs.
• There’s a black cat prowling through the castle like it’s on loan from Poe’s The Black Cat, just to hammer home the literary connection in case you forgot whose name got slapped on the poster.
• Like Bruce Willis in The Sixth Sense, Elisabeth doesn’t always act like she fully grasps that she’s dead. Only, in this case, she’s also a murderess.

 

“What a twist!”

Antonio Margheriti’s Castle of Blood started as a short story, “Danza Macabra,” which is also the film’s Italian title. He directs this horror classic with a sure hand, balancing Gothic atmospherics with brisk pacing, and his knack for turning limited budgets into haunting visuals is on full display. Riccardo Pallottini’s cinematography drenches the castle in velvety shadows, torchlight gleams, and ghostly compositions that feel straight out of a woodcut nightmare. The result is a film that feels simultaneously stagey and otherworldly, like watching a ghost story told by candlelight.

 

Ghosts are well met by candlelight.

Barbara Steele, of course, is the crown jewel here. By 1964, she had already cemented her reputation as the First Lady of Italian Gothic horror after Black Sunday. In Castle of Blood, her Elisabeth is tragic, alluring, and sinister all at once, a role that lets her embody everything uncanny about Gothic heroines while stealing every scene she’s in. She moves with a ghostly grace, her wide, haunted eyes holding centuries of longing, jealousy, and despair. Steele turns Elisabeth into more than a character; she becomes an atmosphere, the beating heart of the castle itself. Without Steele, the film would still be good Gothic pulp; with her, it becomes an iconic, spellbinding performance that is as chilling as it is unforgettable.

 

A woman worth dying for.

In conclusion, Castle of Blood is the kind of Gothic chiller that lingers in your mind like a dream you can’t quite shake. It’s moody, eerie, and full of the kind of shadow-soaked atmosphere that Italian horror specialized in, with Margheriti proving himself a master of visual dread. While the story itself is a ghostly morality tale about hubris and disbelief, the film’s power comes from its style and Steele’s iconic presence. Nestled firmly in the tradition of European Gothic, it stands as one of the great Barbara Steele vehicles and a benchmark for 1960s supernatural horror, proof that Poe’s imagination, whether fictional or “true,” could conjure some of the finest cinematic nightmares.

Monday, June 29, 2026

Blood and Black Lace (1964) – Review

Mario Bava’s Blood and Black Lace is a candy-coated nightmare, part fashion show, part slaughterhouse, and all style. This 1964 proto-giallo didn’t just invent the rules of the slasher film; it strutted down the catwalk and made murder fashionable. If Psycho turned the shower into a crime scene, Bava turned haute couture into a killing floor.

Our story kicks off when Isabella (Francesca Ungaro), one of many impossibly glamorous models working at Christian Haute Couture, takes a nighttime stroll through the fashion house gardens. Instead of a pleasant evening walk, she gets the business end of a masked, trench-coated psycho, wielding more menace than a Milan runway critic. Enter Inspector Silvestri (Thomas Reiner), who starts grilling everyone from Massimo Morlacchi (Cameron Mitchell), the co-manager of the salon, to the newly widowed Countess Cristiana Cuomo (Eva Bartok). Things look extra suspicious when Isabella’s ex, coke-snorting antique dealer Franco Scalo (Dante Dipaolo), is caught up in the mess, especially since Isabella was trying to get him to quit the nose candy.

 

This is not how you find a sponsor.

Naturally, Isabella wasn’t just a pretty face. She was keeping a diary stuffed with everyone’s dirty secrets; blackmail fuel so juicy it practically drips off the pages. Nicole (Ariana Gorini), Franco’s current flame, decides to play whistleblower and hand it over to the cops. But Peggy Peyton (Mary Arden) swipes it during a fashion show like it’s a backstage purse snatch. That night, Nicole brings Franco his powder fix, only to get introduced to the killer’s spiked glove, an accessory that would never pass Vogue standards. When the murderer finds no diary, he’s extra cranky. Meanwhile, Peggy gets a visit from the jittery dresser Marco (Massimo Righi), who’s in love with her but too hopped up on pills to be useful. After refusing his “protection,” Peggy winds up tied to a chair and discovers who the killer is, before her face is flambéed against an iron stove

 

Talk about haute couture going hot couture.

Inspector Silvestri decides the killer must be a sex maniac lurking among the suspects, so he does the logical thing: arrests everyone he can think of. Marco panics, tries to point the finger at Cesare Lazzarini (Luciano Pigozzi), the creepy eavesdropping designer, and promptly has an epileptic seizure. Not a great defence. While everyone’s stuck in custody, Greta (Lea Lander) finds Peggy’s corpse stuffed in her car trunk (note to self, always check the trunk before driving off) and winds up murdered herself in her fiancé’s mansion. The suspects are released, and wouldn’t you know it, Morlacchi just happens to have the very notebook the killer used to threaten Peggy. Red flags everywhere. Sadly, all the Red Flags in the world can’t help with these idiot cops on the case.

 

“Should we call Inspector Clouseau?”

The mask finally drops: Morlacchi and Cristiana have been pulling the strings all along. He’s been carving through models—Isabella, Nicole, Peggy—while Cristiana snuffed out Greta to keep him covered. Isabella had their dirty little secret: they murdered Cristiana’s husband, and she tried a spot of blackmail. The “sex maniac” angle? Just window dressing. What really drove them was greed, the deadliest aphrodisiac of all. So Morlacchi cooks up one last scheme…frame Tao-Li (Claude Dantes), one of the few surviving models, knock her off, and make it look like a neat little suicide. But when Cristiana realizes she’s next on his hit list, she flips the script and sticks a blade in him instead. After a shaky call to Inspector Silvestri, she crumples beside her late lover-in-crime, leaving a trail of corpses, couture, and treachery sprawled across the fashion house floor.

 

Not exactly a Romeo & Juliet ending. 

Stray Observations:

• Models in this film have two modes: strutting around the fashion house in ridiculous outfits or walking alone at night in the creepiest possible locations.
• Peggy is so blasé about Marco’s nervous, pill-popping “protection offer” that you almost root for her indifference, until she winds up tied to a chair and roasted alive. Oops.
• Greta finds a corpse in the trunk of her car and doesn’t immediately scream, run, or call the cops—she just lugs it into the house until the killer shows up. Is this an Italian thing?
• The diary MacGuffin feels like something out of high school gossip: “OMG, Isabella wrote down everyone’s dirty secrets, better kill half the cast before it leaks!”
• The costumes are so over-the-top fabulous, you almost expect Tim Gunn to walk in and say, “Models, this week’s challenge is: Don’t get murdered.” 
• The ending twist—that the “sex maniac” theory was just a red herring—feels like Bava wagging his finger at both the cops and the audience for being so gullible.
• The killer’s outfit—blank white mask, trench coat, and fedora—looks like a cross between a mannequin and a noir detective, which is both creepy and slightly fabulous.

 

Maybe he’s auditioning for the role of DC’s The Question.

Mario Bava wasn’t just directing here; he was painting in Technicolor, with a palette dipped in neon blood and baroque shadows. Every murder is treated like an art installation, staged with eerie precision and macabre elegance. The faceless killer doesn’t just lurk; he glides through the fashion house like some twisted mannequin come to life, turning the supposedly glamorous world of couture into a nightmare factory. Bava takes a lurid pulp story and elevates it into something hypnotic, where even the violence feels stylized to the point of surrealism.

 

It’s an “And Then There Were None” splashed in red.

Ubaldo Terzano’s cinematography deserves its own bow. Forget flat police procedurals or cheap horror lighting; this is chiaroscuro on acid. The deep reds, purples, and electric blues bathe every corridor and catwalk in menace, foreshadowing the neon giallo glow that directors like Argento would later run with. Shadows cut across faces like masks, mannequins leer in corners, and even the garden at night feels alive with dread. Terzano makes Blood and Black Lace less a whodunit and more a “Who cares, look at those colours!”

 

This movie explodes with colour.

The cast isn’t so much about emotional depth as it is about presence, and boy, do they have it. Cameron Mitchell oozes smarm as Morlacchi, every smile a snake’s hiss. Eva Bartok plays Cristiana with icy detachment, hiding cruelty behind a widow’s chic. The models, from Mary Arden’s doomed Peggy to Lea Lander’s unlucky Greta, aren’t given much to work with beyond “look fabulous, then die horribly,” but they do it with aplomb. Even Thomas Reiner’s Inspector Silvestri feels more like an accessory to the set design than an actual detective, but in a movie like this, the real stars are the costumes, the lighting, and that blank, terrifying mask.

 

Wait, is this Madonna from Dick Tracy?

In conclusion, Blood and Black Lace isn’t just a murder mystery; it’s the birth of the giallo as full-blown cinema. Bava turned lurid pulp into lurid art, making death look seductive and shadows feel alive. It’s a film where plot plays second fiddle to atmosphere, where mannequins and models share equal billing, and where every frame feels dipped in gothic glamour. Fifty years later, the slasher genre is still catching up to what Bava accomplished with a faceless killer, a couture salon, and a whole lot of style.