Karl Malden as Arno. |
Karl Malden plays Franco Arno, a blind former journalist who lives with his young niece Lori. During an evening walk, Arno and Lori overhear two people in a car discussing blackmail. A couple of days later, Lori recognizes a photo of one of the car's occupants in the newspaper. The man, a scientist who worked at the Terzi Institute for Genetic Research, apparently killed himself by jumping in front of a moving train.
James Franciscus as Giordani. |
Could the murders somehow be linked to the Terzi Institute and involve the discovery of a chromosome that makes people prone to violent behavior?
Director Dario Argento is justly famous for his fluid camerawork and dark visual aesthetic. His camera moves less than usual in Cat o' Nine Tails, but his visual design does not disappoint. Shadow-filled streets, hallways lit with a sliver of light, and close-ups of a bloodshot eye create a pervasive atmosphere of unease. As in Val Lewton's pictures, alleys and buildings seem devoid of people--except for the victim and the killer, whose presence is often indicated by a point of view shot.
Catherine Spaak as a suspect. |
The title refers to an metaphor used by Malden, in which the cat is the crime and the nine tails are the leads that should result in solving it. That may not quite make sense, but then Cat o' Nine Tails is not a movie that can withstand close scrutiny. Watch for the visuals and the atmosphere. If you're intrigued--and not squeamish--then look for Deep Red (1975). It stars David Hemmings (Blow Up) as a pianist who witnesses the murder of a telepathic woman who sensed the thoughts of a killer during a parapsychology demonstration in a theater.
Thanks for the recommendation, Rick. I have been avoiding giallo forever but have been curious.
ReplyDeleteI've stayed away from giallo because I'm too squeamish, but this sounds like a safe way to investigate.
ReplyDeleteOoh, this sounds good! I never heard the term "giallo" before but yes, if there is slasher elements involved, I'll gladly pass the genre by. This sounds good though.
ReplyDeleteIf you hadn't have captioned "Catherine Spaak" in that photo, I would have never recognized her with that hairdo!