Deep Red (1975)
A Film by Dario Argento
DVD9 Custom | VIDEO_TS | PAL 16:9 (720x576) | 02:06:37 | 7,43 Gb
Audio: German dub AC3 5.1 @ 384 Kbps; English dub, Italiano - AC3 5.1 @ 448 Kbps (both track)
Subtitles: German, English (only when needed in dub), English (for all dialogues; added)
Genre: Horror, Mystery, Thriller | 1 win | Italy
A Film by Dario Argento
DVD9 Custom | VIDEO_TS | PAL 16:9 (720x576) | 02:06:37 | 7,43 Gb
Audio: German dub AC3 5.1 @ 384 Kbps; English dub, Italiano - AC3 5.1 @ 448 Kbps (both track)
Subtitles: German, English (only when needed in dub), English (for all dialogues; added)
Genre: Horror, Mystery, Thriller | 1 win | Italy
A psychic who can read minds picks up the thoughts of a murderer in the audience and soon becomes a victim. An English pianist gets involved in solving the murders, but finds many of his avenues of inquiry cut off by new murders, and he begins to wonder how the murderer can track his movements so closely.
IMDB
Also known as Profondo rosso, this traditional murder mystery from Dario Argento is fast becoming his most beloved and appreciated film, even more so than Argento's more personal Suspiria (1977). Both are superb in their own way, of course. David Hemmings (Blow-Up, Last Orders) stars as Marcus Daly, a British pianist living in Italy. One night, he witnesses the murder of a lady psychic (Macha Meril), who earlier detected the killer's presence in a crowded theater. Marcus tries to solve the murder, alternately aided by and clashing with reporter Gianna Brezzi (Argento regular Daria Nicolodi). Argento continually hacks away at Marcus' manhood, making him ride in a sunken car seat, lower in stature, next to Gianna, or losing an arm-wrestling match to her. This makes an interesting parallel when the ending, and the killer, is finally revealed. In the full-length 126-minute version, Argento tosses in several meaningless shots (dogs fighting, a lizard struggling, etc.), designed to do nothing but ramp up the tension or atmosphere. One set-piece is a thing of genius: a victim scrawls information on the wall in her steam-filled bathroom, and when the steam dissipates, so does the message. Because the film has been restored, certain scenes revert from English to Italian and back again. It's a masterpiece for Argento, although I want to add that he owes everything to his lesser-known predecessor, Mario Bava.
Deep Red (Profondo rosso) was Dario Argento’s transition film, the bridge between his earlier trilogy of giallo films (Italian murder mysteries) and his later output of supernatural horror. It is also one of his best films, as it prefigures some of the elaborate stylistic devices that would come to consume his later work, yet is still deeply embedded in a tight, absorbing narrative.
Although Deep Red is first and foremost a murder mystery, it is tinted with elements of horror and the supernatural. The film begins at a conference of paranormal psychologists. While giving a lecture, a noted psychic, Helga Ulman (Macha Méril), senses that she is in the presence of a murderer who will kill again. She is right, but the twist is that she is the next victim. The murder is witnessed by Marcus Daly (David Hemmings, who played the lead in Michelangelo Antonioni’s Blowup), an English jazz pianist living and teaching in Italy. He rushes up to Helga’s apartment, but by then it is too late; Helga is dead, and he catches a glimpse of someone in a brown raincoat leaving the building. The police cast a suspicious eye on Marcus, but it is obvious that he is not the culprit. However, he can’t shake his involvement in the case because something is gnawing at him: a missing painting. When he first entered Helga’s apartment, he saw a strange painting in the hallway. But, later, he swears that it is gone. “How can that be?” he asks his drunken friend, Carlo (Gabriele Lavia), who jokingly suggests that the painting is the key to the mystery (which, of course, it is).
The rest of the plot details Marcus’s slow investigation into the case. Naturally, each new lead he turns up is murdered by the unseen killer (in true giallo style, we only see black-gloved hands) before he can reach them. He is aided by a strong-willed journalist (Gianna Brezzi), but the obsession is purely Marcus’s. He is a driven man, and the film’s final image of his face reflected in a pool of blood suggests that he may have succumbed to the madness he has sought so desperately to unveil.
Like all of Argento’s films (even his bad ones), Deep Red is replete with astonishing and eerily hypnotic images, including an opening shot of a knife murder that we only see as a shadow on the wall and another scene where a gazing human eye suddenly appears out of the darkness of a closet. There is also the suggestion of ghosts and haunted houses, and the plot incorporates sealed rooms hiding rotting corpses, a creepy nursery rhyme, family murder, and psychosis, all of which are brought together into a tight, unified whole.
Even at its most excessive, Deep Red is a film in which Argento is completely in command of his material (some of his later films have the distinctly opposite feel, that the material has a life of its own and he has no control over it). He drops hints and clues, giving us creepy tracking shots of discarded children’s toys that suggest the murderer’s psychosis and leading us down blind alleys with false leads. He throws in bits of musical and visual humor, toying with our emotions. One moment the film is light and funny, the next it is gory and sadistic. Yet, Argento never misses a beat.
While Suspiria (1977) arguably has Argento’s best opening scene, it would be hard to top the multiple climaxes of Deep Red. The solution to the mystery is a brilliant sleight of hand, and I would be surprised if it weren’t the inspiration for a similar ploy in the feature-length pilot episode of David Lynch’s Twin Peaks (1990), in which a killer was revealed in similar fashion. Argento and his co-writer, Bernardino Zapponi (who frequently collaborated with Federico Fellini), are so slick with the narrative momentum and the manner in which killer’s identity is unveiled, that they can reveal in the end that we had already seen the killer during the initial murder scene. Argento and Zapponi take advantage of cinematic perception in a way that allows them to reveal their hand from the outset, but still win the game in the end.James Kendrick, QNetwork
Special Feature: none on the source
Many Thanks to Elan.
No More Mirrors.