A Brilliant Conflict
Clever, believable, and super fun to watch. It totally has replay value.
View MoreThis is a must-see and one of the best documentaries - and films - of this year.
View MoreThis is one of the best movies I’ve seen in a very long time. You have to go and see this on the big screen.
View More"Weekend Murders" perfectly summarizes all the reasons why Italian gialli-movies made between 1970 and 1980 are my absolute favorite type of horror flicks! Surely this little flick steals ideas of several other classics, surely it's incredibly absurd and far- fetched, and surely it isn't that well-made But, come on, you just have to discover how much fun and exhilaration this crazy little whodunit thriller provides! "Weekend Murders" is basically a spoof of an Agatha Christie story, particularly "Ten Little Indians/And Then There Were None", and thus definitely not your standard type of giallo, however the highly imaginative murder methods and bizarrely eccentric characters are maintained. And then there's something else that usually never features in gialli, namely lots and lots of humor! Director Michele Lupo – mostly known for his numerous Terence Hill & Bud Spencer action/comedy vehicles – marvelously succeeds in narrating the tale of jealousy, family hatred and murder in a very light-headed fashion, with special thanks to a handful of delightfully funny dialogs and a cast full of respectable names with (hidden) comedy talents. Gastone Moschin, for example, whom I only knew from the raw and violent crime thriller "Milano Calibro .9", here demonstrates his comedy skills together with the textbook British Lance Percival. Speaking of textbook British, "Weekend Murders" is probably the only Italian film that successfully manages to look authentically British (aside from the dubbing) with gloomy land houses, stereotypically well-mannered characters and oppressed humor. The film creatively opens somewhere halfway in the plot, in fact. When a lifeless body is discovered in the sandpit of a golf course, local police sergeant Aloisius Thorpe reminds his Scotland Yard colleague that this is already the third vicious murder in three days. So we go back in time and get acquainted with the remaining members of the Carter family and their partners. They have gathered in the old family home for the reading of the will of their deceased patriarch. Like often the case with inheritances and greedy relatives, most of them aren't too happy with the outcome. Soon after the first murder takes place and this indirectly leads to what I personally find the most hilarious part of the movie. For you see, the first victim is Peter butler, so one of the characters makes the incredibly dry and witty remark: "Well, at least this time nobody can say that the butler did it". Anyways, more murders follow, but Sergeant Thorpe certainly isn't as dim-witted as he looks and impressively gets closer and closer to capturing the killer. For my liking, the body count easily could (and should) have been a bit higher, but I was pleasantly surprised by the ingenious unfolding of the mystery and by the revelation of the killer's identity + modus operandi. If all this isn't persuasive enough just yet, "Weekend Murders" also has an awesome score, with a fantastic reworking of the catchy classical music by Pyotr Tchaikovsky, and stars a few couple of really ravishing actresses (Ida Gallo, Anna Mofo, Beryl Cunningham, Orchidea de Santis). It exists on DVD, what are you waiting for?
View MoreWhen a friend showed me the trailer to this film,I was surprised at how different this looked to any of the other films in the Giallo genre that I had seen.One of the things that I noticed from the trailer was,that the film seemed to have been inspired by the works of novelist Agatha Christie and with having enjoyed watching the Margaret Rutherford Miss Marple films with my dad over the years,I felt that this was defiantly a film that was worth watching.The Plot:At a family gathering to hear the will of a recently deceased wealthy relative,the local police officer (sgt . Aloisius Thorpe) at the village near by the deceases mansion, (where all his family are gathered to hear the will) decides to pay a visit to make sure that the reading of the will goes as smoothly as possible.After the reading (which has angered most of the family,due to almost all of them hardly getting anything at all,apart from the one who looked after him for the last three years of his life,who has inherited most of his huge estate.)As Thorpe starts to leave the family and the mansion behind,he is shocked to discover the dead body of the mansions butler!.Realiseing something foul may be afoot Thorpe gets some detectives from Scotland Yard to come down to help him investigate this strange death.With everyone being told to stay at the mansion for the next few days,due to the investigation of the murder,the police are almost stunned into silence,when they find another dead body,which is this time one of the family members (Ted Collins).As more dead bodies start to pile up,and the police begin to suspect that a killer may be loose in the mansion,Aloisius Thorpe decides that he has had enough of trying to follow loose ends,and that he is instead going to do a complete search of the mansion and its surroundings.When Thorpe finds out that before he died the wealthy relative had become obsessed with star gazing from the tallest plier in the mansion.This leads Thorpe to thinking that along with looking up in the sky to gaze at the stars,he may also be able to look down,to gaze at the murderer... View on the film: The first people who I feel should be massively praised for the film are the DVD company Code Red who,instead of letting this extremely strong Giallo fade away into complete obscurity,have into brought the film right back to the present,with a DVD that is filled with fantastic special features.With the screenplay,writers Fabio Pittorru,Massimo Felisatti and Sergio Donati surprisingly stay away from most of the ingredients that Giallo films are famous for,with no sign of any black gloves at all!,they instead go for a much more "traditional" English mystery plot,that feels as if this is a film that could have an adaptation of a long lost Agatha Christie novel.This Giallo also has the unique distinction of perhaps,being the only Giallo that would be perfectly suitable for the whole family to watch (from age 8 to 80!),due to its fun light breezy feel,that has something for everyone.For the music,composer Francesco De Masi has written a very enjoyable score,which has a main theme that will be stuck in your head for days!.Although the screenplay mostly stays away from the style,the fantastic directing from Michele Lupo injects an excellent Giallo feel into the film,with a very good use of jump cuts and whip-pans,that help to show the uneasiness that all of the family have for each other.Final view on the film: A fantastic,very different Giallo, that the whole family can enjoy!
View MoreIf anyone out there has this on DVD give it a close look from the start. Why? Well, my Dad is in it!!!!! The stately home scenes were part shot at Somerleyton Hall, not far from where we live. Anyway, when my Dad and his brother, simply riding by and puzzled by a crowd, stopped the car to see what all the commotion was about, a back-combed sycophant suddenly appeared, carrying a clipboard and asked if they could spare a few moments to fill a couple of subsidiary roles.Hey presto, the old man became the young dark haired stretcher bearing ambulance man and his brother became a taxi driver (although his scene was cut). They were given exceptional 24 hour equity memberships (the actors union) and were dismissively paid about £10 each for their trouble - not bad for 1970!!! They were also told that the working title of the film was "Weekend Murders" but it might have some kind of Italian title upon release.Their abiding memory was of Lance Percival (English comedian & actor on the fringe of the "carry on" team, popular 1960's/1970's) being locked in the portable toilet by one of the sound crew.There you go - a bit of movie trivia for you.
View MoreThis is a take off of the agatha christie type films done in the italian style and set in a statley home in britian.It is great fun and should be seen.Great use of classical music,zoom shots,red herrings and a little bit of the naughty..i mean a little bit,it was early 70s. great apperance by ballard barclay,the major in fawlty towers.It will not set the world on fire but you could do worse. Out of ten,say seven
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