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Seven Blood Stained Orchids (Special Edition) aka Sette orchidee macchiate di rosso [Blu-ray]
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Editorial Reviews
A Code Red Release A maniac on the loose is committing savage acts of slaughter, and one survivor may be the only key to unmasking the serial slayer known as the Half-Moon Killer. The mysterious half-moon lockets could be the only key to unraveling his sinister motives, but will that be enough before he completes his ice-cold plot to claim his intended seven victims? Based on a classic murder mystery novel by Edgar Wallace (King Kong) and starring Uschi Glas (College Girl Murders), Antonio Sabato (Grand Prix, Escape from the Bronx) and the stunning Marisa Mell (Danger Diabolik), this stylish shocker from the golden age of Italian thrillers is a crimson-dripping gem from cult director Umberto Lenzi (Almost Human, Spasmo).
Special Features:
-Brand New 2017 HD Master
-Includes both English and Italian Audio Tracks
-Brand New Interview With Director Umberto Lenzi
-Brand New Audio Commentary By Film Historian Troy Howarth
-Vintage Interview With Umberto Lenzi And Gabriella Giorgelli
-Original Theatrical Trailer
Product details
- MPAA rating : Unrated (Not Rated)
- Product Dimensions : 6.75 x 5.3 x 0.35 inches; 2.4 Ounces
- Director : Umberto Lenzi
- Media Format : Anamorphic, NTSC, Subtitled, Widescreen
- Run time : 1 hour and 32 minutes
- Release date : January 2, 2018
- Actors : Antonio SabatoUschi Glas, Marisa Mell, Uschi Glas, Rossella Falk, Marina Malfatti
- Subtitles: : English
- Studio : Code Red
- ASIN : B077HB8C5T
- Country of Origin : USA
- Number of discs : 1
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Best Sellers Rank:
#51,985 in Movies & TV (See Top 100 in Movies & TV)
- #1,718 in Mystery & Thrillers (Movies & TV)
- #1,922 in Horror (Movies & TV)
- #4,190 in Drama Blu-ray Discs
- Customer Reviews:
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Top reviews from the United States
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Also stars Marisa Mell(Danger: Diabolik, Casanova 70; her off-screen life is one of the most bizarre stories you'll hear) and dozens - dozens! of familiar faces round out the cast.
Features a convoluted(not confusing, however) plot, yet still makes sense and is easy and fun to follow. The finale doesn't cheat either.
Movie seems relatively high budget - great sets, locations and some of the best camera work seen in a Lenzi film. Eye popping color and inventive camera work; some inventive POV shots from the killer and victim(s) incredibly effective.
Ric Ortolini's score more "rock" than his other compositions - indeed, there's a Jimi Hendrix poster in a dope pad.
Great fun, I'd recommend this to a giallo newbie; heaps of highly stylized sex and violence.
Code Red did a great job on this one. English and Italian language, both subtitled. (The dubbed with English subs is the most fun.) Great picture and audio. Extras, too! Not your average bare-boned Code Red release. I hope they put as much effort to quality for upcoming bluray releases.
Based on stories by Edgar Wallace and (allegedly) Cornell Woolrich, "Seven Blood Stained Orchids" features a black-gloved psycho killer chasing around Italy murdering women and leaving half-moon trinkets at the scene--his/her calling card, if you will. One of the women, played by German actress-with-perpetually-awful-hair Uschi Glas, is brutally slashed on a train by the killer after her husband momentarily leaves her alone in their compartment. Luckily for her, an attendant interrupts the attack, allowing Uschi and her new hubby (a shadily handsome Antonio Sabato, Sr.) to spend the rest of the movie trying to figure out who the killer is and what Uschi did to piss him/her off. Or was the killer just trying to be helpful and carve out a new hairstyle for poor Uschi? Well, no, as it turns out, that is not the motive, although it makes about as much sense as the one given. Doesn't matter, though, because "Seven Blood Stained Orchids" is a lively, interesting, very stylish thriller with gory kill shots (the scene with the power drill is an obvious influence on dePalma's "Body Double") and, for those who are interested, Marisa Mell in dual roles. Giallo queen Marina Malfatti also shows up briefly as a glammed-out cat lady with a killer apartment (seriously, I MUST have that apartment), and Pier Paolo Capponi has a fine time playing an (as usual) ineffectual police inspector.
The Code Red blu-ray looks gorgeous, and the audio is excellent, enhancing composer Riz Orztolani's eerie and evocative score. The extras are entertaining if not plentiful, and the always-interesting film historian, Troy Howarth, adds to the audio commentary.
Finally, "Seven Blood Stained Orchids" more than holds its own against most other gialli of the era and is a worthy inclusion to any thriller buff's collection.
A serial murderer, dubbed "The Half-Moon Killer" by the Press (based on the half-moon lockets he leaves on his victims), has warned the police that he will claim seven victims, but one woman has survived his slaughter. She could hold the key to unmasking the killer, but at what cost?
We first see the black-gloved killer sneaking into a house, switchblade in hand. He enters a bedroom where a middle-aged woman is sleeping. He viciously stabs the woman when she wakes up, looking at a photo of her daughter on the nightstand. He then drives to the daughter (Gabriella Giorgelli; WOMEN IN CELL BLOCK 7 - 1973), who is a prostitute waiting for a john at a local hooker walk. The killer picks her up in his classy car and drives her to a field on the bank of the Tiber River, where she strips topless. The killer then pummels her with a metal bar until her bloody body lies dead on the ground, leaving a half-moon locket in her hand. Police Inspector Vismara (Pier Paolo Capponi; THE CAT O'NINE TAILS - 1971) arrives at the scene the next morning and asks Lt. Palumbo (Aldo Barberito; ROME: ARMED TO THE TEETH - 1976) to find out the hooker's real name and to find out why she was called "La Toscana" on the street. Giulia Torresi (Uschi Glass; ANGELS OF TERROR - 1971), who is about to marry clothing designer Mario Gerosa (Antonio Sabato; THE MAN WITH ICY EYES - 1971), gets a phone call from the killer at the boutique she owns, but he hangs up. Mario spends his last day as a bachelor at an art gallery with a bunch of "abstract painters", where the killer calls the gallery and asks to speak to "Kathy Adams", but when the gallery owner says he will look for her, the killer hangs up the phone. We then see that the killer was calling from inside the gallery and he watches as Kathy Adams (Marina Malfatti; THE RED QUEEN KILLS SEVEN TIMES - 1972) picks up the phone and discovers there is no one on the other end. What is the killer's game?
We soon find out. Kathy leaves the gallery and goes home (to feed her cats). As she is getting ready for bed, she hears her cats moaning and goes to investigate, finding her three cats lying on the kitchen floor, poisoned by the milk she just fed them. The killer then stabs Kathy in the neck, leaving a half-moon locket on her dead, topless body. What is the connection between Kathy and "La Toscana"? The Inspector wants to know, too, as he hasn't identified "La Toscana" yet and orders Lt. Palumbo to dig up some info on her so he can have some idea who he is dealing with.
The next time we see Giulia and Mario, they are married and traveling by train to have a quick honeymoon. When Mario leaves their compartment to go get a sandwich, the killer strikes, slicing away at Giulia with a straight razor, but the conductor hears the commotion and interrupts the killer before he can leave the half-moon locket. At Giulia's funeral, the police take photos of every male person that attended, thinking the the killer would be there. Mario is able to identify everyone in the photos, except for one (It's a photo of Lt. Renzi [Franco Fantasia; THE MURDER MANSION - 1972]; a trick perpetrated by Lt. Palumbo without the Inspector's knowledge). Mario tells the Inspector that he has known Giulia for three years, ever since her father died, and he doesn't believe she has any connection to the two other murdered women, but the Inspector is not so sure. It is at this time that we discover that Giulia is very much alive, her funeral a ploy to get the killer to expose himself. Is it possible that the killer is in the photos that Mario identified?
Giulia is not able to identify Kathy because she didn't know her, but she is able to identify "La Toscana". Her name was Ines and she worked as a maid at a hotel her father once owned (She was called "La Toscana" because the hotel was in Tuscany). Giulia tells the Inspector that Ines was engaged to Giovanni Rau (Nello Pazzafini; CONTRABAND - 1980), an unpleasant man who took advantage of Ines' position and stole from the hotel. Giulia and Ines "denounced" Giovanni (whatever that means) and he swore to get even. The Inspector and Lt. Palumbo grill Giovanni (complete with a bright light shining on his face!), but they get nowhere, even though he confesses (but they don't believe him).
Giulia and Mario then go on a trip, where he gives her a half-moon keychain and tells her it was a present from the Inspector (WTF?!?). Giulia looks at the keychain and tells Mario that she recognizes it. It looks exactly the same as a keychain left on a table at her father's hotel two years earlier. All she can remember about the man who left it was that he was American, tall, young, but his face escapes her. She knows he wasn't a client of the hotel, as he would only eat there every once in a while. Giulia also remembers he lived in a resident's hotel on the River Del Sole. Mario postpones their trip and they head to the resident's hotel, where Mario pretends to be a private investigator and grills the hotel manager. Mario gets nowhere, but Giulia gets an idea to check the hotel's registry books since, by law, they have to keep them for five years. She hopes seeing the American's name will trigger an identity in her mind (It's a good plan). Giulia remembers it was the end of the season, in September or October of 1969, but when she and Mario look at the books, the page for September 29, 1969 is missing. Is the killer that intelligent to get rid of any evidence that can identify him? Giulia and Mario are shocked to discover that Kathy Adams stayed at the hotel on September 28 & 30, so she must have been there on the 29th. Did she remove the page and, if she did, why? Giulia and Mario are able to deduce that seven women (including Giulia) were at the hotel that weekend in 1969 and two of them are dead (three if you count Giulia). Is it possible that the other four women, Anita Ferri, Elena Marchi, Concetta De Rosa and Anna Sartori, are next on the killer's list? A priest (Renato Romano; THE SECRET OF DORIAN GRAY - 1970) turns up every once in a while to supply Mario and Giulia with vital information, but why does it always sound like a warning?
We discover that Elena Marchi (Rossella Falk; BLACK BELLY OF THE TARANTULA - 1971) is in an insane asylum and believes the Devil wants to kill her. Anita Ferri died a year ago of natural causes. Concetta De Rosa (Petra Schürmann; SCHOOL OF FEAR - 1969) lives in Palermo and Anna Sartori (Marisa Mell; MARTA - 1971) married the wealthy Palmieri (Ivano Davoli) and are currently touring Australia. Mario deduces that Elena is the next person on the killer's list, so he and Giulia head for the asylum, but they are too late, as the killer has made his way into Elena's room and drowns her in the bathtub (an incredibly tense scene). The killer attacks Mario, stabbing him in the arm and Giulia sees the killer fleeing. The Inspector, who has two policemen stand guard over Giulia and Mario, goes to Palermo to talk to Concetta, who is a school teacher. Mario ditches the police and talks to Raffaele Ferri (Claudio Gora; MAD DOG - 1977), the widower of the deceased Anita, and comes up with a drawing of the American based on Raffaele's memory (He looks like Charlie Brown!). Mario begins showing the drawing on the streets, where a beggar notices him as a friend of Barrett (Bruno Corazzari; THE STRANGE VICE OF MRS. WARDH - 1971), a man who throws sleazy sex parties. Mario finds Barrett at one of his sex parties and he tells Mario that the American's name is Frank Saunders, but he hasn't seen him since July of 1969, when Frank got "hung up on some chick" and then disappeared. Concetta goes to church for Confessional and when the Inspector realizes it was a trap set up by the killer, he races to the church (another incredibly tense scene), only to find Concetta dead in the confessional, strangled with a half-moon locket in her hand. Mario gets close to finding Frank and when he gets too close, the killer calls him on the phone and sets up a meeting. Mario discovers the grave marker of Frank Saunders in a cemetery, who died on September 30, 1969. Beneath the headstone lie seven orchids stained with red and Mario asks the cemetery custodian who left the orchids. He doesn't know, but he tells Mario this is the first time anyone has visited Frank's grave since he died. Mario discovers Frank died in a car accident just outside of Rome and the unknown woman driving the car that killed Frank left the scene, making his death a murder. Meanwhile, the Inspector meets Anna Sartori and her husband at the airport, as they have just returned from Australia.
Think you know who the killer is? You better, because I am not going to give it away. Just as in all my giallo reviews, I have given you enough information for you to figure out on your own. Director/co-screenwriter Umberto Lenzi (KNIFE OF ICE - 1972; SPASMO - 1974; EYEBALL - 1975) has crafted a twisty story with many unexpected reveals. While not overly violent, the mystery will have you riveted to your seat and the frequent nudity by a cast of beautiful actresses will have your eyes wide open. As a matter of fact, when Anna is murdered by the killer with a Black & Decker electric drill, it is the most brutal murder in the film and it took me by surprise because it was unlike any other killing before it. Particularly effective is the sequence where the killer stalks Giulia when he finds out she is still alive. My fingernails were never shorter, because I was biting them constantly (The death of the killer in Mario's huge underground swimming pool is a real nail-biter!). Above all, the mystery makes perfect sense, as the story (Screenplay by Lenzi & Roberto Gianviti [DON'T TORTURE A DUCKLING - 1972]) doesn't take one false turn like many giallo flicks from this period. This is one of the better early-'70s giallo films, worthy of being part of your film library.
Filmed as SETTE ORCHIDEE MACCHIATE DI ROSSO ("Seven Orchids Stained In Red"), this never received a theatrical or legitimate VHS release in the United States, making its first appearance on these shores courtesy of a widescreen DVD from Shriek Show/Media Blasters, which is long OOP. My review is based on the excellent Blu-Ray from Code Red, which is available in its original Italian with English subtitles (my preferred way of watching foreign films) or English dubbed. The print is blemish-free and looks and sounds wonderful, especially Riz Ortolani's (HORROR CASTLE - 1963) effective and haunting music score, which adds greatly to the film's tension. Extras on the disc include one of Lenzi's final interviews (he passed away late in 2017), where he tells us he based this film on Cornell Woolrich's novel and not on a Edgar Wallace story as the German co-producers claimed. He and Roberto Gianviti sued the producers when they saw German posters claiming that it was a film based on an Edgar Wallace story and they won. Lenzi has nothing but good memories about making the film and says that Antonio Sabato tried to seduce every woman who appeared in the film. Who can blame him when all the women are beautiful? I sure can't. The disc also contains vintage interviews with Lenzi and actress Gabriella Giorgelli (ported over from the Shriek Show DVD) and running commentary from Troy Howarth. Look for an extremely young Camille Keaton (I SPIT ON YOUR GRAVE - 1978) as a hippie chick sitting on a couch during Barrett's sex party. Also starring Linda Sini (WAR OF THE PLANETS - 1966), Enzo Andronico (SPECIAL COP IN ACTION - 1976), Fulvio Mingozzi (TRAGIC CEREMONY - 1972), Tom Felleghy (FOUR FLIES ON GREY VELVET - 1971), Fulvio Pellegrino (THE DEVIL WITH SEVEN FACES - 1971) and the prolific Carla Mancini (FLAVIA THE HERETIC - 1974) as Anna's maid. Not Rated.
Top reviews from other countries
Lenzi knows exactly what he is doing and is extremely comfortable in this sub-genre. The mystery is front and center and Lenzi leads the viewer on a chase to find out who this person is. It really does mix Slashers and Whodunits perfectly. The film looks great, The design and style are present, there is some stand out scenes. I love the woman early on in her apartment as she finds her cats and is then slaughtered her self.
This is a great looking transfer of the film.
Ottima questa edizione HD inglese con un altrettanto ottimo riversamento video, audio 2.0 anche in italiano con sottotitoli inglese opzionali.
Da evidenziare l'intervista a Umberto Lenzi di 20 minuti circa e completamente in italiano presente negli extra, la raffinata custodia della slipcase con effetto vellutato al tatto (a dimostrazione di quanto la pellicola sia considerata all'estero) e la copertina reversibile con la locandina originale italiana su un lato!
Sicuramente consigliato agli appassionati del genere
Reviewed in Italy on April 16, 2021
Ottima questa edizione HD inglese con un altrettanto ottimo riversamento video, audio 2.0 anche in italiano con sottotitoli inglese opzionali.
Da evidenziare l'intervista a Umberto Lenzi di 20 minuti circa e completamente in italiano presente negli extra, la raffinata custodia della slipcase con effetto vellutato al tatto (a dimostrazione di quanto la pellicola sia considerata all'estero) e la copertina reversibile con la locandina originale italiana su un lato!
Sicuramente consigliato agli appassionati del genere

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