Blood Feast
Cast & Crew
Read More
Emilio Miraglia
Director
Film Details
Also Known As
Corpse Which Didn't Want to Die, The
MPAA Rating
Release Date
1972
Technical Specs
Duration
1h 38m
Sound
Mono
Color
Color
Theatrical Aspect Ratio
2.35 : 1
Synopsis
Director
Emilio Miraglia
Director
Film Details
Also Known As
Corpse Which Didn't Want to Die, The
MPAA Rating
Release Date
1972
Technical Specs
Duration
1h 38m
Sound
Mono
Color
Color
Theatrical Aspect Ratio
2.35 : 1
Articles
The Emilio Miraglia Killer Queen Box set on DVD
Red-headed women must have been a personal issue with director Emilio P. Miraglia, as both of these blatantly misogynistic exercises in bloodshed have murderous, scheming women at their center. In a genre not known for subtlety, these pictures take the attitude that any female not under the firm control of a man is a potential sex maniac.
1971's The Night Evelyn Came Out of the Grave (La notte che Evelyn uscì dalla tomba) exploits mental illness to present a string of sadistic sexual murders. Wealthy Englishman Alan Cunningham (Antonio De Teffé, billed as Anthony Steffen) is obsessed with his unfaithful, dead wife Evelyn. He invites similar red headed prostitutes and entertainers to the secret playrooms in his crumbling castle for sadistic games of seduction and murder. Both Alan's groundsman and his jaded Uncle (Roberto Maldera) seem aware of his activities, but only Alan's friend Dr. Richard Timberlane (Giacomo Rossi-Stuart) suggests that the troubled young playboy has a serious problem. Alan is visited by recurring nightmares in which he sees his perfidious Evelyn running to the waiting arms of another man.
Alan picks up a nightclub stripper (Erica Blanc) as his next victim and then chances upon Gladys (Marina Malfatti) at a posh garden party for swingers. He marries Gladys and brings her home to the Cunningham manor, at which point terrible things begin to happen. The visions of Evelyn return. Gladys investigates Evelyn's crypt, which is proven to be empty. A relative in a wheelchair loses her life to a caged pack of coyotes on the Cunningham grounds. And Alan is convinced he's going insane when he sees Evelyn standing in the garden, her face a rotted skull.
Alan's problems all turn out to be a dastardly series of plots within plots. The intended appeal of The Night Evelyn Came Out of the Grave is in its lovingly photographed killings and several extended nude sequences. Alan's torture chamber victims happily strip for their lover before he reaches for his bullwhip. Alan's memory of Evelyn is a dreamy slow-motion reverie of the naked woman bounding through the greenery. Every killing is associated with nudity, and killing women is presented as a logical result of sexual attraction.
The thoughtless ending of Emilio Miraglia's film resolves the conspiracy against Alan but drops the issue of his own bloody sex killings as if it wasn't important: With the "evil" women now dead, Alan is now cured, and his victims can be forgotten.
The next year's The Red Queen Kills 7 Times (La dama rossa uccide sette volte) is a more traditional murder mystery made by most of the same creative team from Evelyn. This time the setting is a castle in Germany, where the Wildenbrück family is visited by a curse involving ill-fated twins and a murderous phantom known as The Red Queen. A prologue establishes the back story in which little Kitty Wildenbrück accidentally kills her sister. The girls' grandfather answers their questions about family portrait -- of a lady with a bloody knife standing over her victim.
Years later Kitty (now Barbara Bouchet) is running an upscale fashion photography studio when more kiliings of women occur. First Rosemary (Maria Pia Giancaro) is attacked in a delivery vehicle and then the gorgeous but predatory model Lulu (Sybil Danning) meets a bloody end. The police are skeptical when witnesses report a mysterious person known as the "Red Queen" running from the murder scenes. Suspicion falls on fashion executive Martin Hoffman (Ugo Pagliai) when he benefits from the murder of a superior.
The mystery leads to more murders as Kitty and her other sister Franziska (Marina Malfatti again) try to avoid becoming the Red Queen's next victim. New revelations in the Wildenbrück castle are cut short when the real villain floods the crypt with Kitty trapped inside. Director Emilio Miraglia directs both pictures with a sure hand, emphasizing every exploitable turn of events. Casual nudity is encouraged and the cinematography emphasizes the glamour of the threatened females. They may be slashed to bits, but their hair always looks great. Red Queen makes good use of German locations while Evelyn presents a post-Mod England that looks suspiciously like the Roman suburbs.
No Shame's two-disc Emilio Miraglia Killer Queen Box Set will be a tasty treat for fans of bloody murder pictures featuring nude female victims. The enhanced 2:35 transfers are very handsome indeed, with perfect color and little if any signs of wear. Both features are uncut versions from the original negatives, presented with Italian and English mono soundtracks and removable English subtitles. The atmospheric music scores are by Bruno Nicolai.
New interviews with Erica Blanc, designer Lorenzo Baraldi and actor Marino Masé are spread out across the two films; Red Queen's extras include an alternate opening scene.
The novelty packaging for the limited edition features the above-mentioned Red Queen figurine. No Shame's keep case contains a pair of miniature lobby cards and a fat illustrated insert booklet crammed with essays and talent bios written by Chris D. and Richard Harland Smith.
For more information about The Emilio Miraglia Killer Queen Box, visit No Shame Films. To order The Emilio Miraglia Killer Queen Box, go to TCM Shopping.
by Glenn Erickson
The Emilio Miraglia Killer Queen Box set on DVD
Horror film aficionados have no shortage of Italian slasher and giallo DVDs to pick from, and No Shame Films steps to the front of the crowd with this attention-getting limited edition 2-disc boxed set. The oversized box holds a toy figurine of the villainess known as the Red Queen: A masked redhead in black tights and a red cape, brandishing a bloody dagger.
Red-headed women must have been a personal issue with director Emilio P. Miraglia, as both of these blatantly misogynistic exercises in bloodshed have murderous, scheming women at their center. In a genre not known for subtlety, these pictures take the attitude that any female not under the firm control of a man is a potential sex maniac.
1971's The Night Evelyn Came Out of the Grave (La notte che Evelyn uscì dalla tomba) exploits mental illness to present a string of sadistic sexual murders. Wealthy Englishman Alan Cunningham (Antonio De Teffé, billed as Anthony Steffen) is obsessed with his unfaithful, dead wife Evelyn. He invites similar red headed prostitutes and entertainers to the secret playrooms in his crumbling castle for sadistic games of seduction and murder. Both Alan's groundsman and his jaded Uncle (Roberto Maldera) seem aware of his activities, but only Alan's friend Dr. Richard Timberlane (Giacomo Rossi-Stuart) suggests that the troubled young playboy has a serious problem. Alan is visited by recurring nightmares in which he sees his perfidious Evelyn running to the waiting arms of another man.
Alan picks up a nightclub stripper (Erica Blanc) as his next victim and then chances upon Gladys (Marina Malfatti) at a posh garden party for swingers. He marries Gladys and brings her home to the Cunningham manor, at which point terrible things begin to happen. The visions of Evelyn return. Gladys investigates Evelyn's crypt, which is proven to be empty. A relative in a wheelchair loses her life to a caged pack of coyotes on the Cunningham grounds. And Alan is convinced he's going insane when he sees Evelyn standing in the garden, her face a rotted skull.
Alan's problems all turn out to be a dastardly series of plots within plots. The intended appeal of The Night Evelyn Came Out of the Grave is in its lovingly photographed killings and several extended nude sequences. Alan's torture chamber victims happily strip for their lover before he reaches for his bullwhip. Alan's memory of Evelyn is a dreamy slow-motion reverie of the naked woman bounding through the greenery. Every killing is associated with nudity, and killing women is presented as a logical result of sexual attraction.
The thoughtless ending of Emilio Miraglia's film resolves the conspiracy against Alan but drops the issue of his own bloody sex killings as if it wasn't important: With the "evil" women now dead, Alan is now cured, and his victims can be forgotten.
The next year's The Red Queen Kills 7 Times (La dama rossa uccide sette volte) is a more traditional murder mystery made by most of the same creative team from Evelyn. This time the setting is a castle in Germany, where the Wildenbrück family is visited by a curse involving ill-fated twins and a murderous phantom known as The Red Queen. A prologue establishes the back story in which little Kitty Wildenbrück accidentally kills her sister. The girls' grandfather answers their questions about family portrait -- of a lady with a bloody knife standing over her victim.
Years later Kitty (now Barbara Bouchet) is running an upscale fashion photography studio when more kiliings of women occur. First Rosemary (Maria Pia Giancaro) is attacked in a delivery vehicle and then the gorgeous but predatory model Lulu (Sybil Danning) meets a bloody end. The police are skeptical when witnesses report a mysterious person known as the "Red Queen" running from the murder scenes. Suspicion falls on fashion executive Martin Hoffman (Ugo Pagliai) when he benefits from the murder of a superior.
The mystery leads to more murders as Kitty and her other sister Franziska (Marina Malfatti again) try to avoid becoming the Red Queen's next victim. New revelations in the Wildenbrück castle are cut short when the real villain floods the crypt with Kitty trapped inside. Director Emilio Miraglia directs both pictures with a sure hand, emphasizing every exploitable turn of events. Casual nudity is encouraged and the cinematography emphasizes the glamour of the threatened females. They may be slashed to bits, but their hair always looks great. Red Queen makes good use of German locations while Evelyn presents a post-Mod England that looks suspiciously like the Roman suburbs.
No Shame's two-disc Emilio Miraglia Killer Queen Box Set will be a tasty treat for fans of bloody murder pictures featuring nude female victims. The enhanced 2:35 transfers are very handsome indeed, with perfect color and little if any signs of wear. Both features are uncut versions from the original negatives, presented with Italian and English mono soundtracks and removable English subtitles. The atmospheric music scores are by Bruno Nicolai.
New interviews with Erica Blanc, designer Lorenzo Baraldi and actor Marino Masé are spread out across the two films; Red Queen's extras include an alternate opening scene.
The novelty packaging for the limited edition features the above-mentioned Red Queen figurine. No Shame's keep case contains a pair of miniature lobby cards and a fat illustrated insert booklet crammed with essays and talent bios written by Chris D. and Richard Harland Smith.
For more information about The Emilio Miraglia Killer Queen Box, visit No Shame Films. To order The Emilio Miraglia Killer Queen Box, go to
TCM Shopping.
by Glenn Erickson
Night of the Bloody Apes/Feast of Flesh
In addition to the gratuitous gore, Night of the Bloody Apes also features plenty of female nudity from the wrestler heroine lounging around the locker room in her birthday suit to a female victim being stripped naked and mauled by the rampaging, sex-crazed monkey-man. Oh yes, the monkey man. See if this makes sense. A grieving scientist tries to reverse the effects of his son's terminal heart disease so he kidnaps an ape from the local zoo and transplants the heart into his son's body. The ensuing scene contains the immortal line, "Prepare the gorilla," as the scientist orders his handicapped assistant - the Spanish equivalent of Igor - to do the dirty work. As expected, the patient gets worse and eventually receives another heart transplant - this one courtesy of an unsuspecting female wrestler. So now we've got a sickly boy with a female wrestler's heart and the body of a muscle-bound Neanderthal. Nothing makes a whole lot of sense here but then consider the title. Amid the crudely staged carnage and dull exposition scenes involving a couple of inept cops are occasional moments of fun like the opening scene which introduces the lady wrestlers - they look like rejects from a Batgirl casting call. The atrociously dubbed English dialogue may even make you consider having your eardrums cleaned. Did he really say that? Yes, I'm afraid, he did. For example, in the scene where the chief inspector ridicules his underling's investigation as the product of a lively imagination, he tells him, "It's more probable that of late more and more you're watching on your television those pictures of terror." Linguistic experts could learn a lot from this movie; then again, they could suffer serious brain damage.
Night of the Bloody Apes, digitally remastered for Something Weird's DVD edition, looks better than it has any right to for a cheesy early '70s grind-house stable. And it comes with an insane amount of DVD extras including an additional feature, Feast of Flesh aka The Deadly Organ (1967), which makes even less sense than Night of the Bloody Apes and is directed by Emilio Vieyra, the man who gave us The Curious Dr. Humpp (1971). Though beautifully photographed in black and white and presented in its theatrical aspect ratio of 1.66:1, Feast of Flesh is rather slow going with a storyline that fluctuates between a masked sadist transforming women into his love slaves and a police manhunt for a serial killer that haunts a South American beach resort. Other extras include numerous short subjects and burlesque novelty numbers like "Gorilla and the Maiden," a gallery of ghoulish comic cover art, movie trailers for Face of the Screaming Werewolf (1964) and other schlock titles, 3 minutes of gory outtakes from Night of the Bloody Apes and lots more!
For more information about Night of the Bloody Apes, visit Image Entertainment, Inc.. To order Night of the Bloody Apes, visit TCM Shopping.
by Jeff Stafford
Night of the Bloody Apes/Feast of Flesh
In the grand tradition of Samson vs. the Vampire Women (1962), Blue Demon vs. the Infernal Brain (1967) or any of the countless Mexican horror adventures featuring the masked wrestler Santo, Night of the Bloody Apes (1972) takes a popular mini-genre in Mexican cinema and updates it for seventies audiences, liberally adding large helpings of violence, sex and female nudity. If nothing else the film - now available on DVD from Something Weird Video - shows just how far things have progressed since the more innocent black and white Santo features of the early sixties. Sure, the standard stock ingredients are still here - lots of wrasslin' interspersed with mad scientist/monster-on-the-rampage shtick - but there's also something new, gross-out gore effects rendered in garish color. In the case of Night of the Bloody Apes, director Rene Cardona, Jr., decided to intercut real footage of an open-heart surgery into the mad scientist laboratory segments. The effect is jarring to say the least but Cardona has never been accused of subtlety. After all, he's helmed some of the cruder exploitation films of the seventies including Survive! (1976), a low-rent rip-off of Alive, the bestseller about the Andes plane crash survivors who reverted to cannibalism, and The Night of a Thousand Cats (1972), another film about flesh-eaters featuring a castle dungeon full of starved kitties.
In addition to the gratuitous gore, Night of the Bloody Apes also features plenty of female nudity from the wrestler heroine lounging around the locker room in her birthday suit to a female victim being stripped naked and mauled by the rampaging, sex-crazed monkey-man. Oh yes, the monkey man. See if this makes sense. A grieving scientist tries to reverse the effects of his son's terminal heart disease so he kidnaps an ape from the local zoo and transplants the heart into his son's body. The ensuing scene contains the immortal line, "Prepare the gorilla," as the scientist orders his handicapped assistant - the Spanish equivalent of Igor - to do the dirty work. As expected, the patient gets worse and eventually receives another heart transplant - this one courtesy of an unsuspecting female wrestler. So now we've got a sickly boy with a female wrestler's heart and the body of a muscle-bound Neanderthal. Nothing makes a whole lot of sense here but then consider the title. Amid the crudely staged carnage and dull exposition scenes involving a couple of inept cops are occasional moments of fun like the opening scene which introduces the lady wrestlers - they look like rejects from a Batgirl casting call. The atrociously dubbed English dialogue may even make you consider having your eardrums cleaned. Did he really say that? Yes, I'm afraid, he did. For example, in the scene where the chief inspector ridicules his underling's investigation as the product of a lively imagination, he tells him, "It's more probable that of late more and more you're watching on your television those pictures of terror." Linguistic experts could learn a lot from this movie; then again, they could suffer serious brain damage.
Night of the Bloody Apes, digitally remastered for Something Weird's DVD edition, looks better than it has any right to for a cheesy early '70s grind-house stable. And it comes with an insane amount of DVD extras including an additional feature, Feast of Flesh aka The Deadly Organ (1967), which makes even less sense than Night of the Bloody Apes and is directed by Emilio Vieyra, the man who gave us The Curious Dr. Humpp (1971). Though beautifully photographed in black and white and presented in its theatrical aspect ratio of 1.66:1, Feast of Flesh is rather slow going with a storyline that fluctuates between a masked sadist transforming women into his love slaves and a police manhunt for a serial killer that haunts a South American beach resort. Other extras include numerous short subjects and burlesque novelty numbers like "Gorilla and the Maiden," a gallery of ghoulish comic cover art, movie trailers for Face of the Screaming Werewolf (1964) and other schlock titles, 3 minutes of gory outtakes from Night of the Bloody Apes and lots more!
For more information about Night of the Bloody Apes, visit Image Entertainment, Inc.. To order Night of the Bloody Apes, visit TCM Shopping.
by Jeff Stafford