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A Lizard in a Woman’s Skin

A Lizard in a Woman’s Skin (1971)

Director – Lucio Fulci

Writers – Lucio Fulci, Roberto Gianviti, Jose Luis Martinez Molla, Andre Tranche

Starring – Florinda Bolkan, Stanley Baker, Jean Sorel, Silvia Monti, Alverto de Mendoza, Penny Brown, Mike Kennedy, Ely Galleani, Gearges Rigaud, Ezio Marano, Franco Balducci, Luigi Antonio Guerra, Erzsi Paal, Gaetano Imbro

 

 

Review by The_Void

First rate Fulci

When people think of Lucio Fulci, it’s always his gorier and largely incoherent efforts that spring to mind. Films like Zombie Flesh-Eaters and The Beyond, which are most definitely good films if you like that sort of thing (as I certainly do!); but they don’t adequately portray the man’s talent. If you want to see the ‘great’ Fulci films, you need to go back to his Giallo days of seventies films like Don’t Torture a Duckling and indeed this film; A Lizard in Woman’s Skin. Fulci’s first Giallo is a trippy thriller that excellently captures the laid back style of the swinging sixties and blends it magnificently with the thrilling pace that has gone on to epitomise the Italian thriller. The film follows a young woman (Florinda Bolkan) who dreams that she is having orgies with a hippy woman that lives downstairs. Events take a turn for the worse when the young woman dreams that she’s killed the hippy, who then turns up dead; brutally murdered in her apartment, in exactly the way that the woman dreamt…

While this seventies film isn’t as brutal as some of the later Giallo efforts, Fulci succeeds in creating a foreboding atmosphere and manages to keep his audience on the edge of their seats. The plot line is rather strange, and Fulci makes best use of this through an excellent Ennio Morricone score, which firmly instills the trippy atmosphere in the viewers mind. The Giallo has come to be synonymous with brutal murders and lots of gore but, ironically, Fulci keeps his murders down a minimum and some of them even happen off screen. This is both a good and a bad thing as I, personally, like seeing brutal murders in Giallo’s; but on the other hand it allows Fulci to keep the focus firmly on the central murder and he doesn’t get sidetracked with lots of blood and gore, which does the film itself lots of favours. The mystery boils down to an excellent ending, in which the film is tied up nicely and we are treated to a great twist and some first rate detective work from the detective on the case. Highly recommended viewing and a must for Giallo fans!

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70s Films

A tour through the great and not so great films of the seventies The seventies saw a huge change in styles and genres from the advent of the slasher horror movies like Halloween and the blockbuster summers films started by Jaws. More...

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