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poster of Black Sabbath
Rating: 7.2/10 by 421 users

Black Sabbath (1963)

Three short tales of supernatural horror. In “The Telephone,” a woman is plagued by threatening phone calls. In "The Wurdalak,” a family is preyed upon by vampiric monsters. In “The Drop of Water,” a deceased medium wreaks havoc on the living.

Directing:
  • Mario Bava
  • Priscilla Contardi
Writing:
  • Marcello Fondato
  • Aleksey Konstantinovich Tolstoy
  • Alberto Bevilacqua
  • Anton Chekhov
  • Guy de Maupassant
  • Mario Bava
Stars:
Release Date: Sat, Aug 17, 1963

Rating: 7.2/10 by 421 users

Alternative Title:
The Three Faces of Fear - US
The Three Faces of Terror - US
Las tres caras del miedo - ES
Die 3 Gesichter der Furcht - DE
Der Ring der Verdammten - AT
Les trois visages de la peur - FR
Drie Aangezichten van de Verschrikking - NL
ブラック・サバス 恐怖! 三つの顔 - JP

Country:
France
Italy
Language:
Italiano
Runtime: 01 hour 35 minutes
Budget: $0
Revenue: $0

Plot Keyword: nurse, vampire, telephone, stalker, anthology, murder, severed head, ghost, stabbed to death, horror anthology, supernatural horror, giallo
Subtitle   Wallpaper   Watch Trailer    

Boris Karloff
Gorca (segment "The Wurdalak")
Mark Damon
Vladimire d'Urfe (segment "The Wurdalak")
Michèle Mercier
Rosy (segment "The Telephone")
Susy Andersen
Sdenka (segment "The Wurdalak")
Lidia Alfonsi
Mary (segment "The Telephone")
Jacqueline Pierreux
Helen Chester (segment "A Drop Of Water")
Glauco Onorato
Giorgio (segment "The Wurdalak")
Massimo Righi
Pietro (segment "The Wurdalak")
Rika Dialina
Maria (segment "The Wurdalak")
Milo Quesada
Frank Rainer (segment "The Telephone")
Milly
The Maid (segment "A Drop Of Water")
Gustavo De Nardo
Police Inspector (segment "A Drop Of Water")
Harriet Medin
Neighbor (segment "A Drop Of Water")

CinemaSerf

Boris Karloff introduces this triptych of short stories. I found the first, the shortest, to be the least interesting centring around a greedy nurse who robs a corpse of a valuable ring only to find that it's erstwhile owner isn't quite finished with it, or her, quite yet! The second sees a beautiful woman return to her apartment one evening only to find herself subjected to repeated telephone calls warning her that she shall not see the morning! Michèle Mercier is quite effective as the terrified "Rosy" in this story. Finally, Karloff himself takes to the stage in a rather lengthier, enjoyable, vampire story that sees a travelling count discover the body of a dreaded bandit and take it to a nearby farm. It's only once there, and with the return of the father "Gorca", that he begins to realise that this danger has already been "invited in"! The productions have a very Hammer look to them, the make up and visual effects (especially in the first story) don't hold up so well, but in the main, the three stories are quite solid with portentous messages of revenge for those who would steal or cheat or kill! You are unlikely to recall it a few days after watching, but Bava knew how to do budget/studio horror quite well and the last two stories make a decent fist of developing some sense of menace and threat. Good fun.


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