Showing posts with label Diana Lorys. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Diana Lorys. Show all posts
Tuesday, November 25, 2014
WINTER OF DISCONTENT: Nightmares Come at Night
It’s just not a successful Winter of Discontent without certain movies: you need a video nasty, you need a grubby revenge thriller, and – at some point, whatever you might think of the man and his almost uncatalogueable body of work – you need un film de Jess Franco.
In selecting a Jess Franco opus, questions need to be asked: do you favour his muse and career-long leading lady Lina Romay; do you opt for one of his many riffs on the work of the Marquis de Sade; or do you just pick something with a funky title?
Employing the latter, we find ourselves in the company of ‘Nightmares Come at Night’, a title which deserves some kind of award for stating the obvious. I almost wish it were part of a trilogy, followed by ‘Daydreams Occur in the Day’ and ‘Insomnia Happens When You Can’t Sleep’.
‘Nightmares Come at Night’ tells the story of Anna (Diana Lorys), a Zagreb-based stripper (the script repeatedly references the city, presumably to compensate for the budget not allowing any establishing shots) who comes into the orbit of the rich and seductive Cynthia (Colette Giacobine) who promises to groom her as a film star. This, predictably, never occurs and Anna finds herself confined to Cynthia’s mansion and treated as little more than a plaything. Worn down by Cynthia’s mind games and cruel treatment, Anna begins having vivid nightmares involving sex and death (what else? this is a Jesus Franco production, y’all). At this point Cynthia engages the services of Dr Paul Lucas (Paul Muller), who was variously referred to as “Dr Lucas”, “Dr Paul” and “Dr Peters” in the English dub that I watched. Still, one does simply expect continuity from Jess Franco.
Most of the film occurs in flashback as Anna narrates to Dr Lucas her history with Cynthia and the shadowy, half-forgotten act that might mean she’s a murderer. Meanwhile, a young couple – Andrea Montchal and Soledad Miranda – spy on Anna and Cynthia from a neighbouring property, spout portentous dialogue that suggests there’s something conspiratorial going on, and get naked a lot.
Ah yes, the raison d’etre of Franco’s entire output: nudity. Anna’s nightmares all full of it, and she awakens from them only for her diaphanous nightgown to fall open; Cynthia lounges around sans chemise most of the time; during one crucial flashback, Anna meets a couple at a nightclub, next thing they’re reconvened somewhere private, and – whaddaya know? – they all slip into something more disrobed.
All of which is enough is make a case for Franco as little more than a pornographer, but if you did that you’d have to throw the net just that bit wider and include Jean Rollin in that definition. And though Rollin’s raison d’etre was pretty much the same as Franco’s (only with a fetishistic obsession with grandfather clocks thrown into the bargain), Rollin at his best was a poet of surreal and dreamy eroticism.
Franco – with his love of off-kilter compositions, discontiguous narrative, and mise en scene as burlesque – often seems like the almost-Rollin. Perhaps the key difference is Rollin’s absolute focus on atmosphere where Franco instead rolls up his sleeves, gleefully rubs his hands together and really gets stuck into the sleaze. Which is just as well, since ‘Nightmares Come at Night’ boasts neither an interesting resolution to its half-baked mystery or a single notable performance: Lorys occasionally tries to emote, but mostly drifts through the film with a blank expression; Giacobine doesn’t for a moment suggest a femme fatale with a dominant enough personality to enslave and manipulate those around her; and Miranda – memorable in Franco’s ‘Vampyros Lesbos’ and ‘She Killed in Ecstasy’ – is left to flounder in a nothing role.
But ultimately, the tao of Franco can be summed up as “it don’t mean a thing if it ain’t got that sleaze”. ‘Nightmares Come at Night’ got that sleaze. Plenty of it.
Sunday, January 02, 2011
GIALLO SUNDAY: The Blue Eyes of the Broken Doll

In this Spanish-made giallo, genre stalwart Paul Naschy (who co-wrote the screenplay) plays escaped convict Gilles, a man tormented by memories of strangling his lover to death. These flashbacks are filmed in a highly theatrical, almost balletic style, which leaves you wondering whether (a) director Carlos Aured had seen ‘The Red Shoes’ one too many times and (b) this event exists purely in Gilles’s mind.
It’s the first of several ploys Aured uses to disconcert the viewer, not the least of which is a tendency to bounce from one distinct style of narrative to another. Things start off in crime thriller mode as a Gilles – a drifter with a violent past – arrives in a small town. Then we’re in Polanski territory as he’s hired as handyman by Claude (Diana Lorys) – who I’m sure must have been called Claudine or Claudette in the original, since Claude is a bloke’s name; however this is the name given in the English dub and on IMDb, so Claude it is – and meets her sisters, the wheelchair-bound Ivette (Maria Perschy) and over-sexed man-eater Nicole (Eva Leon).
Power games and jealousy seem to be the order of the day, with Claude – hating herself for a disfigurement (the reason for which is never explained) – lording it over Ivette and Nicole, even going so far as to lock Nicole in her room as punishment for getting it on with Gilles.

After about 45 minutes of this, the film gets its giallo groove on good and proper as a masked and leather-gloved individual starts massacring blonde-haired blue-eyed women. The modus operandi is reinforced several times by typically ineffectual copper Inspector Pierre (Antonio Pica), with local GP – and, it would seem, part-time pathologist – Dr Philippe (Eduardo Calvo) popping up to confirm that the killer is in the habit of removing the victim’s eyeballs.
Gilles’s identity is uncovered and Inspector Pierre and the boys in blue head off to arrest him. Gilles, in true ‘High Sierra’ stylee, arms himself and heads towards the mountains. This aspect of the film is curtailed with such unexpected finality that suddenly, with twenty minutes left, all bets are off and it’s an abrupt shift back to the giallo tropes for the double whammy ending.
Or at least, what Aured probably deluded himself during shooting was a double whammy ending. The finale edges into the realms of the ridiculous with Ivette’s nurse, the blue-eyed and blonde-haired Michelle (Ines Morales) heading home at night through the woods even though it’s public knowledge that she’s exactly the type the killer is targeting. The subsequent revelation of the killer’s identity seems to bring things to a fairly guessable conclusion, then Aured pulls something out of the bag that’s so WTF that we’re not so much edging into the realms of the ridiculous as powering at unstoppable speed right into the heart of it.
On the whole, ‘The Blue Eyes of the Broken Doll’ is a fairly proficient piece of work, with a nice slow-burn atmosphere during the early stages, decent cinematography, and some well staged death scenes. The use of ‘Frere Jacques’ during these scenes is creepily effective, even if the rest of the score is jauntily inappropriate. Naschy gives the standard Naschy performance, all moody stares, piercing eyes and shirt-removal at every possible opportunity. The ladies of the cast provide eye-candy aplenty.

Certainly not top-flight, and I’d hesitate even to put it in the second tier, but ‘The Blue Eyes of the Broken Doll’ is entertaining nonetheless; even its bonkers ending is part of its charm.
Labels:
Carlos Aured,
Diana Lorys,
Eva Leon,
giallo,
Maria Perschy,
Paul Naschy
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