
Color, 1990, 86 mins. 23 secs.
Directed by Charles Band
Starring Sherilyn Fenn, Malcolm Jamieson, Charlie Spradling, Hilary Mason, Phil Fondacaro
88 Films (Blu-ray) (UK RB HD), X-Rated Kult (Blu-ray & DVD) (Germany R0 HD/PAL), Raro (Blu-ray & DVD) (US R0 HD/NTSC, Italy R0 PAL) / WS (1.85:1) (16:9)
familiar with
Full Moon Features probably has a soft spot for the "Charlie Band's Italian Castle" cycle, a short-lived streak of films he made in an abandoned medieval structure in Umbria, Italy, such as Castle Freak and The Pit and the Pendulum. Band himself directed this one, a pretty legendary title in celebrity skin circles in the '90s thanks to a lengthy, slo-mo seduction scene with extensive topless nudity by Twin Peaks' Sherilyn Fenn and another, lesser known Lynch veteran, Charlie Spradling (who popped up unclothed for one memorable line in Wild at Heart as well), billed here simply as "Charlie." Though definitely supernatural and boasting some vivid creature effects, the film barely fits in the horror genre; it's more of a dark romantic fantasy with a more interesting script than you'd expect courtesy of regular Stuart Gordon collaborator Dennis Paoli (Re-Animator). Toss in some dark, moody cinematography by the reliable Mac Ahlberg, editing by frequent Full Moon / Empire Pictures director Ted Nicolau, and a swooning electronic-heavy score by the great Pino Donaggio, and you end up with one of the strangest but most memorable early '90s offerings from the studio's early days.
Fenn as Catherine, an American sculptor who returns home to Italy
when she inherits a family castle now inhabited by her old governess (Don't Look Now's Mason). Also on hand is another gorgeous American, Gina (Spradling), who's busy restoring a particularly mysterious work of local art at the church. One afternoon they decide to check out a traveling circus where they're taken with its leader, Lawrence Fauvrey (Jamieson), and invite his troupe to dinner. However, he has other plans in mind that involve drugging the girls and seducing them with the participation of his cursed brother, Oliver, who's taken the form of a hairy beast. Soon Catherine has to unlock a dark family secret and deal with the long-running curse as she finds herself falling for the more physically horrifying but morally pure of the two brothers.
pretty low on the erotic scale; however, it's certainly something that grabs your attention whenever you stumble across it for the first time. The story itself is a really odd stew of dark
magic, romance, and European fairy tale atmosphere, which doesn't always coalesce into something satisfying but definitely makes this stand apart from the pack. U.S. DVD FRAME GRABS