

After returning to Spain in its post-dictatorship, pro-sex and violence heyday at the start of the '80s, Jess Franco embarked on some major career and life changes that resulted in some of his least seen but wildest efforts. Soaked in gauzy Iberian sunlight and featuring very low budgets, Franco excelled with films like Cries of Pleasure, Black Boots Leather Whip, and this film. Night Has a Thousand Desires (Mil sexos tiene la noche) draws both its title and initial premise from peerless pulp writer Cornell Woolrich's Night Has a Thousand Eyes, about a doomed fake fortune teller who finds his very real, unexpected psychic visions portending actual deaths.
Fabian's older rival and Irina's possible bed mate, Ahmed (Oasis of the Zombies' Graziani), culminating in a drug-fueled and ultimately violent foursome and additional dangerous seductions. Is Fabian turning Irina into his own personal assassin, or is something even stranger at play?
Never released before in an English-friendly version (and only on DVD previously in Spain), Night Has a Thousand Desires (whose title might work better as Night Has a Thousand Sighs to preserve the pun) looks great on Blu-ray from Mondo Macabro with a fresh transfer off of the original camera negative. It's a very dark film (literally) at times, and this captures that quality well with its often intense color schemes popping out nicely. It's definitely enough to make you hope some more of Franco's films from the period get the similar treatment, and the Spanish mono audio with optional English subtitles also sounds great (featuring a mixture of older and new music by Daniel J. White, riffing in particular on Female Vampire). Of course it wouldn't be a proper Franco release these days without some sort of contribution from Stephen Thrower, author of Murderous Passions: The Delirious Cinema of Jesus Franco, in which he presents an eloquent 33-minute breakdown of the film both for its place in Franco's life (with his collaborations with Romay taking a romantic turn shortly before this) and its place as a key but lesser known entry in his filmography, using the Lorna and Irina characters in fascinating new ways. Also included is the original 24-minute Jess Franco episode of the great Eurotika! UK TV series, with the director himself and other participants (Nigel Wingrove, Peter Blumenstock, etc.) offering an intro to the challenging but immense rewards of his sprawling filmography. The usual Mondo Macabro promo reel closes out this essential release for any Franco fanatic.