pint-sized slasher fans were churning out plenty of DIY genre films on America
with Super 8 cameras or VHS camcorders, Europe wasn't slacking off either with France and Italy featuring some of the wilder offerings reflecting its own national horror culture. One who went very under the radar outside of Italy for ages was Fabio Salerno, who banded together friends and colleagues for a slew of Super 8 shorts and two (sort of) feature films before he committed suicide in 1993 at the age of 29. Sort of in the same vein as ambitious amateurs like Nathan Schiff, he was unabashed in his love for Italian horror maestros with plenty of nods to Dario Argento and unexpected tips of the hat to films like The Visitor. In 2022, Italian label/store Oblivion issued all of his extant filmography across two Blu-rays or two DVDs of his two feature-length titles and a DVD of his shorts, Salerno Splatter Shorts Show; the two full movies had English subtitle options for the main features, but otherwise everything was Italian only (not counting fuzzy burned-in subtitles on one of the shorts). In 2024, Bleeding Skull finally brought all of Salerno's work to the U.S. as a two-disc Blu-ray set with everything featuring English subtitles at last, and it's a heck of a wild ride if you love scrappy homemade horror.
Other Dimension (L'altra dimensione) (78m24s),
which is obviously three short films stitched together with an off-camera Salerno spooling them up on a projector while issuing a bit of ominous narration. The result actually works though, kicking off with the first story, "Delirium" ("Delirio"), starring Francesco Rinaldi as a young man chain-smoking and drinking his pain away three months after losing his girlfriend (Maddalena Vadacca)-- which leads to a fateful trip to Milan with a sting in the tale. In "Mortal Instinct" ("Istinto Mortale"), Elvira fan Luigi Sgroi provides shelter to his best friend (Nadia Rebeccato) from her abusive boyfriend (Piero Belloto)-- with some occult shenanigans thrown into the mix. Finally in "Eros and Thanatos (Amore e morte)," the longest of the bunch by a long shot, a musician (Marco Monzani) faces an unusual dilemma when his girlfriend (Giorgia Chezzi) passes away but is far from being out of his life. None of the stories overstay their welcome, and as with his other work, Salerno does the effects himself including some great old-fashioned monster and splatter gags guaranteed to raise a smile.
Dimension release but thankfully subbed here) about the filmmaker created by Oblivion, here subtitled in English as collaborators like Vittorio Rifranti, Enrico Vanossi, and Maurizio Casula chatting about the collaborative process
of making all the Super 8 shorts, other artistic pursuits among them, the engineering of effects via latex and stage blood, and plenty more. Also included is a very lengthy (and thankfully subtitled) VHS-shot making of Deep Night (71m51s), plus a 3m15 photo gallery with some especially cool handmade VHS art and local media ads.
serial killer while Vampiri (18m26s) is an atmospheric look at modern Slavic bloodsucking. 1984's Incubo ("Nightmare") (24m34s) depicts a man being tormented on his birthday by horrific
visions in his apartment, and Notte ("Night") (20m58s) from 1983 is a borderline abstract dialogue-free barrage of giallo-inspired imagery. 1982's Cadaveri (45m53s), one of a handful of titles in which the director amusingly credits himself as "Fabio Argento," is a very entertaining zero-budget giallo that opens with a makeup salesgirl getting attacked with a cleaver while making a house call. Then we follow the young culprit going about his business alone and with his best buddy, all while keeping track of his latest crime and figuring out what to do next. 1981's extremely lo-fi La paura esiste giĆ (Un natale rosso sangue) ("Fear Already Exists: A Blood-Red Christmas") (16m50s) has some kids getting together to listen to music and watch George Romero movies before horror spills over into real life. In a similar vein and also from '81, Magic (9m42s) has some kids get their hands on a mysterious book of black magic that unleashes some killer doll mayhem; this one also comes with an enthusiastic optional commentary by Bleeding Skull's Joseph A. Ziemba, who explains why some of the earliest films exist only as digital files made from camcorder-shot projections with far less than optimal quality (including projector noise!). Finally we close out with 1981's La signora del 5 piano ("The Lady from the 5th Floor") (23m48s), which is about... well, the dialogue is all unintelligible (as the option subtitles confirm!) but it's another creepy vignette about kids falling in with a supernatural Suspiria-inspired menace in their building and getting offed, including a pretty nutty demise involving hanging and a pair of scissors. All told, it's a real treat sitting through these shorts going more or less in reverse chronological order-- and enjoying the wonderfully chosen borrowed soundtracks that will tickle the hearts of anyone reared on Argento and Bava. Also on the disc is a vintage making-of featurette for Oltretomba (13m12s), including an ADR studio session and an interview with the director in stylish Argento-style lighting.