RINGS OF FEAR aka
TRAUMA aka Enigma Rosso (1978)
Dir. Alberto Negrin
Written by
(seriously!) Marcello
Coscia & Massimo Dallamano & Franco Ferrini & Stefano Ubezio &
Alberto Negrin & Peter Berling. All named in the opening credits. IMDB goes on to name Thomas
Danneberg (dialogue: German version) and Miguel de Echarri (screenplay). Maybe
they didn’t have room on-screen to include them?
Starring Fabio Testi, Christine
Kaufmann, Ivan Desny, Jack Taylor, Fausta Avelli
(WARNING: in case the following pullquote doesn’t ring your alarm
bells, this is probably one of those reviews you shouldn’t read if you would be
the type to get upset about things which it would be completely reasonable to
get upset about. Italy, man, what can I say?)
“The pace is brisk and
the school shower scene is truly gratuitous.” -- IMDB reviewer HumanoidOfFlesh,
Nov 19, 2010.
RINGS OF FEAR starts out by ogling the nude breasts of an
underaged corpse. But before you get too judgmental, I have some reassuring news: except for one scene where it blatantly ogles a bunch of
16-year-olds playing together in the showers (the camera reluctantly follows
the action of our leading girl as she leaves the showers, and then zips back
in for one more peek before it cuts) and one scene where a girl is murdered
at an orgy via penetration by a giant dildo… well, other than those scenes and
a few others it gets a little classier as it goes on, at least as far these things go! I
wasn’t aware of this going in, but apparently RINGS OF FEAR is considered the third film
in the loose “schoolgirls in peril!” trilogy which began with WHAT HAVE YOU
DONE TO SOLANGE? and continued with WHAT HAVE THEY DONE WITH YOUR DAUGHTERS?, and
would have continued seamlessly here if not for the death of director Massimo
Dallamano* (still one of the six credited co-writers). But the dream was too
beautiful to die with its author, and so, just as it looked like we might have to live in a dark world with only two sleazy "schoolgirls in peril!" Italian movies from the 70's, in stepped TV director Alberto Negrin
(the Secret of the Sahara miniseries starring Michael York, Andie MacDowell,
and Ben Kingsley[!]) to offer us one last wild ride with those schoolgirls who,
darn it, just can’t seem to stay out of peril.
The peril these particular schoolgirls have found
themselves in began prior to the events of the movie, as our protagonist,
Inspector Gianni Di Salvo (Fabio Testi, THE GARDEN OF THE FINZI-CONTINIS, but
most known for having a name which literally translates as “Fabulous
Testicles”**) discovers when he steps in on a case which concerns a 16-year old
schoolgirl. This particular schoolgirl is now thankfully out of peril, as she
is currently deceased, having been killed by a giant dong (hey, I warned you!). Her classmates seem
to know more than they’re saying, which becomes a real problem for them when
they start to get targeted by a mystery avenger operating under the nom de guerre “Nemesis,” who may be a vigilante trying to avenge the dead girl, or the real
killer trying to intimidate these co-conspirators into silence. Either way, Di
Salvo is on the job, and he knows just what to do: kick his way into the school
in the dead of night, rouse everyone from their beds, and shout at everyone
incoherently that a girl was murdered and raped with a huge penis. When that
somehow fails to produce the desired results, he’s gotta get creative.
Despite the three “M”s prominently on display,*** this is
probably more poliziotteschi than giallo, with a tough-guy cop as the
main character, and most of the movie devoted to his hard-nosed attempts at
shaking down the local underworld characters for information on this mysterious
fiend with the killer johnson. Its style is more gritty than surreal, with a
handful of action-packed chase scenes and fights, nearly always shot
on-location during the daytime. But it has a few appreciably nutty
stalking/suspense sequences too, probably just barely enough to justify describing
it as a horror-thriller, if you were inclined to be generous about such things
for some reason, such as if you were a person who blogs mostly about horror
movies and saw this during October and was consequently honor-bound to write
about it, for example.
It is a
whodunnit, anyway, and, in fact, one with a batty enough solution to please
even the most discerning connoisseurs of psychotic Italian exploitation cinema.
(SPOILERS FOLLOW!) It turns out, in fact, to be a double mystery --
“Nemesis” and the dildo murderers are actually unrelated, and Di Salvo has been
unknowingly chasing two perps, not one. The whole thing with the dead
schoolgirl actually ends up mostly only being a sex conspiracy, not a murder
conspiracy; it seems the young woman in question was just an participant in a
totally normal and consensual school-wide orgy between underaged classmates and
creepy old men, and one of the participants simply miscalculated what size of
dildo he could use on her without fatal results. You know how that goes. What a
faux pas! Anyway, just a completely understandable misunderstanding; in fact,
I’m not even sure the movie ever bothers to actually identify the person responsible for the original death, it’s much more interested on the subsequent coverup. “Nemesis,” though,
turns out to be a little more interesting: it is, in fact, the adorable little
sister of the dead girl, resorting to some straight up fucking SAW shit to
punish her sisters’ complicit classmates. The movie seems pretty comfortable with
her assessment that these terrified 16-year-olds are equally culpable (if not
more!) than the adult males who presumably put together this sordid little
soiree; so much so that when Di Salvo finally figures it out, he doesn’t even
punish this little fucking psycho, and in fact the movie implies that they may
team up from here on! Seriously, it ends with an unmistakable "I think this is the beginning of a beautiful friendship" scene! Jesus, this has to be the most depraved, Machiavellian
little kid since… well, I DRINK YOUR BLOOD only eight years earlier. What the fuck was up with the 70’s and thinking
murderous little tykes were cute? (END SPOILERS)
Anyway, that’s a pretty
nutty solution to a pretty nutty mystery, but still, it does
basically kind of make sense. Not, like, in the way real things in real life
make sense, of course, but in the sense that most of the basic questions posed
get answered, and the solutions roughly conform to the basic tenets of the
plot up to that point. Frankly six screenwriters (and possibly as many as eight!) adding up
to a whodunnit which even vaguely coheres is kind of a miracle in itself, and
when you throw 1978 Italy into the mix, we’re basically talking about quantum
probability here. Nice work, RINGS OF FEAR. Not that the solution really matters, of course; the real enjoyment of this sort
of thing --if you are, like me, the sort of person who has it in them to enjoy
this sort of thing, and if you’re not, I sincerely commend you on being a
better person than I am-- is in the journey, not the destination. A lot of it
is disappointingly down-to-earth, considering the ludicrous premise, but it’s
peppered all the way through with colorful details. You got a red herring
character with a mysterious fake hand, a death by spilled marbles, an
interrogation on a real roller coaster which absolutely looks none-too-safe
(featuring the venerable Jack Taylor, THE GHOST GALLEON, something of a Euro-sleaze staple), and
one of the most hilariously abrupt suicides of all time. So it’s a pretty good
time, especially when it’s rockin’ the jazzy, uptempo title track by Riz
Ortolani (DON'T TORTURE A DUCKLING, CANNIBAL HOLOCAUST), which is as funky and catchy as it is wildly inappropriate. RINGS OF FEAR is by no means essential cinema, even
by Italian trash standards, but it is both idiosyncratic and sleazy enough to
satisfy the only people on Earth who would ever come across it.
Which is all, now that I
think about it, just a unnecessary longwinded way of saying exactly what we
began with: “The pace is brisk and the school shower scene is truly
gratuitous.” Next time I’ll let it go at that.
* Dallamano, by the way, directed a handful of
giallo and poliziotteschi flicks, but is most known as the cinematographer for
A FISTFUL OF DOLLARS and FOR A FEW DOLLARS MORE. Seriously!
** Warning: translation may not be accurate.
*** Murder, Mystery, and Misogyny
CHAINSAWNUKAH 2018
CHECKLIST!
Searching For Bloody
Pictures
TAGLINE
|
No Girl Can Ever Feel
Safe, warns the poster.
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TITLE ACCURACY
|
Yeah, no idea what
that means. I think the Italian title is just “Red Mystery,” which also is
inaccurate, in fact I’m not sure there’s even any blood in here.
|
LITERARY ADAPTATION?
|
Nope
|
SEQUEL?
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None.
|
REMAKE?
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No
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COUNTRY OF ORIGIN
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Italy
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HORROR SUB-GENRE
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Giallo (sort of),
Whodunnit
|
SLUMMING A-LISTER?
|
None, although Fabio
Testi worked with Vittorio di Sica, which is pretty baller.
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BELOVED HORROR ICON?
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None
|
NUDITY?
|
Yes, but you’re obligated
by law not to enjoy it, so don’t get too excited you creep.
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SEXUAL ASSAULT?
|
Yes.
|
WHEN ANIMALS ATTACK!
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No.
|
THE UNDEAD?
|
None
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POSSESSION?
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No
|
CREEPY DOLLS?
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None
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EVIL CULT?
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No.
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MADNESS?
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Nah
|
TRANSMOGRIFICATION?
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None
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VOYEURISM?
|
Just by the camera.
|
MORAL OF THE STORY
|
It is entirely
possible to have a productive conversation with a murder suspect while also riding
a roller coaster, and you should do it.
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