Lo spettacolo dell'orrore italiano: Manhattan Baby, aka Eye of the Evil Dead

According to the internet, so it must be true, director Lucio Fulci did not  like the title of Manhattan Baby, his second feature released in 1982. He preferred the title ‘Evil Eye.’ He had a point. ‘Manhattan Baby’ makes it sound like this movie is just a ripoff of Rosemary’s Baby, and it is not. If there is any horror movie this flick cribs from, it’s The Exorcist. 

Manhattan Baby stars Christopher Connelly as George Hacker, a professor of Egyptology. In an introduction featuring some beautiful location work in Egypt, Hacker is shown heading an archeological dig. A tomb is uncovered, and while Hacker is exploring it, he falls through a trapdoor into another chamber. There, a strange symbol carved into the wall, with a glowing jewel in its center, shoots blue lasers into his eyes, blinding him. Meanwhile, Hacker’s daughter, Susie (Brigitta Boccoli), and wife, Emily (Laura Lenzi), are nearby, having accompanied George for a vacation. At the same time George is being blinded, an old woman with clouded eyes is giving Susie a medallion just like the mysterious symbol George found in the tomb in miniature. Soon after George crawls forth from the tomb and collapses into the desert sand. That’s some setup. Continue readingLo spettacolo dell'orrore italiano: Manhattan Baby, aka Eye of the Evil Dead”

Lo spettacolo dell’orrore italiano

October has arrived. It’s a holy month for we fans of horror cinema. The mere presence of the spooky day at the end of the month has given us license to let loose, just like how some grandmas manage to turn the entire month of December into a celebration of Christmas. Halloween is not just one day. It is an entire month where the enjoyment of ersatz blood and death is considered just good, wholesome fun.

The return of October also means the return of the October Horrorshow, when Missile Test joins in the celebration of all that is scary and violent. This is the fifteenth Horrorshow, and the theme this year is Italian horror. The morning posts will be all horror flicks from the boot, while afternoon posts, if there is one, will be random horror flicks I felt like writing about.

There’s no particular order or significance to the films that were chosen for the Italian Horrorshow. It’s not a comprehensive list, nor is it a ranking of the very best. Rather, these are all films that I found available on streaming, ready to be seen by the masses. A good deal of these flicks are obscure, but in the Information Age, obscure does not mean hard to find. If one of these films piques interest, I can guarantee it’s only a few clicks away in the tubes.