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2/13/2014

Black Sabbath/I Tre Volti Della Paura (1963) - Bava and Karloff's great, gothic anthology



Fascinating poster for Mario Bava's Black Sabbath

QUICK REVIEW:

Boris Karloff (Frankenstein (1931)) serves as a superiorly theatrical, terror-striking narrator in Mario Bava's (A Bay of Blood (1971)) horror anthology, Black Sabbath. He also plays the character Gorka, who becomes a blood-sucking 'Wurdulak' in the 3rd story in the film, which is based on a Tolstoy novella. (Note that if you see the apparently much different Italian version of the film, the Wurdulak story is the second story in the film. The Italian version has, it seems, more tongue-in-cheek Karloff as the narrator, a lesbian subplot in the telephone story, a different score and slightly more gore. This review is based on the American version, which is certainly also very good.)

A still from the Wurdulak-story in Mario Bava's Black Sabbath

The Wurdulak-story is Gothic and scary in the traditional Universal horror-type-style, (although Sabbath was an entirely European feat, English/Italian/French.) The other two stories are (1) about a woman, who steals a dead woman's ring and is then haunted by her, and (2) about a woman, who gets terrorized over the phone by a deceased ex-lover.
There is a moral resonance in all three stories. The two first are draped in an ultra-heavy, classicist decor and feature extremely vampy dames. It is all presented with cheesy dialog and a bit lax editing. The original, Italian title means 'The Three Faces of Fear'.
In case you are wondering, this film is the reason that Ozzy Osbourne's band called themselves Black Sabbath. It is a very cool film, and especially recommended for Karloff-fans.

Related reviews:

Mario Bava, cinematographer: Blood and Black Lace (1964) or, The Fashionista Killer!
Hercules Unchained (1959) - Spaghetti decadence never fades
Boris Karloff: The Ape (1940) or, The Costume-Crazed Doctor!
The Bride of Frankenstein (1935) - The magnificent and mysterious monster bride

Another wicked (Spanish) poster for the film - click to enlarge

Budget: Unkown
Box office: 103 mil. ITL (only Italy)
= Uncertainty

What do you think of Black Sabbath?
What other horror anthology movies would you recommend?

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