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“Tender young flesh seduced by the ultimate evil.” /
“When the Devil calls, she comes...” Mario Bianchi, here credited as
Alan W. Cools, directed this lurid film Satan's Baby Doll, sometimes
known in America as 'A Girl For Satan', mixing pornographic pleasure
with possession and pain. Within the confines of the Aguilar castle, a lushly
decorated tomb resting high upon an emerald hill (the same exterior in Antonio
Margheriti's Seven Deaths in the Cat's Eye), the forces of evil are
about to sink their teeth into some delicious revenge.
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screenshots…
“And the dead come back and come to life again in us
forever, for better or worse till the end of time.” Inside the cold
stone walls of the castle, Maria Aguilar is lying in-state, surrounded by her
family and servants. It's a sombre affair tinged with suspicion, even anger, as
loaded glances are exchanged across her body. With the wind howling, and Nico
Catanese's Goblin-esque synth score soaring, an unfortunate 'automatic nervous
contraction' spasms the matriarch back into motion – terrifying her beautiful
daughter Miria – a portent of things to come.
“We knew about her hysterics, but somebody else might
interpret the facts in a different way.” Maria (Swedish icon Marina
Hedman, The Beast In Space) was a nymphomaniac, something her
husband Antonio (Aldo Sambrell) isn't best pleased about, and so he eyes
every male who met her with increasingly strung-out distrust. He's an addict
and a cruel patriarch, a man who believes his wealthy lifestyle earns him the
right to look down on his servants with disdain, and yet his innocent daughter
Miria (the delectable Jaqueline Dupré) is the only one who can melt his
icy heart.
“I will save you from the damned souls!”
Living with Antonio, in the cavernous excesses of this cursed castle, are his
paraplegic brother Ignazio and his nurse Sol (European screen icon Mariangela
Giordano), and Isidro, a general dogsbody whose superstitious belief in
evil are mocked by visiting Doctor Juan.
“I knew her innermost thoughts. All of them.” The
family have wealth and power, but Maria's death is exposing the dark heart lurking
beneath the surface. Antonio is blissed out on drugs dreaming of 'desecrating'
Sol's 'temple' for he deems her to be a tempting whore, while Ignazio is in
love with her – a Nun – and watches as she gets undressed, fantasising about
her gratifying her own toned and slender body.
“Stop fooling around, it's dirty and vulgar!”
It's at this point that we experience the first of a handful of sequences
sourced from the 'German XXX' version of the film. Producer and Co-Writer
Gabriele Crisanti was known for inserting more graphic close ups and scene
extensions for more liberal foreign markets at the time, although it all
amounts to little more than moistened lips, massaged boobs and fondled muff for
the most part.
“This castle has been cursed, we shall all die.”
But there's something darker rising up from the crypt beneath the castle – a
spirit seeping through the corridors and stairways – as Isidro does some weird,
wobbly-handed slithering about above a mummified corpse to cast away impending
evil. It's all for nought though as sweet, golden-haired Miria becomes
possessed by the spirit of her mother, who encourages her to seduce and kill.
Mother has a score to settle from beyond the grave, but who – if anyone – will
survive her lascivious wrath?
“Aguilars are not affected by earthly misfortunes. For
them the Earth is just a chessboard and human beings are nothing but pawns in
their hands.” Bianchi's film is a fairly brief affair (a mere 75
minutes with the 'XXX' footage included), but compared to Love Goddessof the Cannibals (Joe D'Amato, 1978) there's a better balance
between story and sexploitation. There's a pleasing, if somewhat minimalist,
sense of mystery to the proceedings as the family's dirty deeds unfurl while
the avenging spirit of Maria slithers through their home in the sylphlike body
of her daughter. That said, the film is essentially a retread of similar ideas
from Andrea (Strip Nude For Your Killer) Bianchi's film Malabimba
(1979), which was also written by Piero Regnoli and Gabriele Crisanti
and featured Mariangela Giordano in a similar role as Sister Sofia. Possession,
sexuality, hints of incest, sacrilege, and 'XXX' footage inserted for spicier
audiences.
“Tell the police? Don't panic! Let's use our heads.”
Of course, with this type of movie, one man's trash is another man's treasure.
Uncredited cinematographers Angelo Lannutti and Franco Villa capture the
grandeur of the location, often cast in stark lighting and deep hues of blue
and red. Likewise, the story – if somewhat light-on-plot – has frequent
suggestions of deeper thought. Here, the decadence of the Italian aristocracy
is torn down along with the corruption of religion by carnal desire, as rich
and poor, money and God, desire and divinity provide ample subtext. Even youth
is seen to be stripped of innocence by the sins of elders.
“Come Darling. Come.” In terms of
sexploitation, Satan's Baby Doll is no slouch. Dupré is tantalising,
Giordano weakens your knees in those tight white stockings, and Hedman is
certifiably milfy. Soft focus close ups, alluring eyes, caressed skin and so
forth makes up the bulk of the 'XXX' inserts (tame by 21st
century standards, blatantly), scored throughout by Catanese's wonderful
synthesised moods.
“I'd rather die than let an oily character like you
stain me.” Shameless Screen Entertainment's 23rd release
comes with a distinct Italian track and optional English subtitles. The quality
of the print is pretty good for this kind of film on DVD although, naturally,
the footage included from the 'German XXX' version is fairly rough (iffy
colour, lots of damage). However, it's fun to see just how much extra
footage there is and where it's placed – in a way it makes these steamier
scenes more illicit. While the disc isn't exactly brimming with extras (these
sorts of archive releases rarely are), what's included is mostly
worthwhile. A spoiler-ific trailer, an 'alternate gown scene' (with
split-screen comparison), an alternative opening sequence featuring more
raunch from a scene usually found later in the film (and titled “Orgasmo Di
Satana”), as well as the 'Shameless Trailer Park' – twenty-four trailers
for other releases from the fan favourite distributor (clocking in at 28
minutes).
The most interesting extra though, is an excerpt from an Alan
Jones & Mark Ashworth article “Diva Divina: The Mariangela Giardano Story”,
which provides some interesting background history on one of the film's sultry
actresses. This film is reviewed as part of the 'Shameless Sexploitation Triple
Sinema Bill' box set, which also features Love Goddess of the Cannibals
and The Beast In Space. The packaging is decidedly impressive, appealing
to extinct format nostalgia (a reversible sleeve styled after a Betamax tape),
as well as a gorgeously gaudy yellow box boasting typically lurid artwork by
Rick Melton, which is revealed in its uncensored form when you slide out the
DVD case.
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