Shock (1977) by Mario Bava


Director: Mario Bava
Year: 1977
Country: Italy
Alternative Titles: Beyond the Door II
Genre: Haunted House

Plot:
After moving into an old house with her family, a mentally unhinged woman begins to increasingly suspect that her former husband's ghost still haunts the property and tries to save her son from his presence when she realizes that it has possessed her current husband which only worsens her sanity.

Review:

Overall this was an incredibly enjoyable and exciting effort with a lot to like. One of the best qualities here is the incredibly strong central premise of being stuck in the old house and why it was designated to return there, having such a strong connection with the location that's spelled out here in the convoluted back-story that grows increasingly more disturbed with each layer effectively making the stay there quite unwelcome in the first place and readily setting this one up right from the start.

The way this one really digs into the psychosis of it all, that back-story giving a plausible excuse for all manner of really inventive scares from a hallucinatory attack by a floating razor-blade that follows her every move, a series of visions about a strange brick-wall that appears out of nowhere and the growing fascination her son has with either molesting her or her personal undergarments that altogether combine into a classy yet effectively sleazy affair in the greatest Italian traditions. The use of the child being possessed and whether that in itself is simply another form of her overall madness really makes for quite an intriguing premise throughout this that really makes the most of the time given to it with a rather intense and quite shocking series of events that may or may not be all in her head that continues on here and really helps to make the first half all that much more chilling as it lets the story unfold.

When the second half really lets loose, this one tends to favor the action as the centerpiece is a massive ghostly attack throughout the entire house as it continually hurls furniture and belongings at her from an unseen force while demonic howls and screaming continually make their way throughout the scene which is long, intense and quite chilling overall which sets up the best part of this one. While this one did have a few small flaws, the only really damaging part is the factor of the first half here being a bit more relaxed in pace as the majority of the events play with her psychosis to the point that those are the only points of interest and that leads to a somewhat plodding, lumbering march to get going. It's all quite fun, but it doesn't match the relentlessness of the later half of the film and is really all that holds it back.


Overview: ****/5
An impressive and enjoyable final contribution for the masters' catalog, there's not much to dislike here as the highly impressive positives manage to make this a creepy and chilling effort just below his all-time classics. Give this a look if you're a fan of the style, the creative crew, or appreciate Eurhorror in general while only those that don't enjoy any of those factors should heed caution here.

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