So Sweet, So Perverse (1969) by Umberto Lenzi


Director: Umberto Lenzi
Year: 1969
Country: Italy/France/West Germany
Alternate Titles: Così dolce... così perversa
Genre: Giallo

Plot:
Trying to keep their marriage afloat, a man begins to be slowly drawn to his new upstairs neighbor and begins to woe her even though she claims to be in danger, and when it proves true as he becomes a stranger’s target tries to get to the bottom of her stories to be able to save her.

Review:

This was a rather solid and enjoyable outing. Among its best features comes from the strong build-up to the overall thriller aspects here. As this one generates some intriguing elements here with the strained, loveless marriage fueled by his unfaithfulness, the potential intrigue of a new relationship with the upstairs neighbor and the baggage she brings featuring the troubled relationship involving the strange man following him around creates an engaging setup. As everything gets equal timing to where his womanizing matters interfere with their marriage and their new burgeoning romance at the expense of his time around his wife gives everything a nice clarity.

There’s also quite a lot to like as the series of games that emerge from this setup. As the idea of the stranger following them is also planning to kill him by using her as bait in the orchestrated plan, there’s a fine intrigue at play here with the change in loyalty involving who she’s really playing for as the constant claims of his mistreatment towards her contradicting her claims of what she’s doing it for. The exceptional twist about their game gets played off masterfully about the necessary steps to carry it out which is a logical plan to think through in how this changes everyone’s allegiances in a thoughtful manner when all the pieces get revealed. As this setup gives the film a lot to like regarding the sleaze elements on display, there’s quite a lot to like with this one.

There are some issues to be had here. One of the main problems is the somewhat sluggish first half that doesn’t develop much in the way of a thriller setup. Since it focuses on his cheating and romancing the neighbor in such a lazy manner, this doesn’t offer much in the way of excitement as there’s nothing about why he does. Despite being incredibly attractive, there’s nothing given here about why he goes for her as deep as he does as quickly after meeting, overall making this feel somewhat underwhelming. The other real issue is a somewhat problematic factor in the second half where the twists are revealed and the hysterical screaming doesn’t seem realistic to the setup since everything’s gone to plan but instead this just feels highly unrealistic about the purpose for it. While none of these are truly detrimental, they do lower this slightly.


Overview: ****/5
A fun and generally enjoyable take on the stylish, suspenseful side of the giallo, there’s not a whole lot really wrong even though there are a few points that lower it slightly. Fans of the creative crew, their previous efforts in the genre for this particular side of European cinemas as a whole would be well-versed to check it out although most others who enjoy the body-count variation should heed caution.

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