The Case of the Scorpion's Tail (1971) by Sergio Martino


Director: Sergio Martino
Year: 1971
Country: Italy/Spain/United Kingdom
Alternate Titles: La coda dello scorpione
Genre: Giallo

Plot:
After the death of her husband in a plane-crash, a woman receives the inheritance left behind and enjoys herself but is soon under attack by a multitude of parties that want the money, and when they succeed a private investigator and journalist decide to figure out what happened only to find themselves the new targets.

Review:

This was a solid if somewhat flawed giallo. As with most entries here, this one manages to get a lot to like by weaving together a generally fun and engaging central mystery. The emergence of the monumental life-insurance police and the resulting greed by the various sundry characters wanting to get their hands on it play a prominent role here in tying together the disparate plotlines as it switches focus. Upon realizing what’s happening with the numerous deaths around them and how the clues come together, there’s a great storyline here featuring the hunt for the missing money and how everyone fits together in the end.

As well, the central murder scenes are impressive and just an overall blast. The initial ambush in the theater and chase through the building is quite thrilling, as is the later chase inside the victims’ house while the raging thunderstorm blares outside offering fun, thrilling scenes that have plenty to like while building a fine setup for later. Featuring several fun brawls featuring the killer confronting and attacking various victims in both lethal and non-lethal confrontations have some excitement to them, and with a fun finale revealing some surprise revelations, great chasing and a fun detail to the investigation there’s plenty to like with this one.


There are some issues to be had with this one. One of the main flaws is how the pacing is quite disjointing, as obvious cut scenes are left in to boost up the running time. The exploits of the hotel managers calling around to find out what’s happening, scenes of the investigators running around the city in an attempt to understand clues or general travelogue scenes of the city are completely unnecessary to move this along and could’ve been taken out without any change to the film. Contrasted with the shorter, straightforward stalking scenes this leaves an indelible and obvious mark against the film.

The other problem to this one is a wholly jarring and somewhat scattershot storyline which plays out here. The initial part plays out nicely with the apparent death and struggle to reclaim the policy which is a fine storyline with the potential for quite a few scummy players, but then it shifts to the investigator and then the reporter which is somewhat chaotic. This has no real logical throughput for the rapid shift of characters being thrust into the spotlight since these two just seem dropped into the story halfway through the film with little build-up and seems to be quite confusing as to why they’re both involved. It’s not a big issue but does lower it somewhat.


Overview: ***.5/5
While not in the same league as the top-tier gialli in the scene, there’s still plenty of highly enjoyable elements at play that make for a watchable time here. Definitely give this a shot if you’re a fan of Eurohorror or giallo in particular as well as the creative crew, while those turned off by the style or genre as a whole would not find this as much fun.

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