The Devil with Seven Faces (1971) by Osvaldo Civrani


Director: Osvaldo Civrani
Year: 1971
Country: Italy/Netherlands
Alternate Titles: Il diavolo a sette facce
Genre: Giallo

Plot:
After a series of close encounters, a woman enlists the help of her attorney and his friend to help her when a group of diamond thieves are convinced she has their stolen loot and that it’s her twin sister who’s really to blame, but no matter how much she tries to do so their quest to get the jewels back puts them all in danger.

Review:

This was a decidedly disappointing and uneventful Giallo effort. Among the few positives here stem from the initially intriguing storyline that starts off the film rather well. Immediately engrossing us in the threat by having the aborted abduction and reveal about not just the thugs on her trail but the reason for it as the duplicity with the twin who’s the real target is the kind of fine introduction needed here. It gets to the action and setup from the start as that’s all given barely ten minutes in which soon brings about a series of fine double-crosses and intense confrontations that try to pepper in some action into the proceedings as the thieves grow increasingly more intent on their misguided mission. Alongside a fun finale with some decent chases and action involved, there are some positives in this one.

There are some issues to be had here that hold this one down. The main gist of the film is that once the initial setup has been revealed there’s not a whole lot that happens that’s interesting here. The inability of the thugs to recognize the twin duplicity has befallen them making them immensely underwhelming and non-threatening who carry on with their plans despite no real evidence of what’s going on. As they try to catch up to her and the charges trying to keep her safe, their inability to recognize everything they’re saying comes off more as a means of continuing the story than anything else. This ends up leading to a large assortment of scenes that are just not interesting with either these uninspired shakedowns or lifeless romance sequences featuring the couples coming together for the first time which drag this out.

As well, there’s also the wholly underwhelming series of action scenes that are far more lackluster than expected. Instead of the traditional stalk and slash which is usually found in these kinds of films, the use of gunplay and shootouts from everything renders this without the kind of body count or general feel associated with the genre as this type of action doesn’t leave a good impression. Even worse is a cringe-inducing car chase that’s criminally inept and flat-out embarrassing, rarely having the cars on-screen together in the same shot and trying to undercut everything by having not just the outside traveling shots but the interiors within the car shown through sped-up footage. It’s immensely obvious with all of the unnatural behaviors and jerking going on and all come together to lower this one overall.


Overview: */5
Solely underwhelming and barely worthwhile crime/thriller masquerading as a giallo, this would still be somewhat problematic even if this one was closer to the type of film it’s marketed as and that leaves this one quite low on the totem pole. Give it a shot only if you’re the most ardent die-hard Eurohorror fanatic or are a fan of the creative crew while most others should steer clear or at least heed extreme caution with it.

Comments