The Doll of Satan (1969) by Ferruccio Casapinta


Director: Ferruccio Casapinta
Year: 1969
Country: Italy
Alternate Titles; La bambola di satana
Genre: Giallo

Plot:
After inheriting her family’s castle, a woman struggles to believe a family legend about her barbaric ancestors coming back to haunt her, which is being played up by her relatives to allow them access to uranium deposits underneath the castle, and must race to stop their plans.

Review:

This was a massively dull and barely worthwhile genre effort. Among the few positives to be had here is the film’s use of bridging together the kind of storyline that links Gothic horror and giallo together. The central premise here about her returning home only to be confronted with the strange killer provides the kind of setting that brings about glorious Gothic horror shenanigans only utilized too frequently at the start of the decade with the proceedings bringing about family curses, long-held secret relations, a family with a dark, tragic past, and putting the whole thing into a multi-tiered Gothic castle. The first half of this one, with the arrival at the castle and the series of explanations looking at the different aspects of the family legacy coming back to haunt them, makes for a great case, tying into that environment where we get to see the whole thing taking place in a glorious Gothic castle. With some hints along the way that something is targeting her, from the visions of hooded figures trying to kill her or the series of revelations that take place in the finale, it all comes together well enough to have some positives.

Outside of that, though, there’s just not much here to work with. That’s mainly due to the utterly bland and just absolutely lifeless storyline at play here, where it’s not geared at all for genre thrills in any regard. The film tends to spend most of the running time explaining what’s going on in long, drawn-out conversations around the castle where they tend to spew out the background information on the family curse and how it starts to affect them that are just dull and lifeless to sit through, and the repeated nature of this tactic to explain why she’s returned and how everything comes together don’t help much. That there’s far more of this kind of activity on-screen than any kind of genuine genre shenanigans, whether it be the stalking scenes of the hooded killer looking to keep the whole thing a secret, and there’s just nothing interesting happening for so long because of these scenes that it becomes quite difficult to get through. On top of that, with the film suffering from a slew of technical issues that range from lackluster gore, the way-too-bright castle that looks good but zaps the tension, and a series of bad day-for-night shots to show off how cheap it is, these are what hold this down.


Overview: */5
A generally bland and lifeless genre effort, there’s little about this one that’s worthwhile, as the massive flaws on display are more than enough to offset the few positives featured here. Those with an appreciation for these elements or who are the most hardcore devotees of either style will have the most to like here, as others out there should heed caution.


This review is part of our ongoing series of reviews for Italian Horror Month, every November on the site:

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