Five Dolls for an August Moon
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Five Dolls for an August Moon | |
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Italian | 5 bambole per la luna d'agosto |
Directed by | Mario Bava |
Written by | Mario di Nardo |
Produced by |
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Starring |
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Cinematography | Antonio Rinaldi |
Edited by | Mario Bava |
Music by | Piero Umiliani |
Production company | Produzioni Atlas Consorziate (P.A.C.) |
Distributed by | Produzioni Atlas Consorziate (P.A.C.) |
Release date |
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Running time | 81 minutes[a] |
Country | Italy |
Language | Italian |
Five Dolls for an August Moon (Italian: 5 bambole per la luna d'agosto) is a 1970 Italian giallo film directed by Mario Bava. It concerns a group of people who have gathered on a remote island for fun and relaxation. One of the guests is a chemist who has created a revolutionary new chemical process, and several of the attending industrialists are eager to buy it from him. Business problems become moot when someone begins killing off the attendees one by one.
Plot
At the private island retreat of wealthy industrialist George Stark, a group of people have assembled for a weekend getaway; among the guests is scientist Professor Gerry Farrell. The first night passes uneventfully, but Farrell is enraged the next morning to discover that Stark and the other guests planned the weekend to coerce him to sell his latest invention: a formula for a revolutionary industrial resin, which he is reluctant to divulge due to his colleague's death during its invention.
Farrell's wife, Trudy, is having an affair with Stark's artist wife, Jill. Stark's business partner, Nick, is verbally abusive to his coquettish wife Marie, but does not object to her sleeping with other men, one of whom is the Starks' manservant, Charles. Stark is less of a husband to Jill than he is a business manager. He arranges for her to have her paintings and artwork publicly displayed and is a source of constant criticism. The sole happy couple is Nick's co-worker Jack and his wife Peggy. Also on the island is Isabel, the teenage daughter of Stark's game warden; Isabel's parents are away for medical reasons.
As Stark, Nick and Jack badger Farrell for the formula—the original documents for which he has secretly destroyed—by offering him cheques for $1 million each from their Swiss bank accounts, Jill discovers the dead body of Charles on the beach. Having already sent the motor launch away to prevent Farrell from leaving the island, and with the radio out of commission, Stark has no way of contacting the mainland. Charles' body is moved into a large walk-in freezer. The next morning, Farrell is walking alone on the beach. Trudy and Jill, walking hand-in-hand nearby, hear a gunshot and find Farrell's body. They run away to tell the others. The sniper, Isabel, drags Farrell's body to the sea.
As tempers flare to Farrell's apparent death and disappearance, the killings escalate. Peggy, standing on the balcony of her room, is shot dead by an unseen assailant. Jack arrives on the scene first and accuses Stark of being responsible. Marie is found to have been tied to a tree and stabbed in the chest. Jill turns up dead in her bathtub, her wrists slashed in an apparent suicide. Each of the bodies is placed in the freezer. The four remaining survivors—Stark, Jack, Nick and Trudy—hold up in Stark's living room for the night. After bickering with Trudy, Nick storms off. The next morning, he too is found dead, and his body is placed in cold storage.
Stark offers Trudy his cheque for Farrell's formula, which she reveals still exists on a microfilm, and uncovers a previously hidden motorboat which can take them to the mainland. As he returns to the house to get supplies, Jack confronts him and reveals he killed everyone, except for Farrell, to steal their cheques; he also killed Peggy for nearly discovering his plan. Jack shoots him dead. Confronted by him in the freezer, Trudy offers to give him the formula in exchange for his cheque. During the handover, they simultaneously shoot each other; Trudy dies first. Isabel steals the cheque and the formula, but not before a dying Jack tries to stop her.
Some time later, a now-wealthy Isabel visits Farrell in prison, where he is awaiting execution for the murder of his colleague, the rightful discoverer of the resin. Isabel claims that she loves Farrell and had decided to save him by rendering him unconscious with a sodium pentathol pellet of the kind her father had used to tranquilize animals, but was unaware of sodium pentathol's truth serum properties, leading him to confess to killing his partner to the authorities. Isabel reveals that she is broke, having cashed and spent George's and Jack's cheques but not Nick's due to her not knowing the account number. Aware of his inescapable fate and thankful to her, Farrell gives Isabel the number, and she happily leaves, instructing her chauffeur to drive her to Lausanne.
Cast
- William Berger as Professor Gerry Farrell (Professore Frick Kruger in the Italian version)
- Ira Fürstenberg as Trudy Farrell (Trud Larsen)
- Edwige Fenech as Marie Chaney (Puch Chaney)
- Howard Ross as Jack Davidson (Jack Terrison)
- Helena Ronée as Peggy Davidson (Peg Terrison)
- Teodoro Corrà as George Stark (George Sagan)
- Justine Gall as Isabel
- Edith Meloni as Jill Stark
- Mauro Bosco as Charles (Jacques)
- Maurice Poli as Nick Chaney
Production
Produzioni Atlas Consorziate purchased Mario di Nardo's script for Five Dolls for an August Moon with plans to make it into a vehicle for actress Edwige Fenech, though early publicity instead spotlighted Princess Ira von Fürstenberg (who was one of the film's principal investors).[1] The film lost its director just days before filming was scheduled to begin, leading producers Mario and Pietro Bregni to appeal to Mario Bava to take over. Though there is no record of who the original director was, Bava biographer Tim Lucas reasons that it was mostly likely Guido Malatesta.[1] Bava was very reluctant to take on the project, since he felt the script was a poorly written ripoff of Agatha Christie's novel And Then There Were None (1939), but agreed to do it under the condition that he be paid up front.[1] He was further dismayed when, at the meeting where he was presented with the contract for the film, the Bregnis told him that the original director's departure was so last-minute that the cast and technical crew had already been selected and filming was to begin in just two days, leaving him no time to rework the script.[1]
However, in addition to insisting on the use of his usual camera crew (headed by Antonio Rinaldi), Bava made two significant changes to the film's script: putting the corpses in polythene bags inside a walk-in freezer (di Nardo's script put them in underground graves with cross-shaped headstones) and adding on the twist ending with Farrell and Isabel.[1]
The film's budget was so low that most of the cast had to wear their own clothes.[1] The exterior of the Stark house was a matte painting painted by Bava himself, while the interior was a real beach house located not far from the beach where many of the scenes were filmed, on the Torre Astura coastline.[1] Five Dolls for an August Moon was the only film where Bava had to do the editing entirely by himself.[1]
Release
Debuting on Valentine's Day 1970, Five Dolls for an August Moon was a failure at the Italian box office.[1]
Five Dolls for an August Moon was one of Bava's most obscure films, and did not receive an official American release until 2001 when Image Entertainment distributed it on DVD. After the Image disc went out of print, Anchor Bay Entertainment re-released the film as part of the Mario Bava Collection Volume 2 box set on 23 October 2007. The film was released in France as L'Île de l'épouvante (Island of Terror). In 2013, Kino International released the film on Blu-ray in the United States.
Critical reception
Craig Butler of AllMovie gave the film two stars out of five, calling it "a confusing and not terribly exciting whodunit." Butler placed the blame for the film's failure primarily on the script, and commended Bava for managing to inject some visual interest into the weak material.[2]
In his review of the 2013 American Blu-ray release for Slant Magazine, Budd Wilkins wrote, "Five Dolls for an August Moon isn't top-tier Bava by any means, but for those with eyes to see, there are pleasures aplenty to be gleaned from this playfully abstract jeu d'esprit."[3]
In his commentary track for the Kino International Blu-ray release of the film, Bava scholar Tim Lucas argues strongly against Cazzinos own assessment of the film as one of his worst and calls it one of his most beautiful and innovative films.
Notes
- ^ The American DVD release from Image Entertainment runs 78 minutes due to a lack of optimization to the NTSC format; when played at the correct speed, it is also 81 minutes. The Image version in fact contains roughly half a minute more footage than the original cut, due to a postponement of the fade-out during the final scene.[1]
References
- ^ a b c d e f g h i j Lucas, Tim (2007). Mario Bava: All the Colors of the Dark. Video Watchdog. pp. 809–822. ISBN 978-0-9633756-1-2.
- ^ Butler, Craig. "Five Dolls for an August Moon – Review". AllMovie. Archived from the original on 25 May 2024. Retrieved 25 May 2024.
- ^ Wilkins, Budd (23 September 2013). "Review: Mario Bava's Five Dolls for an August Moon on Kino Lorber Blu-ray". Slant Magazine. Retrieved 25 May 2024.
External links
- 1970 films
- 1970s Italian films
- 1970s Italian-language films
- 1970s mystery thriller films
- Films directed by Mario Bava
- Films scored by Piero Umiliani
- Films set in the Mediterranean Sea
- Films set on islands
- Films shot in Lazio
- Giallo films
- Italian mystery thriller films
- Murder mystery films
- Saturn Award–winning films