
Color, 1977, 93 mins. 6 secs.
Directed by Joe D'Amato
Starring Laura Gemser, Gabriele Tinti, Susan Scott, Donal O'Brien, Percy Hogan, Monica Zanchi, Annemaria Clementi, Geoffrey Copleston
Severin Films (Blu-ray & DVD) (US R0 HD/NTSC), 88 Films (Blu-ray) (UK RB HD), Media Blasters (DVD) (US R0 NTSC), Neo Publishing (DVD) (France R2 PAL) / WS (1.85:1) (16:9)
fourth of five films
in the Black Emanuelle cycle directed by Joe D'Amato and starring Laura Gemser, Emanuelle and the Last Cannibals offers a ridiculously enjoyable hybrid of softcore sleaze and Italian cannibal mayhem rushed quickly into production to cash in on the same year's Jungle Holocaust. Having just pushed the series as far as it could go with the outrageous Emanuelle in America, D'Amato and company decided to take a different tactic for box office success and ended up choosing wisely. As it turned out, the cannibal craze was just beginning and would keep on escalating well into the early '80s. Not one to go for animal violence in his films (quite the opposite, as Pedro the horse can attest) and even avoiding a hardcore variant for this one, D'Amato ended up making one of the more accessible films in both of the areas he was exploiting.
erudite and frisky
Professor Mark Lester (Tinti, of course) who ends up bedding our heroine over and over after showing her some raw footage of cannibals slicing off genitalia. (Why not?) Since he's an authority on tribal customs, Mark joins Emanuelle on an excursion to the Amazon where they cross paths with hunter Donald McKenzie (O'Brien), his wife Maggie (Scott), traveling nun Sister Angela (Clementi), and Isabelle (Zanchi), daughter of their ill-fated guide. Of course, it isn't long before all hell breaks loose in this green nightmare as cannibals emerge and start dining on the intruders.
scoring duties with another
dance-friendly rendition of his familiar "Make Love on the Wing" theme, adding to the bizarre atmosphere and laying the groundwork for his later score in the much-loved Zombie Holocaust. By this point D'Amato and Gemser had pretty much taken the series about as far as it would go since their one follow-up feature, Emanuelle and the White Slave Trade, plays like more of a tame greatest hits reel and even lifts scenes from this film to pad it out.
a minor image gallery, and
a very drab transfer. The first Blu-ray of Emanuelle and the Last Cannibals hit shores in 2016 from U.K. label 88 Films, which was bare bones apart from the theatrical trailer and alternate Italian credits but did include the welcome gesture of featuring both the English and Italian dubs with optional English subtitles. The transfer didn't really set anyone's world on fire at the time, improving in detail over the DVD but still looking muddy with very flat black levels.
first
bona fide special edition ever for this film. "The World of Nico Fidenco" (27m4s) is more of a career-spanning interview with the composer and popular vocalist, who recounts how he wound up getting a shortcut to Italian record chart stardom and parlayed his success into a long, very fruitful career working on films including all of the D'Amato-Gemser Black Emanuelle films. "A Nun Among the Cannibals" (22m53s) is a surprisingly funny and candid interview with Clementi who talks about getting an agent and landing her first role, her natural affinity for acting without training, her gratitude for post-dubbing on her films ("I have the memory of a goldfish"), and her reaction to being covered in animal guts. O'Brien turns up next for "Dr. O'Brien MD" (18m47s) with the future Zombie Holocaust star, sporting a beard and shot in SD at a restaurant, chatting about his start in the industry, early roles in The Train and Run Man Run, and collaborations with directors like D'Amato, Lucio Fulci, and Sergio Sollima. Next up is Monica Zanchi with Notturno Video's featurette "From Switzerland to Mato Grosso" (18m40s), with the Swiss-born actress sharing stories about how she got into acting and ended up appearing in films like Hitch Hike and Sister Emanuelle. She chats a fair bit about this film including her crush on Tinti and a fight with a costumer, as well as her views on doing nudity. Finally, the reclusive Gemser is represented with the "I Am Your Black Queen" archival interview (11m25s), also from Notturno, speaking generally about her time in the series which she remembers as one long experience with D'Amato whom she continues to greatly miss.