
Color, 1989, 83 mins. 28 secs.
Directed by Luigi Cozzi
Starring Daria Nicolodi, Jasmine Maimone, Pascal Persiano, Donald Pleasence, Maria Cristina Mastrangeli, Michel Klippstein, Pietro Genuardi
Severin Films (Blu-ray & DVD) (US RA/R1 HD/NTSC), 88 Films (Blu-ray) (UK RB HD) / WS (1.66:1), NSM Records (DVD) (Germany R2 PAL) / WS (1.78:1)
best left a mystery, Italy found itself
in the throes of a minor Paganinisploitation craze in 1989 with no less than two completely wacko films revolving around Niccolò Paganini, the legendary violinist whose virtuoso performances spawned rumors that he was somehow in league with the devil. The more ambitious of the two was Paganini, the final film by Klaus Kinski (as well as his sole venture as a director) and a truly wild mixture of arty excess and softcore sex. Incredibly, that wasn't even the craziest Paganini film that year thanks to Paganini Horror, a rock-flavored supernatural slasher film by Luigi Cozzi made back to back with his absolutely insane 1989 quasi-Suspiria sequel The Black Cat. Both films were intended to have a spacey cosmic angle (thanks to footage shot for Starcrash), though in the case of this film that was almost entirely jettisoned by producers by the time it barely hit theaters and home video (mostly in Japan and a handful of European countries). Shot in 16mm and presented by famed Lucio Fulci collaborator Fabrizio De Angelis, it's a wild ride for seasoned Italian horror buffs featuring a really crazy Donald Pleasence performance as he gets to cackle "Little demons, fly away!" while tossing money off a roof.
years including a young girl electrocuting her mother in the bathtub (the film's precredits scene), but it does the trick for Kate and company
who mount a colorful, morbid music video extravaganza involving a masked Paganini stabbing her while she flits around in a wedding dress. Unfortunately the horror soon becomes real as the performers and crew are stalked by a killer wielding a violin with a sharp retractable blade, but that's just the start of a crackpot night of demonic mayhem and gore galore.
nicely where they should. The LPCM 2.0 stereo English and Italian tracks sound fine and come with optional newly translated English subs for the Italian track; it isn't the most vigorous sound mix in the world either way but gets the job done. A new audio commentary by Troy
Howarth is entertaining and amusing as always as he goes into Cozzi's traits as a director, the backgrounds of the various players (including a lot about Nicolodi), and the "endearingly goofy" qualities of this production (without overlooking its shortcomings or the modesty of its production values). On the video side you get the English trailer, the Cozzi interview "Bloody Violin" (30m48s) and a chat with actor Pietro Genuardi (25m52s), but more on those below. SEVERIN (Blu-ray)
88 FILMS (Blu-ray)