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List Price: $19.98Price: $3.02 You Save: $16.96 (85%)as of 11/25/2009 05:26 EST details
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Aspect Ratio: 2.35:1
Audience Rating: NR (Not Rated)
Binding: DVD
EAN: 0013131202793
Format: Color, DVD, Subtitled, Widescreen, NTSC
Label: Starz / Anchor Bay
Languages: EnglishSubtitledItalianOriginal Language
Manufacturer: Starz / Anchor Bay
Number Of Items: 1
Publisher: Starz / Anchor Bay
Region Code: 1
Release Date: June 25, 2002
Running Time: 97 minutes
Studio: Starz / Anchor Bay
Theatrical Release Date: 1971
Average Rating: 
Rating: -
"Short Night Of Glass Dolls" is a great
mystery.
Spoilers
***********
The plot is very interesting with
a 1970's pop-culture idea of
individual freedom which is being
suppressed by a secretive conspiracy
of cold-war, communist fascists in
Chechoslavakia who use some sort
of occult sex-magic religion as their
underlying means of control.
It seems that young woman are being
kidnapped to tap into their ... Read More
Rating: -
wow i've seen a lot of giallo but this one pretty much sucks. couldnt even finish it actually. i kept asking myself, is this really a giallo??? the beginning has a guy narrating the film internally due to having a dead body but live mind....right. so we have to pretend the brain can still function without blood flow. so ya, imagination has to terminate logic completely on this one. the style is lacking, scene compsition dull and overall just bland scenery for the most part. visualy this is not the fifth ... Read More
Rating: -
This film has gone by several names, including MALASTRANA (the director's original choice) and PARALYZED. It's one of Barbara Bach's several pre-007 Italian thrillers. I'm undecided whether the American-born Bach, fluent in Italian, dubbed her own voice. As she is the best known in the cast to contemporary American audiences, Bach gets major billing, although she mainly appears in only a few early scenes.
The film opens with a man believed dead who, we soon learn, is alive but paralyzed, ... Read More
Rating: -
It was a beautiful day indeed when Anchor Bay released a box set of four classic Italian gialli films. Most fans of Italian horror films know all about these colorful murder mystery pictures-- thanks to Mario Bava, Lucio Fulci, and Dario Argento--but how many of us know about Aldo Lado? Two of his films appear in the boxed set, "Short Night of Glass Dolls" and the impenetrable "Who Saw Her Die?" On the surface, both films look like absolute grand slam winners. We've a killer on the prowl, gruesome murders, ... Read More
Rating: -
Admittedly the idea of narrator being a corpse is a very intriguing hook for a film. Thus Lado's debut begins with much promise. It seems to have the makings of a fine giallo. Where it completely and utterly tanks, however, is in the gialloness itself, for this isn't a giallo so much as it is a conspiracy story dressed up in the thinnest Hitchcockian device of a vanishing girl. To me, what makes giallos so fun and fascinating to watch is the sheer edginess of the violence and sex. You will find none of ... Read More
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