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#Giorgio Mariuzzo
666frames · 3 months
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Aenigma (1987)
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bloggaccio · 7 months
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Gloria Guida
La minorenne, regia di Silvio Amadio (1974)
Quella età maliziosa, regia di Silvio Amadio (1975)
Blue Jeans, regia di Mario Imperoli (1975)
La novizia, regia di Pier Giorgio Ferretti (1975)
Peccati di gioventù, regia di Silvio Amadio (1975)
La liceale, regia di Michele Massimo Tarantini (1975)
Il gatto mammone, regia di Nando Cicero (1975)
Il medico... la studentessa, regia di Silvio Amadio (1976)
Il solco di pesca, regia di Maurizio Liverani (1976)
Scandalo in famiglia, regia di Marcello Andrei (1976)
La ragazza alla pari, regia di Mino Guerrini (1976)
L'affittacamere, regia di Mariano Laurenti (1976)
Maschio latino... cercasi, regia di Giovanni Narzisi (1977)
Orazi e Curiazi 3 - 2, regia di Giorgio Mariuzzo (1977)
Il triangolo delle Bermude (The Bermuda Triangle), regia di René Cardona Jr. (1978)
La liceale nella classe dei ripetenti, regia di Mariano Laurenti (1978)
Indagine su un delitto perfetto, regia di Giuseppe Rosati (1978)
Avere vent'anni, regia di Fernando Di Leo (1978)
Travolto dagli affetti familiari, regia di Mauro Severino (1978)
L'infermiera di notte, regia di Mariano Laurenti (1979)
La liceale seduce i professori, regia di Mariano Laurenti (1979)
La liceale, il diavolo e l'acquasanta, regia di Nando Cicero (1979)
Fico d'India, regia di Steno (1980)
Bollenti spiriti, regia di Giorgio Capitani (1981)
La casa stregata, regia di Bruno Corbucci (1982)
Sesso e volentieri, regia di Dino Risi (1982)
Improvvisamente Natale, regia di Francesco Patierno (2022)
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docrotten · 2 years
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THE HOUSE BY THE CEMETERY (1981) – Episode 209 – Decades Of Horror 1980s
“Why do you keep telling me to go on with those pills? I feel fine. I never felt better! My nerves are fine the way they are!” If you moved into a house in the middle of a cemetery with an actual tomb inside the house, and it was the site of a murder-suicide, your nerves might be shot too. Join your faithful Grue-Crew – Bill Mulligan, Crystal Cleveland, and Jeff Mohr  – as they check out the final entry in Lucio Fulci’s Gates of Hell Trilogy, The House by the Cemetery (1981).
Decades of Horror 1980s Episode 209 – The House by the Cemetery (1981)
Join the Crew on the Gruesome Magazine YouTube channel! Subscribe today! And click the alert to get notified of new content! https://youtube.com/gruesomemagazine
A New England home is terrorized by a series of murders, unbeknownst to the guests that a gruesome secret is hiding in the basement.
IMDb
  Directed: Lucio Fulci
Writers: Dardano Sacchetti, Giorgio Mariuzzo, Lucio Fulci (screenplay); Elisa Briganti (story) (as Elisa Livia Briganti); H.P. Lovecraft (inspiration) (uncredited)
Music: Walter Rizzati
Cinematography: Sergio Salvati (director of photography)
Makeup Department: 
Giannetto De Rossi (makeup artist/special makeup effects artist)
Maurizio Trani (makeup artist/special makeup effects artist)
Selected Cast:
Catriona MacColl as Lucy Boyle (credited as Katherine MacColl)
Paolo Malco as Dr. Norman Boyle
Ania Pieroni as Ann (babysitter)
Giovanni Frezza as Bob Boyle
Silvia Collatina as Mae Freudstein
Dagmar Lassander as Laura Gittleson
Giovanni De Nava as Dr. Freudstein
Daniela Doria as the first female victim
Gianpaolo Saccarola as Daniel Douglas
Carlo De Mejo as Mr. Wheatley
Kenneth A. Olsen as Harold (credited as John Olson)
Elmer Johnsson as the Cemetery Caretaker
Ranieri Ferrara as a victim
Teresa Rossi Passante as Mary Freudstein
Lucio Fulci as Professor Mueller (uncredited)
The House by the Cemetery, aka Quella villa accanto al cimitero (original title), is Jeff’s pick and he loves it. Despite the weird voice dubbed for Bob, the young boy in the story, he digs the atmospheric music, the long-drawn-out kill scenes, and what turns out to be a fairly coherent story, at least for a Fulci film. Crystal also loves The House by the Cemetery. Besides having maggots, gruesome kills, a weird story, and a creepy kid, it’s very well shot. 
The little boy is not cute, according to Bill, and he too describes the horrible voice dubbing of said boy. Though The House by the Cemetery is not his favorite of the trilogy, he still thinks it’s pretty cool. Despite the frequent scenes of characters walking around the house calling out names, it is pretty to look at and really well made.
The Decades of Horror Grue Crews always have something to say about Lucio Fulci’s work. Here are the Decades of Horror episodes discussing Fulci’s work:
ZOMBIE (1979) — Episode 62 — Decades Of Horror 1970s
CITY OF THE LIVING DEAD (The Gates Of Hell, 1980) – Episode 145 – Decades Of Horror 1980s
THE BEYOND (1981) – Episode 123 – Decades Of Horror 1980s
THE BLACK CAT (1981) – Episode 184 – Decades Of Horror 1980s
As of this writing, The House by the Cemetery is available to stream from Shudder. In terms of physical media, Blu-ray and 4K Ultra HD discs from Blue Underground are available.
Every two weeks, Gruesome Magazine’s Decades of Horror 1980s podcast will cover another horror film from the 1980s. The next episode’s film, chosen by Bill, will be Clash of the Titans (1981) with a stellar cast and, of course, the magic of Ray Harryhausen!
Please let them know how they’re doing! They want to hear from you – the coolest, grooviest fans:  leave them a message or leave a comment on the gruesome Magazine Youtube channel, on the website or email the Decades of Horror 1980s podcast hosts at [email protected]
Check out this episode!
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80smovies · 4 years
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brokehorrorfan · 4 years
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Aenigma will be released on Blu-ray on July 14 via Severin Films. Direct orders ($28) included a limited edition, uncensored slipcover for the 1987 Italian horror film, pictured below.
Lucio Fulci (The Beyond, Zombie) directs from a script he co-wrote with Giorgio Mariuzzo (The Beyond). Jared Martin, Lara Lamberti, Ulli Reinthaler, Sophie d'Aulan, Jennifer Naud, kathiwise, Kathi Wise, and Riccardo Acerbi star.
Aenigma has been newly scanned in 4K from the original negative. Read on for the special features.
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Special features:
Audio commentary with Splintered Visions: Lucio Fulci and His Films author Troy Howarth and film historian Nathaniel Thompson
Interview with co-writer Giorgio Mariuzzo
Italian Aenigma: Appraising Late Day Fulci
English trailer
Italian trailer
Italian credits
When a bullied student at a New England girls school becomes comatose after a prank gone wrong, her tormenters will suffer graphic telepathic punishment that includes the infamous ‘death by snails’ scene
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noxhell · 7 years
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mcbastardsmausoleum · 4 years
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The House By The Cemetery (1981) gets a 3-Disc Limited Edition 4K from @blueundergroundfilms on 1/21 Extras: - NEW! Audio Commentary with Troy Howarth, Author of Splintered Visions: Lucio Fulci and His Films - Deleted Scene - Theatrical Trailers - TV Spot - Poster & Still Galleries - Meet the Boyles - Interviews with Stars Catriona MacColl and Paolo Malco - Children of the Night - Interviews with Stars Giovanni Frezza and Silvia Collatina Tales of Laura Gittleson - Interview with Star Dagmar Lassander - My Time With Terror - Interview with Star Carlo De Mejo - A Haunted House Story - Interviews with Co-Writers Dardano Sacchetti and Elisa Briganti - To Build a Better Death Trap: Interviews with Cinematographer Sergio Salvati, Special Make-Up Effects Artist Maurizio Trani, Special Effects Artist Gino De Rossi, and Actor Giovanni De Nava - NEW!House Quake - Interview with Co-Writer Giorgio Mariuzzo - NEW! Catriona MacColl Q&A - NEW!Calling Dr. Freudstein - Interview with Stephen Thrower, Author of Beyond Terror: The Films of Lucio Fulci - Original Motion Picture Soundtrack by Walter Rizzati - BONUS! Collectable Booklet with new essay by Michael Gingold https://www.instagram.com/p/B5wohrUFdwC/?igshid=6mn3pd63ku9m
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giallofever2 · 5 years
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1981 (International 📼 VHS Covers)
......E tu vivrai nel terrore! L'aldilà
Also Known As (AKA)
Argentina El más allá
Brazil (video box title) A Casa do Além
Brazil Terror nas Trevas
Bulgaria (Bulgarian title) Седмата порта на ада
Canada (French title) L'au-delà
Denmark (video title) Rædslernes hotel
Denmark Woodoo - rædslernes hotel
France L'au-delà
Germany Die Geisterstadt der Zombies
Greece (transliterated) I 7i pyli tis Kolaseos
Greece (DVD title) I evdomi pyli tis Kolaseos
Greece Η έβδομη πύλη της κολάσεως
Hong Kong (Cantonese title) Gwai seng siu siu
Hong Kong (Mandarin title) Gui sheng xiao xiao
Hungary A pokol hét kapuja
Italy (short title) L'aldilà
Italy ...E tu vivrai nel terrore! L'aldilà
Japan Biyondo
Mexico Las siete puertas del infierno
Netherlands (informal literal title) Hotel der verdoemden
Norway The Beyond
Poland Siedem bram piekieł
Portugal As Sete Portas do Inferno
Soviet Union (Russian title) Седьмые врата ада
Spain El más allá
USA (promotional title) Seven Doors of Death
USA (cut version) 7 Doors of Death
USA The Beyond
Uruguay (video box title) El más allá
West Germany (video box title) Geisterstadt der Zombies
West Germany Über dem Jenseits
West Germany (video title) Eibon - Die 7 Tore des Schreckens
World-wide (English title) The Beyond
World-wide (English title) (literal English title) And You Will Live in Terror: The Beyond
Release Dates
West Germany 22 April 1981
Italy 29 April 1981
Hong Kong 11 July 1981
UK 27 August 1981
Netherlands 24 September 1981
France 14 October 1981
Spain 19 October 1981
Portugal 27 May 1982
Denmark 14 March 1983
USA 11 November 1983
Mexico 2 February 1984
Japan 28 August 1986 (video premiere)
Netherlands 21 March 1987 (The Weekend of Terror)
Netherlands 22 April 1996 (Amsterdam Fantastic Film Festival)
Germany 1 January 1998 (re-release)
USA 12 June 1998 (re-release)
Sweden 9 November 2002 (Uppsala Horror Film Festival)
Denmark 30 March 2003 (NatFilm Festival)
Finland 17 August 2006 (DVD premiere)
Hungary 5 April 2007
USA 16 July 2010 (New York Museum of Arts and Design)
Japan 1 March 2011 (Tokyo Intenational Zombie Film Festival)
Spain 12 October 2011 (Barcelona) (re-release) (Phenomena)
Greece 20 November 2012 (Panorama of European Cinema)
USA 18 October 2014 (New Orleans Film Festival)
Finland 30 October 2014 (Night Visions Film Festival)
Directed by Lucio Fulci
Music by
Fabio Frizzi / Walter E. Sear ... (U.S. version)
Filming Dates
20 October 1980 - 15 December 1980
Writing Credits
Dardano Sacchetti ... (story/screenplay)
Giorgio Mariuzzo ... (screenplay)
Lucio Fulci ... (screenplay)
Filming Locations
Otis House, Fairview Riverside State Park - 119 Fairview Drive, Madisonville, Louisiana, USA
(Seven Doors hotel)
Incir De Paolis Studios, Rome, Lazio, Italy
(studio)
New Orleans, Lake Charles, Monroe, Metairie, Louisiana, USA
Lake Pontchartrain Causeway, New Orleans, Louisiana, USA
(on location)
technical specifications
Runtime 1 hr 27 min (87 min)
1 hr 20 min (80 min) (R-rated) (USA)
1 hr 22 min (82 min) (cut) (Korea)
Cast
Catriona MacColl Catriona MacColl ... Liza Merril (as Katherine MacColl)
David Warbeck David Warbeck ... Dr. John McCabe
Cinzia Monreale Cinzia Monreale ... Emily (as Sarah Keller)
Antoine Saint-John Antoine Saint-John ... Schweick
Veronica Lazar Veronica Lazar ... Martha
Larry Ray Larry Ray ... Larry (as Anthony Flees)
Giovanni De Nava Giovanni De Nava ... Joe the Plumber (credit only)
Al Cliver Al Cliver ... Dr. Harris
Michele Mirabella Michele Mirabella ... Martin Avery
Giampaolo Saccarola Giampaolo Saccarola ... Arthur
Maria Pia Marsala Maria Pia Marsala ... Jill
Laura De Marchi Laura De Marchi ... Mary-Ann
Ottaviano Dell'Acqua Ottaviano Dell'Acqua ... Zombie at Hospital (uncredited)
Roberto Dell'Acqua Roberto Dell'Acqua ... Glass-Smashing Zombie (uncredited)
Lucio Fulci Lucio Fulci ... Town Clerk (uncredited)
Dardano Sacchetti Dardano Sacchetti ... Mob Member (uncredited)
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johnnymundano · 5 years
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The House by the Cemetery (AKA Quella villa accanto al cimitero) (1981)
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Directed by Lucio Fulci
Written by Dardano Sacchetti, Giorgio Mariuzzo and Lucio Fulci
Music by Walter Rizzati
Country: Italy
Language: Italian
Running Time: 88 minutes
CAST
Catriona MacColl as Lucy Boyle (credited as Katherine MacColl)
Paolo Malco as Dr. Norman Boyle
Ania Pieroni as Ann (babysitter)
Giovanni Frezza as Bob Boyle
Silvia Collatina as Mae Freudstein
Dagmar Lassander as Laura Gittleson
Giovanni De Nava as Dr. Freudstein
Daniela Doria as the first female victim
Gianpaolo Saccarola as Daniel Douglas
Carlo De Mejo as Mr. Wheatley
Kenneth A. Olsen as Harold (credited as John Olson)
Elmer Johnsson as the Cemetery Caretaker
Ranieri Ferrara as a victim
Teresa Rossi Passante as Mary Freudstein
Lucio Fulci as Professor Mueller (uncredited)
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The House by the Cemetery is a disjointed 1980’s schlocker by the entertainingly inconsistent Italian director Lucio Fulci. As movies go, it’s terrible. As Lucio Fulci movies go, it’s quite good. As horror movies go, it’s kind of for diehards only; not because it’s so harrowing (it isn’t) but because you need to forgive its many, many failings in order to enjoy it. It’s not for everyone, but then what is, besides death. Appropriately enough for a house by a cemetery there’s plenty of death in The House by The Cemetery, so much in fact that several of the characters are in fact dead to start with. Ghosts then, except for the guy in the cellar with a head like a burn scarred testicle. 
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Of course this cellar is in The House by the Cemetery, and of course our expendable family move in. Lucy (Catriona MacColl; good) is a mum ,and the ‘70s not really having ended yet in 1981, that’s about all she gets to play with. Norman (Paolo Malco; not bad), her husband is an academic studying (something I either missed or which is less than explicitly stated). Whatever he’s studying it has a high mortality rate (it’s probably Sociology; tough gig that). See, Norman’s colleague, Dr Peterson, murdered his wife and hung himself, while studying (mumble mumble) at the house by the cemetery. Norman and his family move into the house (by the cemetery; that’s important) to complete Dr Peterson’s research into (cough cough). Even before they leave the city, Bob (Giovanni Frezza), their small son, is having spooky experiences which I feel legally obliged to state in no way suggest someone has been watching The Shining (1980) and taking notes.  In many ways The House by the Cemetery is like The Shining, but The Shining written not by Stephen King, but by a glue huffing Guy N Smith. 
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Wait, I think Norman is researching the house itself (?), because there’s a lot of talk in libraries about a one time resident Dr Freudstein (yes, really; I know, I know) who killed his family back in Victorian times. A kind of academic boon for Norman’s researches then is that Dr Freudstein (I mean, wow, that name...just wow) is actually still in the basement, kind of dead but kept mobile due to his non-specific “experiments”, when he isn’t doing those he presumably sits very quietly in the basement. The perfect tenant then, except every now and again he’ll come up and stab someone repeatedly with a poker, or saw through their neck or stab them in the head. Obviously no one would want to live in a house where defrosting the fridge could be suddenly interrupted by a maniac with a cheese melt face ripping your throat out. So, cunningly, the realtor (Dagmar Lassander; angry and confused alternately) just never mentions this offal faced tenant, or even the fact the basement is boarded up. But then it seems to be boarded up with magic nails because old face ache nips in and out smoother than a teenager sneaking down for a midnight snack. Mind you, I’m not sure the realtor knows what’s going on, she seems quite surprised when the man with a boiled arse for a face starts stabbing her really slowly with a poker. So maybe no one know he’s there? Which makes precisely no sense.
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But, unlike scarlet corn syrup and maggots,  sense is in short supply in The House by the Cemetery. I mean, the cemetery isn’t just by the house; some of  it’s actually in the house. There’s a tomb stone inlaid into the ground floor. Because, reasons. Unfortunately, it is established that there is a huge basement under the house so that makes no sense. A lot of this illogicality is intentional as  Fulci’s obviously going for a dream-like state, and every now and again that works; dream logic is light on sense and nightmare logic doubly so. Creepy child trapped in photograph, shop window dummy prefiguring death by decapitation, a kid playing hide and seek with a ghost, these are all flesh crawlingly good fun. The problem is that this dream logic saturates every scene, even the mundane stuff, so the whole thing just ends up bafflingly irrational. 
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People wander about ostensibly doing normal things but none of it makes much sense. At one point the nanny, Anna (who is played by Ania Pieroni as though she is possessed, for no clear reason), is cleaning up a massive blood trail in the kitchen when Lucy, not unsurprisingly, asks what she’s doing. Anna stares at her like she’s on a crack high and the conversation moves on. Lucy apparently is more used than I am to massive blood trails in the kitchen. About half way through the movie you realise you have no idea why any of what’s happening is happening, or even why any of the characters are where they are, or doing what they are doing. The only thing you are sure of is several of them have died violently at the hands of someone with an inside out face, and before moving into a house you should always check the basement.
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To be fair to The House by the Cemetery, the version I saw  was dubbed and this dubbing was just terrible. Just bloody awful stuff. It was so terrible it did the cast no favours whatsoever. The kid, Bob, is largely irritating because of the dubbing, which sounds like a someone doing a shrill impersonation of Little Lord Fauntleroy. When he’s allowed to act without speaking he’s remarkable, largely because in those bits he looks shit scared out of his wits. Seriously, he looks pretty genuinely distressed, I hate to imagine what they were putting him through. I’m sure he shows up in the jeep at the end of Demons (1985), so clearly he survived the filming experience. Basically, The House by the Cemetery is probably a much better experience viewed with subtitles, but I doubt even that would actually catapult it into “good”. It is, however, very enjoyable and a great deal of fun, with some really quite nifty direction by Fulci. Bonus: contains a fantastically ridiculous bat attack.
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moviesandmania · 4 years
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Ænigma (1987) reviews and Severin Films Blu-ray news
Ænigma (1987) reviews and Severin Films Blu-ray news
Lucio Fulci’s 1987 horror film Ænigma is being released on Blu-ray as a part of Severin Films’ mid-year sale. Special features:
• Limited CD Soundtrack • Audio Commentary with Troy Howarth, Author of Splintered Visions: Lucio Fulci and His Films and Mondo-Digital.com’s Nathaniel Thompson • Writing Nightmares: Interview with Screenwriter Giorgio Mariuzzo • Italian Aenigma: Appraising Late Day Fulci
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80smovies · 6 years
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The Beyond
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brokehorrorfan · 4 years
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The House by the Cemetery and The New York Ripper will be released on 4K Ultra HD on on August 25 via Blue Underground. Both Italian horror films are directed by Lucio Fulci (Zombie, The Beyond).
The House by the Cemetery is a 1981 horror film written by Fulci, Dardano Sacchetti (The Beyond), and Giorgio Mariuzzo (The Beyond). Catriona MacColl, Paolo Malco, Ania Pieroni, Giovanni Frezza, Silvia Collatina, and Dagmar Lassander star.
The New York Ripper is a 1982 giallo film written by Fulci, Gianfranco Clerici (Cannibal Holocaust), Vincenzo Mannino (House on the Edge of the Park), and Dardano Sacchetti (The Beyond). Paolo Malco, Almanta Suska, and Alexandra Delli Colli star.
Both films were restored in 4K for special edition Blu-rays that debuted last year. This time around, they’ll be presented in true 4K 16-bit with Dolby Vision HDR and new Dolby Atmos audio mixes.
Each release comes with a Blu-ray disc with special features, detailed below. First pressings include a slipcover.
The House by the Cemetery 4K Ultra HD disc:
Feature film
Audio commentary with Splintered Visions: Lucio Fulci and His Films author Troy Howarth
Deleted scene
Theatrical trailers
TV spot
Poster & still galleries
The House by the Cemetery Blu-ray disc:
Interviews with actors Catriona MacColl and Paolo Malco
Interviews with actors Giovanni Frezza and Silvia Collatina
Interview with actress Dagmar Lassander
Interview with actor Carlo De Mejo
Interviews with co-writers Dardano Sacchetti and Elisa Briganti
Interviews with cinematographer Sergio Salvati, special makeup effects artist Maurizio Trani, special effects artist Gino De Rossi, and actor Giovanni De Nava
Interview with co-writer Giorgio Mariuzzo
Q&A with actress Catriona MacColl
Interview with Beyond Terror: The Films of Lucio Fulci author Stephen Thrower
A young family moves from their cramped New York City apartment to a spacious new home in New England. But this is no ordinary house in the country: the previous owner was the deranged Dr. Freudstein, whose monstrous human experiments have left a legacy of bloody mayhem. Now, someone-or something-is alive in the basement, and home sweet home is about to become a horrific hell on earth. 
The New York Ripper 4K Ultra HD disc 1:
Feature film
Audio commentary with Splintered Visions: Lucio Fulci and His Films author Troy Howarth
Theatrical trailer
The New York Ripper Blu-ray disc:
Feature film
Audio commentary with Splintered Visions: Lucio Fulci and His Films author Troy Howarth
Interview with co-writer Dardano Sacchetti
Interview with actor Howard Ross
Interview with actress Cinzia de Ponti
Interview with actress Zora Kerova
2009 archival interview with actress Zora Kerova
Interview with Beyond Terror: The Films of Lucio Fulci author Stephen Thrower
Interview with poster artist Enzo Sciotti
New York City filming locations then and now
Theatrical trailer
Poster & still gallery
A blade-wielding psychopath is on the loose, turning The Big Apple bright red with the blood of beautiful young women. As NYPD detective Fred Williams (Jack Hedley) follows the trail of butchery from the decks of the Staten Island Ferry to the sex shows of Times Square, each brutal murder becomes a sadistic taunt. In the city that never sleeps, the hunt is on for the killer that can t be stopped!
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80smovies · 6 years
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The Beyond
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