A sleek thriller from the
bloodier end of the giallo spectrum, Black Belly of the Tarantula is very
similar in style and tone to the many Hitchcock-inspired thrillers that Brian
De Palma made—it’s a highly sexualized and nearly operatic melodrama about a
psycho who mutilates and kills beautiful women. Accordingly, the same question
that one can ask about De Palma’s ugliest movies can be asked about this
Italian production. Does Black Belly of
the Tarantula justify its own existence? Not really. Although noteworthy
for certain elements, including a parade of gorgeous starlets and a truly eerie
score by the great Ennio Morricone, Black
Belly of the Tarantula is vile for the way it eroticizes the degradation of
women. Some psycho-killer movies are worthwhile because they provide insights
into the human condition, and it’s true that the people behind Black Belly of the Tarantula follow a
fairly true moral compass. Nonetheless, how many images of lovely ladies being
sliced open does the world really need?
Set in Rome, the picture tracks an
investigation by Inspector Tellini (Giancarlo Giannini) into a series of
strange murders. As depicted in loving detail, each murder involves an unknown
assailant stabbing a woman in the back of the neck with an acupuncture needle,
thereby paralyzing the women so the murderer can disembowel her while she’s still
conscious. Tellini learns that this method of killing is inspired by the way a
black wasp kills its natural enemy, the tarantula. In between murder vignettes
and scenes of Tellini examining grisly crime scenes, the picture shows Tellini
interrogating suspects and also shows Tellini’s home life. The most interesting
thread in the movie is a subplot about Tellini questioning whether he’s cut out
to be a homicide investigator, not only because seeing savagery wounds his
soul, but also because the killer makes sport of Tellini by surreptitiously
filming a sexual encounter between the inspector and his wife.
Despite its formulaic
story and sadistic extremes, Black Belly
of the Tarantula is interesting to watch for the way it stimulates the
senses. Director Paolo Cavara contrives many dynamic images and even a few
somewhat erotic ones (for example, the shots of a nude woman viewed through
jellied glass while she receives a massage). And even though Cavara’s chase
scenes are perfunctory, he exhibits real glee when filming murders, contriving
dramatic camera angles and translating peril into something like choreography.
European beauties passing before Cavara’s camera include three women associated
with the James Bond franchise—Claudine Auger, Barbara Bach, and Barbara Bouchet—while
Morricone’s inventive melodies are like aural candy with bitter undertones.
Furthermore, Giannini gives a strong performance in the leading role, blending
desperation, ennui, fear, and rage into a sympathetic characterization.
Black Belly of the Tarantula: FUNKY
2 comments:
Talk about uncanny. Giannini plays an inspector trailing a bizarre and elaborate killer, who in turn taunts him by mentioning his wife. That was essentially his role in 2001's Hannibal!
This was one of the few gialli to gain a British release from a major when MGM-EMI picked it up and put it out in September '72 as support to THE WEEKEND MURDERS.
David Pirie, author of A Heritage of Horror, called it "tatty and incomprehensible" in the same month's Monthly Film Bulletin, but did make the interesting observation that "the direction remains uncannily static".
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