Showing posts with label Peter Strickland. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Peter Strickland. Show all posts

Monday, September 14, 2015

EVOLUTION Premieres Tonight!


I like to think that Evolution exists in the same world as Peter Strickland's The Duke of Burgundy. It has the same gorgeous cinematography, a similar focus on the natural world. But where The Duke of Burgundy presented a world of female scholars and scientists, in which the only male voice was that of a mole cricket singing on a recording, in Evolution, there are no adult men. There are only boys. The film takes place on an island populated only by young boys and female care providers performing mysterious experiments on them.

We have a teaser now, and it looks gorgeous.



Perhaps, if we are lucky, there will be a mole cricket here and there.

Meanwhile, on another part of the island, mole crickets and lepidoptery lectures.


EVOLUTION Screening Times:
Mon., Sept. 14, 9:30pm at RYERSON
Wed., Sept. 16, 4:30pm at BLOOR HOT DOCS CINEMA
Sun., Sept. 20,  8:30pm at TIFF BELL LIGHTBOX

Saturday, June 27, 2015

Listen to THE DUKE OF BURGUNDY Director Peter Strickland's "The Len Continuum"

"Darling, I'm off to the Lepidoptery lecture." "I think I'll stay home and listen to 'The Len Continuum.'"


Did you enjoy Peter Strickland's The Duke of Burgundy at Vanguard last year? Or maybe his tribute to giallo and sound design, Berberian Sound Studio, which premiered at Vanguard? Do you wish you could enjoy more dramas by Peter Strickland? Well you're in luck--Strickland has a radio drama "The Len Continuum" airing on BBC Radio 4. It features Toby Jones (Berberian Sound Studio) and it sounds plenty promising.

The debut for radio by the critically acclaimed British filmmaker Peter Strickland, writer and director of cult films Berberian Sound Studio and The Duke of Burgundy.

Sometime in the early eighties, struggling actor Len is increasingly overshadowed by his wife Alice's successful career in local radio. As his bitterness grows, he comes by a chance to finally prove himself.

Surreal soundscapes and black humour with Toby Jones and Belinda Stewart-Wilson.

Will there be mole crickets singing? Listen to find out.  You can listen to it on the Radio 4 site for another three weeks.
Hope you enjoy the show, everyone!



Monday, September 8, 2014

THE DUKE OF BURGUNDY: Some Thoughts


I don't have quite a review, more some thoughts about The Duke of Burgundy. I loved it from the opening credits, which are as gorgeous as Berberian Sound Studio's. Where Berberian Sound Studio (2012) explored and played with the conventions of giallo, The Duke of Burgundy is grounded in the forms and conventions of European erotica from the late Sixties and Seventies. It is gorgeous, as both Berberian Sound Studio and Strickland's first film, Katalin Varga (2009) are. The soundtrack is an intriguing mix of scoring by Cat's Eyes and field recordings of insects, including the mole cricket (which has become quite popular here at Vanguard). There are beautiful shots of insect and butterfly specimens and diagrams. One segment is an almost kaleidoscopic display of butterfly wings as seen through a microscope. And just as beautifully composed shots of orthopterist Cynthia (Sidse Babette Knudsen) dressing and applying her make-up, composing herself for amateur lepidopterist Evelyn (Chiara D'Anna).

U think that The Duke of Burgundy subverts its genre in its quiet way. There are no men present in the film, no male gaze or point of view to relate with, and the only evident male presence is the male mole cricket recording Cynthia listens to. And it isn't even a pointed male absence. It is, as Jordan Hoffman points out in his review, just the world of the movie. "The movie exists in a world without men, or automobiles or vocations/activities other than delivering or attending lepidoptera lectures."

"Off to another lepidoptera lecture at the institute!"

That world of riding bicycles and attending lepidoptera lectures on endless golden autumn days is tremendously appealing. And god knows, I am looking for a Queer cinema with scientists in love--and hopefully some Danger: Diabolik-style Queer lady cat burglars. But with The Duke of Burgundy, the setting, the lectures and the cycling becomes so much more present for me than the kink, which becomes almost mundane as we see it from different perspectives and in changing contexts.  The kink portrayed is a way of exploring not just their relationship, but the way that fantasy is negotiated in relationships and how relationships, like D/s scenes and films, have their scripts. It's also kind of fascinating to me that a film with such concern with structure and form, not only in Cynthia and Evelyn's relationship, but in the presentation of the narrative and in film's visual and aural structures can be so intimate and compassionate.

But where I think The Duke of Burgundy is truly subversive is in its presentation of Queer women, Lesbians and Lesbian relationships. I have seen a lot of Lesbian films, films about Lesbian relationships and films with Lesbians in them intended for a straight audience. The Duke of Burgundy is one of the few that I think people will watch in the future not as a historical curiosity about how women's relationships with women were portrayed, but as a film exploring the give and take of making your partner happy without making yourself miserable and balancing happiness and fulfillment in a relationship. But with kink, specially designed furniture, lectures about butterflies and mole crickets.

THE DUKE OF BURGUNDY screening times:
Monday, Sept 8th 3:15 PM SCOTIABANK 12

DUKE OF BURGUNDY Twitter Buzz!


There's only one more screening of The Duke Of Burgundy. We've shared an interview with director Peter Strickland. We've shown you the beautiful poster. We've shared some reviews. And we've discussed mole crickets at some length. But if you're still not sure if it's a movie for you, maybe you'd like to read what some other people who saw it think.



THE DUKE OF BURGUNDY Final Screening:
Monday, Sept 8th 3:15 PM SCOTIABANK 12

Sunday, September 7, 2014

DUKE OF BURGUNDY Press Round-Up!

"Should we go into town to see a film?"
 There's one more screening of The Duke Of Burgundy and maybe you haven't quite decided if it is for you. Here's a little round-up of reviews to help. We like to help.

At Little White Lies, David Ehrlich has a nice review of The Duke of Burgundy, writing, "Peter Strickland's sapphic giallo dream is a tied-up and twisted masterpiece."

And adding:

A few minutes into Peter Strickland’s The Duke of Burgundy, the matron of a gorgeous European estate pulls her maid into a bathroom and pisses into her mouth. That’s the exact moment when it becomes clear that these two women are deeply in love with each other.

Perhaps the major discovery of this year’s Toronto International Film Festival, The Duke of Burgundy is a Certified Copy riff for the S&M crowd, Strickland’s third feature cementing his status as a world talent while also assimilating shades of early Fassbinder and a diffuse (but palpable) giallo atmosphere into its cheeky exploration of relationships and their performative nature

At Screen Daily, Allan Hunter writes, "The Duke Of Burgundy is a complex, melancholy romance in which love is sustained by negotiating the limits of desire and understanding the expectations of your partner. It is an odd, original and beguiling work."

 Robbie Collin writes at The Telegraph:
In the same way Strickland’s last film, Berberian Sound Studio, invoked the black gloves and curdled screams of giallo horror without actually making a home for itself in that genre, The Duke of Burgundy draws on the sexually charged European chillers of the late 1970s, by directors like Jess Franco and Joe D’Amato – it operates at the same kind of sex-dazed remove as Vampyros Lesbos or Lorna the Exorcist, although here, that forbidden creaminess comes spiced with very British humour.

 Jordan Hoffman writes at The Guardian:
The Duke of Burgundy will have its detractors. But this is not just a filthy movie. It's a considerable work of art, and one that touches on a rarely discussed side of human sexuality completely free of judgement. You may be surprised to find shades of your own life in Evelyn and Cynthia's fragile relationship.

Meanwhile, Culture Addicts looks at the soundtrack by Cat's Eyes:

Cat’s Eyes have created a compelling atmosphere which beautifully showcases [Rachel] Zeffira’s classical leanings and [Faris] Badwan’s darker side, while drawing previously invisible arcs between Verdian Requiems, Phil Spector pop, and Paul Giovanni’s Wicker Man.

 Unfortunately, I can find no reviews of Peter Strickland's mole cricket 7".

Sorry, little guy.


THE DUKE OF BURGUNDY Final Screening:
Monday, Sept 8th 3:15 PM SCOTIABANK 12



Saturday, September 6, 2014

THE DUKE OF BURGUNDY: Our Friend The Mole Cricket

Hi, everybody!

When we interviewed Peter Strickland, director for The Duke of Burgundy, he revealed that his favorite insect was the mole cricket and his favorite insect sound is the mole cricket's call. And it became clear to me that the heart of The Duke Of Burgundy is not European Erotic Cinema or even the complex negotiations of human relationships. It's mole crickets.

Things to know about mole crickets:

Mole crickets are in the same order (Orthoptera) as crickets, grasshoppers and leafhoppers of various kinds, but their family (Gryllotalpidae) have developed specialized--and kinda adorable if you look at them a long time--claws for digging. Their rear legs are adapted for helping them push through the ground.

They are nocturnal, omnivorous and hibernate deep beneath the ground in the winter.

Mole crickets might not be strong jumpers, but they can fly, making them a terrestrial, aerial and subterranean triple threat.

As adults, mole crickets are classified as "big-ass"--growing up to an inch and a half or 3-5 cm.

"I am at the heart of cinema itself."


According to Peter Strickland, golfers and golf course grounds keepers despise mole crickets. My own internet research bears this out.

Male mole crickets create swank dens for female mole crickets to lay their eggs in. The dens act as a resonating chamber for the male's call.

via Listen To This Noise as is the video below.


And mole crickets make this sound:


Learn more about mole crickets--and love--and loving mole crickets tonight with The Duke Of Burgundy. And make sure to pick up one of Strickland's recordings of mole cricket song if you get the chance!

THE DUKE OF BURGUNDY screening times:
Saturday, Sept 6th 10:00 PM TIFF BELL LIGHTBOX 1
Monday, Sept 8th 3:15 PM SCOTIABANK 12

THE DUKE OF BURGUNDY: Premieres Tonight!


Peter Strickland's The Duke of Burgundy is the third Vanguard film premiering today. The premiere will take place at TIFF Bell Lightbox Cinema 1 at 10:00 PM. Head over to our previous posts to see the poster and an interview with director Peter Strickland.

Tickets can be purchased:
    • ONLINETIFF.net's Ticket Product List Page
    • BY PHONE: 416.599.TIFF or 1.888.599.8433 (Toll-free) 
    • IN PERSON
      • Festival Box Office; 225 King St. West
      • TIFF Bell Lightbox, 350 King St. West
    Further information about The Duke of Burgundy can be found on the Festival website and the film's official website.

    THE DUKE OF BURGUNDY screening times:
    Sat., Sept. 6th, 10:00 PM, TIFF BELL LIGHTBOX 1
    Mon., Sept. 8th, 3:15 PM, SCOTIABANK 12

    Wednesday, September 3, 2014

    THE DUKE OF BURGUNDY: 5 Question Interview with Director Peter Strickland


    After astounding audiences with his tribute to giallo and foleying two years ago in Berberian Sound Studio, Peter Strickland returns to Vanguard this year with The Duke Of Burgundy, a film about the relationship between two women with conflicting desires and a shared interest in lepidoptery and entomology. Strickland was kind enough to answer a few questions. In this short interview, he talks about sound, the pressure to put on a persona, pheromonal perfume and mole crickets. ~ Carol Borden

    Sound design played an integral role in Berberian Sound Studio and plays one again in The Duke Of Burgundy. What interests you about sound design and soundtracks in film, and how did you come to use insect sounds for The Duke Of Burgundy

    There was a conscious effort to do something rigorous and defined for the sound design in Berberian Sound Studio. That approach would've felt frivolous had we done it for The Duke of Burgundy. Martin Pavey stripped a lot back for the sound mix. We probably put more time and thought into taking sounds away than in constructing anything. We tried to offer something sparse with air to breathe and most importantly, we didn't wish to draw attention to ourselves since sound was not the subject as it was with the previous film. But taking that into account, Martin is a highly inventive one-man show of a sound designer. He does the job of five people on any other film. We don't want to wow people with sound but we want to evoke a strong sense of place and feeling. Carefully looking for original field recordings to mix in with Rob Entwistle's work certainly helped. Certain animals were not available or on cue during the shoot, so we had to hunt down recordings of roe deer and scops owls during post production. I was very happy to include the wing sounds of Bombyx mori by Michael Prime (a member of Organum, one of my favourite bands).

    I can't really explain my interest in sound and soundtracks. It's just something I naturally key into, though I greatly admire directors who resist soundtracks. It's all ultimately down to what most suitably serves the mood and subject of a film, whether that means no music or something incredibly lush. I came to use mole cricket sounds for The Duke of Burgundy because I put out a record of these in 2003 and couldn't sell any. I got tired of those boxes taking up so much space under my bed, thinking that if this film does well, I can finally sell those records. I'm kind of desperate to be honest and I'll be bringing a box with me to Toronto.



    The Duke of Burgundy feels quite a bit like a lot of Lesbian literature, pulp melodrama and historical material from the 1930s and 1940s, while portraying a very emotionally believable relationship between two people. I was wondering what, if any, research you did and how it informed the film and your portrayal of Cynthia, Evelyn and their relationship. 

    I didn't do much research. It's a completely artificial world which I wanted to exist on its own terms. In terms of the emotional resonance, that comes from somewhere or other. Just being a human, that side takes care of itself when writing. I didn't want to make a judgement either for or against BDSM nor did I want to send it up, but the practicalities of enacting any fantasy can be as ridiculous as the practicalities of doing foley work for a horror film. What I wanted to do was push the audience to a far point in terms of being able to relate to a sexual desire and almost lose them. But once the surprise at the lengths Evelyn will go to for her sexual kicks has gone, one can hopefully see what is at the crux of the film: how can compromise be reached between two lovers who have different intimate needs?

    But research aside, I'm very fond of a lot of those euro sleaze films from the '70s, especially anything with Joe Dallesandro. My first meeting with Andy Starke was to do with remaking Jess Franco's Lorna the Exorcist. We ditched that idea but wanted to wade into that fantastical realm that Franco was notorious for. In some way, taking some core cues from Franco's films was a starting point for the script, but then with the process of writing it changed naturally into something else, though staying true to the sadomasochistic pulse of the majority of his work. The first proper job I ever had in the film industry was as an assistant on Bruce LaBruce's Skin Flick in 1998, so maybe something stuck.

    Berberian Sound Studio explored the artifice of film, while showing the blurry line between reality and fantasy in people's lives. The Duke of Burgundy reveals the artifice necessary to make fantasy reality in the context of BDSM and, possibly, love. Is the relationship between people's inner and outer lives something you find particularly interesting? 

    That's something I can only consider in hindsight. I wasn't really conscious of that when writing either script. What I found interesting from the films I had seen which explored different desires was that they rarely exposed the reality behind the fantasy. The dominant male or female is inherently so in these films. It seemed both more fun and truthful to peel off the ice queen mask and reveal an altogether different person - a reluctant dominatrix, which Sidse portrayed so vividly.  The ritualistic/repetitive aspect of the sexual role play is fascinating and you can manipulate that in a film as a means of altering one's perception of power, meaning and even time. The same words are repeated but with the accrued knowledge the audience have of the characters and their dynamic, the meaning is totally different. But ultimately, the most universal connection the film has is the pressure of putting on a persona. That's something that's always a demand on us in almost all aspects of our lives. 
    Mole cricket via Listen To This Noise

    The film is incredibly sensuous, not just visually and aurally, but appealing to senses less easily accessed by film. There are strong tactile elements, but I also noticed a perfume credited in the opening titles. Was it a scent worn by one of the actors? What role does it play in the film? 

    That's a new perfume--je suis Gizella. She's an erstwhile javelin champion who had to take early retirement due to an in-growing toenail. The perfume is allegedly made from some clandestine serum but she won't divulge too much. It's quite pheromonal and was making a couple of the crew members too horny, which meant I had to confiscate the bottles.

    Do you have a favorite insect or insect sound? 

    It has to be the mole cricket. They're hated by golfers which gives them an instant thumbs up from me. I find them staggeringly beautiful even though they're probably the most elusive of insects. Also, the sound they make can be harsher than a Whitehouse record.

    Thanks to Peter Strickland for taking time to answer my questions. And make sure you get a copy of his collection of mole cricket sounds! 

    THE DUKE OF BURGUNDY screening times:
    Saturday, Sept 6th 10:00 PM TIFF BELL LIGHTBOX 1
    Monday, Sept 8th 3:15 PM SCOTIABANK 12

    Friday, August 22, 2014

    THE DUKE OF BURGUNDY First Look and Poster!


    We're pretty sure we could just type PETER STRICKLAND over and over again in caps and that would be enough to entice you to want to see The Duke of Burgundy. Because we all still remember the amazingness that was Berberian Sound Studio from the 2012 Festival, right? Right. Well Strickland is back and all we can say is, "Finally!"

    This time, we're taken to new erotic heights with the story of a wealthy amateur lepidopterist (read: studier of butterflies and moths) whose sadomasochistic streak is slowly revealed to her new housekeeper as the two become lovers. (You know how it goes with housekeepers.) The Duke of Burgundy, like Berberian Sound Studio, promises to plunge the audience in a startling, surreal sensory experience through dark, lush cinematography and music.

    Totally normal relationship for a housekeeper and employer, yup.
    Production company Rook Films released a poster by amazing artist Jay Shaw. After ogling this work, you should head over to his website and ogle the rest. (We want them all, obviously.)

    Poster perfection? We think so. 

    The Duke of Burgundy is screening at the 2014 Toronto International Film Festival as part of the Vanguard Programme. Check out the rest of the Vanguard films on the official Festival website.


    THE DUKE OF BURGUNDY screening times:
    Saturday, Sept 6th 10:00 PM TIFF BELL LIGHTBOX 1
    Monday, Sept 8th 3:15 PM SCOTIABANK 12



    Monday, September 10, 2012

    BERBERIAN SOUND STUDIO: Giallo Playlist


    Peter Strickland's Berberian Sound Studio focuses not only on the love of a particular genre, giallo, but on a love for that genre's particular relationship with sound.  Gialli not only have viscerally powerful sound effects making even looking away no guarantee that a murder won't be deeply affecting, they also have a long tradition of ennervated, groovy, dynamic and even experimental soundtracks. Here's a playlist to get you in the giallo mood.

    "Piume Di Cristallo" from Ennio Morricone's score for Dario Argento's The Bird with the Crystal Plumage/ L'Uccello Piume di Cristalli (1969).




    "Sabba" from Bruno Nicolai soundtrack for Sergio Martino's Tutti I Colori di Buio / All the Colors of the Dark (1972)


    Berto Pisano's funk-inflected opening theme for Andrea Bianchi's Strip Nude for your Killer / Nude per l'Assassino (1975).


    Progressive rock band Goblin is probably best known for their soundtrack to Argento's Suspiria, but they got their start providing the tense synth mixed with classic Gothic organ soundtrack for Argento's Deep Red / Profundo Rosso (1975).


    UK band Broadcast provides the soundtack for Berberian Sound Studio despite the untimely death of  band member, Trish Keenan. Broadcast completed the soundtrack using vocals Keenan had recorded before her death. I couldn't find any singles from it, but here's one of their earlier songs, "Paper Cuts."



    Our friends at The Deuce have more suggestions for giallo soundtrack listening.

    BERBERIAN SOUND STUDIO screens one more time: 
    Tues., Sept. 11, 2:45PM CINEPLEX YONGE AND DUNDAS

    BERBERIAN SOUND STUDIO Premieres Tonight!


    Peter Strickland's Berberian Sound Studio premieres tonight at the Bloor Hot Docs Cinema at 6:00 PM. Head over to our previous post to see the film's trailer and poster.

    Tickets can be purchased:
      • ONLINETIFF.net/thefestival
      • BY PHONE: 416.599.TIFF or 1.888.599.8433 (Toll-free) 
      • IN PERSON
        • Festival Box Office; 225 King St. West
        • Bloor Hot Docs Cinema Box Office; 506 Bloor Street West


    Further information about Peter Strickland's Berberian Sound Studio can be found on the Festival website, as well as on the Berberian Sound Studio Twitter accountFacebook page, and IMDB page.

    BERBERIAN SOUND STUDIO screening times:
    • Mon., Sept. 10, The Bloor Hot Docs Cinema 6:00 PM
    • Tues., Sept. 11, Cineplex Yonge & Dundas 3 2:45 PM

    Friday, September 7, 2012

    BERBERIAN SOUND STUDIO: Review from Mostly Film

    Toby Jones fails to see the humor in this scene.
    Mostly Film's Indy Datta reviewed Berberian Sound Studio this week. It's a beautifully written, well-informed, and positive review.

    Datta briefly analyzes the differences in plot between Berberian Sound Studio and director Peter Strickland's previous film Katalin Varga, and adds: "But what is striking, in the end, is how clearly the two films share the same voice, and how distinctive that voice is."

    In addition, the review mentions not only the humor in the movie but also that Berberian Sound Studio "feels like a very uncalculated and personal film, and its sincerity is ultimately disarming."

    Read the entire review here. Be sure to catch a screening of Berberian Sound Studio at the Toronto International Film Festival.

    BERBERIAN SOUND STUDIO Screening Times:
    Mon., Sept. 10th, BLOOR HOT DOCS CINEMA 6:00PM
    Tues., Sept. 11th, CINEPLEX YONGE & DUNDAS 3  2:45PM

    Wednesday, September 5, 2012

    The Guardian Interviews BERBERIAN SOUND STUDIO Director Peter Strickland



    The Guardian profiles Berberian Sound Studio director Peter Strickland. Strickland talks about 1970s England (Dorking, in particular), Toby Jones, giallo cinema and the power of sound in film.

    But while 70s Britain was glued to Dad's Army, in Italy directors such as Dario Argento were turning out the floridly stylised gialli whose zealous attention to music and costume Strickland would later relish. His own film is a riot of sly references to the underground cinema and music he admits being obsessed by (the title alludes to avant-garde singer Cathy Berberian). Yet despite what Strickland himself calls the "trainspotting", his story pushes in unexpected directions. With nods to the trials of freelance employment and workplace bullying, this oddball horror-art movie has a firmer grasp of working life than many sober slices of social realism.
    Click through for more.

    BERBERIAN SOUND STUDIO screening times:
    Mon., Sept. 10, 6:00PM:  The Bloor Hot Docs Cinema
    Tues., Sept. 11, 2:45:  Cineplex Yonge & Dundas 3

    Tuesday, September 4, 2012

    Alternative Posters for BERBERIAN SOUND STUDIO

    Peter Strickland's Berberian Sound Studio, playing the Toronto International Film Festival within the Vanguard programme, has released a collection of alternative posters by Julian House through their Facebook page








    Further information about Peter Strickland's Berberian Sound Studio can be found on the Festival website, as well as on the Berberian Sound Studio Twitter account, Facebook page, and IMDB page.

    BERBERIAN SOUND STUDIO screening times:
    • Mon., Sept. 10, The Bloor Hot Docs Cinema 6:00 PM
    • Tues., Sept. 11, Cineplex Yonge & Dundas 3 2:45 PM

    Tuesday, August 28, 2012

    BERBERIAN SOUND STUDIO sweeps awards at FrightFest


    What a scream! London's FrightFest has just wrapped up and Peter Strickland's Berberian Sound Studio has collected all the top awards: Best Film, Best Actor (Toby Jones) and Best Director! Way to amp up my anticipation for this unique "giallo" homage.

    Total Film has the full list of winners along with some photos.

    BERBERIAN SOUND STUDIO Screening Times:
    • Mon., Sept. 10th, 6:00 PM BLOOR HOT DOCS CINEMA
    • Tue., Sept. 11th, 2:45 PM CINEPLEX YONGE & DUNDAS 3

    BERBERIAN SOUND STUDIO Poster and Trailer


    Peter Strickland's Berberian Sound Studio is a tense psychological thriller behind the scenes of 1970s Italian horror cinema, boasting a performance by renowned character actor Toby Jones that Empire Magazine calls "masterful."

    Below are the poster and trailer for Berberian Sound Studio, which plays the Toronto International Film Festival within the Vanguard programme.



    Further information about Peter Strickland's Berberian Sound Studio can be found on the Festival website, as well as on the Berberian Sound Studio Twitter account, Facebook page, and IMDB page.

    BERBERIAN SOUND STUDIO screening times:
    • Mon., Sept. 10, The Bloor Hot Docs Cinema 6:00 PM
    • Tues., Sept. 11, Cineplex Yonge & Dundas 3 2:45 PM

    Saturday, August 25, 2012

    BERBERIAN SOUND STUDIO: What's a "giallo"?

    In Berberian Sound Studio, Toby Jones plays the part of a meek English sound engineer who is in Italy working on the sound mix for a "giallo" film. For those not familiar with this genre, I thought I'd provide a little background.


    Example of a "giallo" paperback novel

    "Giallo" is the Italian word for yellow and refers to a series of cheap paperbook mystery novels with yellow covers that were popular reading from the 1930s onward. Though the books were often in the vein of Agathie Christie or Ellery Queen, when filmmakers began adapting them in the 1960s, they soon added their own very distinct touches, taking the films into territory more associated today with the horror and slasher genres.


    Poster for Dario Argento's The Girl Who Knew Too Much (1963)

    Directors like Dario Argento, Mario Bava, Lucio Fulci, and Sergio Martino made dozens of these films, rather quickly and cheaply, during the 60s and 70s. They were often filled with operatic levels of violence, not to mention liberal amounts of nudity and sex.


    Poster from Sergio Martino's All the Colours of the Dark (1972)

    Though best known for their often-garish visual style, giallo films were also innovative in their use of music and sound, which is where our poor sound engineer comes in. Many of the plots were based on madness and psychological horror, and the sound design was integral to setting the right mood.


    Poster from Andrea Bianchi's Strip Nude for Your Killer (1975)

    In fact, many of these films were shot completely without sync sound, so everything from dialogue to foley effects was recorded later in a studio, perhaps somewhere like Berberian Sound Studio.

    p.s. You might notice a certain similarity in the posters I've included. A (presumably male) hand poised over a woman in peril. These films were nothing if not formulaic, but they've been a huge influence on succeeding generations of trashy thrillers.

    BERBERIAN SOUND STUDIO screening times:

    Mon., Sept. 10, 6PM:  THE BLOOR HOT DOCS CINEMA
    Tues., Sept. 11, 2:45PM  CINEPLEX YONGE AND DUNDAS