
First I’d like to apologize for my delay in posting this review. My work, albeit minimal, and family life have kept me quite busy over the past month. I have, however, been actively viewing films since the last post and maintain the intention of posting more frequently. In addition, I’d like to mention that although I understand many of you reading this blog are familiar with the genres I am referring to (i.e. pink films, giallos, etc.), I will continue to give a small description of the genre for the film I am discussing only the first time it is introduced to the blog for readers that might be unfamiliar with these genres. In other words, after describing what pink films are in the last post, the next review I give that falls within the pink genre will be discussed without explanation as it has already been defined. And with that said…
Today I plan to review a film that lies within another one of my favorite genres of exploitation cinema, the Italian giallo. I have studied this genre much more thoroughly than the Japanese “pink” cinema I previously posted about. Yet, over the years, I have been exposed to more obscure films and film makers that I feel deserve recognition. The term giallo comes from the Italian gialli meaning yellow and refers to a series of violent murder mystery pulp novels released in Italy around the 1940’s which adorned yellow covers and became the inspiration for the genre. Most people will agree that the very first giallos came from the Italian maestro Mario Bava. The first being The Girl Who Knew Too Much (1962) and then continued by a segment entitled “The Telephone” in his anthology Black Sabbath (1963) and next with his beautiful masterpiece Blood and Black Lace (1964). While Bava introduced and created the blueprint for the giallo, it was his protégée, Dario Argento, who refined the genre and became much more popular with these films. His directorial debut The Bird With The Crystal Plumage (1969) and ultimately his magnum opus, Profondo Rosso or Deep Red (1974) are notable early entries. I have heard it said before that Bava created the giallo while Argento perfected it. Well, I believe that is an argument best reserved for when I discuss a film by one of these two masters of Italian horror. Although the classic characteristics of the black gloved murderer, sleazy atmospheric violence, multiple red herrings and characters that are, at best, morally challenged never changed, the 70’s did see an increase in the genre’s levels of sex and violence depending on the film maker. There have been many great contributors to the giallo genre over the years such as Lucio Fulci, Umberto Lenzi, Aldo Lado, and certainly Sergio Martino, who are all worth mentioning when speaking of this uniquely Italian type of cinema.

I believe Martino has created a superb giallo with The Case Of The Scorpion’s Tail. Inviting the talents of genre veterans George Hilton (All The Colors Of The Dark) and Anita Strindberg (A Lizard In A Woman’s Skin), he solidifies his place as one of the top directors in the genre. The film’s plot begins with a promiscuous woman who inherits a million dollars after her husband dies in, a supposed, accidental plane crash. The insurance company, suspicious of the man’s death, assigns an agent to investigate the matter further. But when the widow is found murdered and the million dollars stolen, the floodgates open to a cast of suspects and subsequent murders. The agent and a rather nosey journalist join forces to try to find out who is responsible for the increasing deaths surrounding this mystery.

Absolutely not to be mistaken for a film maker trying to cash in on the Italian giallo genre, Sergio Martino has proved with The Case Of The Scorpion’s Tail (not to mention several of his other giallo entries) that he is truly one of the founders and masters of the giallo!