Macabre (DVD)
APPROX. 90 MINS. - PROD. YEAR: 1980 - MPA RATING: NR
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What shocked me the most with Lamberto Bava´s "Macabre" is the fact it is based on actual events that took place in New Orleans. At least this is claimed to be. "Macabre" is not the typical Italian horror film or giallo. It plays more on the characters perception of sex, or as Bava suggests in the short interview, "sex cannot be seen." There is not much contained in "Macabre" to induce fright and with the exception of a few short scenes, gore and blood is nowhere to be found.
"Macabre" is Lamberto Bava´s directorial debut. Bava´s father, Mario is arguably the greatest Italian Horror director to live. An eerie fact is after the elder Bava saw his son´s film he told Lamberto ´Now I can die in peace." Mario died a couple of months later and this was the only film of his son´s he would ever see. At least he saw the best his son had to offer. "Macabre" is superior to Lamberto´s follow-up "A Blade In The Dark," and unlike the "Demon" films, it does possess a plot.
This nonstandard tale revolves around a woman named Jane (Bernice Stegers), who is going through a bout of infidelity. Jane has two children and her daughter Lucy (Veronica Zinny) one day discovers the truth of her mother. To retaliate against her mother, she drowns her brother and calls her mother with the details. Jane has her boyfriend drive her home. Fate deals its dark hand one more time for Jane. On the way home, Fred (Roberto Posse) is decapitated. For Jane, this was a bit much for one day and she suffers a mental breakdown.
A few years later, Jane is released from the asylum. She takes residence at the building where her and Fred shared an apartment as a love nest. The caretaker has died and her blind son Robert (Stanko Molnar) now takes care of the upkeep. He has left Jane´s room the way she left it. Robert has romantic feelings towards Jane and she reinforces them through casual flirtation. No matter how hard Robert tries to win her heart, she resists. Every night, Robert can hear Jane making love to a stranger. This upsets him, as he wishes to be her lover.
As the days pass, Jane is routinely visited by her daughter. She knows that her daughter is out to cause trouble, and eventually this causes suspicion with Robert, as Robert and Lucy try to determine what secrets hide behind Jane´s locked door and particularly a locked icebox. One day, everything comes to a head and the shocking identity of Jane´s lover and the contents of the freezer are revealed. This leads to a confrontation between Robert, Jane, Lucy and the lover. Of course, by the time this is revealed to Robert and Lucy, the audience has long since had the knowledge they seek.
Thus the problem with "Macabre," the only real shock value is revealed too early in the film. There is no surprise value contained between the opening and closing credits. There is a tacked on fate for Robert, which seems silly and though it attempts to throw a wrench in the audience´s beliefs, fails miserably. The story is certainly odd, and it is hard to believe the relationship between Jane and her hidden lover actually happened. Stranger things have happened. If the content of the film weren´t so odd, there would not be much reason to sit through the ninety minute running time of "Macabre."
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