The Italian Horror tour descends into velvet-draped madness as Steven and Sean tackle the horror legacy of Mario Bava; a filmmaker whose gorgeous lighting, elegant murders, and stunning brunettes didn’t just shape Gothic and Giallo cinema, but practically colour-graded it into existence.
Across first-time watches and long-standing favourites, we work our way through the candle-lit hallway of Bava’s greatest hits (and strangest detours), including Black Sunday, The Girl Who Knew Too Much, Black Sabbath, The Whip and the Body, Blood and Black Lace, Planet of the Vampires, Kill, Baby… Kill, Five Dolls for an August Moon, Hatchet for the Honeymoon, A Bay of Blood, Baron Blood, Lisa and the Devil, and Shock.
There’s glowing praise for Blood and Black Lace as the visual and structural blueprint for future Giallo, a heated debate over the ending of Planet of the Vampires (in which one host is categorically wrong but refuses to admit it), and a mutual lambasting of the 70s fashion choices of Baron Blood. We also dig into just how outrageously influential these films were, from A Bay of Blood basically inventing Friday the 13th, to Planet of the Vampires laying the groundwork for Alien, and take several opportunities to respectfully swoon over Fabienne Dali, Barbara Steele, and especially Edwige Fenech, all while marvelling over Bava’s ability to make murder look impossibly cool.
Stylish, opinionated, and occasionally thirsty, join us for a tribute to one of horror’s true architects. Mario Bava. The man who made shadows dance, colours leap, and murder look like theatre.