'Scream and Die!' (1973) - José Ramón Larraz.
The throat-grabbingly monikered 'Scream and Die!' aka ‘The House That Vanished’ (1973) is another relatively obscure, José Ramón Larraz 70s horror excursion that is entirely undeserving of its current ignominious position of lost title. All the requisite, Larraz terror-traits are in abundance, luridly libidinous, scantily clad buxom lovelies, creaky, dimly-lit, doom-laden domiciles with some elusive, sexually 'unusual' maniac enthusiastically slaying a series of shrieking, tantalizingly top-heavy females!
The Giallo-esque plot of some
sordidly sinister, shadow-stalking, black-gloved killer rarely strays from convention, but where
the estimable, Larraz succeeds, and many other genre filmmakers so
often fail is that he manages to excitingly generate a
palpably erotic and decadent tone amongst all the
heavy-breathing, gleefully gory 'gash and slash'. Complementing the sublime plenitude of
fecund, candle-lit décolletage, he also darkly infuses the admittedly generic
premise with ominous oodles of genuinely unsettling Gothic motifs.
After reading a few glibly dismissive reviews of 'Scream...and Die' I
really wasn't expecting much, but contrary to low expectations, Larraz's warped, twist-headed thriller proved to be an uproariously entertaining terror flick with a scintillating series of
deliciously sinister set pieces that managed to evoke a
sweaty-palmed, Poe-like sepulchral chill. My positive opinion hasn't changed in 15 years, when in Samhain is this fine psycho-slasher going to be restored?
(My initial review was originally written based on watching a scratchy-looking DVD-R bootleg)
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