A Black Ribbon for Deborah explained

A Black Ribbon for Deborah
Director:Marcello Andrei
Screenplay:
Story:
  • Piero Regnoli
  • Marcello Andrei
  • Alvaro Fabrizio
  • Giuseppe Pulieri
Starring:
Music:Albert Verrecchia
Cinematography:Claudio Racca
Editing:Gianni Oppedisano
Studio:Paola Film s.r.l.
Distributor:Alpherat
Runtime:108 minutes
Country:Italy
Gross:118.676 million

A Black Ribbon for Deborah (Italian: Un fiocco nero per Deborah) is a 1974 Italian horror film directed by Marcello Andrei.

Cast

Production

Director Marcello Andrei and his co-writers originally conceived the film with an original idea of a dying woman passing the child she is bearing to another person. Giuseppe Pulieri stated that the script he worked one was ruined by a producers attempt to exploit the film as part of the "demonic possession" cycle of films. Pulieri stated that "The script stayed ten years in the drawer, I even pestered Raymond Stross into making it, to no avail ... they altered the story, the in all the usual bullshit: the witches, the sorcerer, the special effects..."

The film began shooting on May 13, 1974.

Release

A Black Ribbon for Deborah was distributed theatrically in Italy by Alpherat on 26 September 1974. The film grossed a total of 118,676,000 Italian lire domestically. Italian film historian Roberto Curti described the film as passing "almost unnoticed on its theatrical release".

The film was first released on home video in the United States and the United Kingdom in the early 1980s. It was released in the United Kingdom as The Torment.

Reception

AllMovie defines the film a "low-wattage horror piece".[1]

Footnotes

References

Notes and References

  1. News: Hal. Erickson. Hal Erickson (author). Deborah (1974). 24 June 2012. AllMovie.