La morte risale a ieri sera explained

La morte risale a ieri sera
Director:Duccio Tessari
Producer:
Screenplay:
Starring:
Music:Gianni Ferrio
Cinematography:Lamberto Caimi
Editing:Mario Morra
Production Companies:
  • Lombard Film
  • Slogan Film
  • Filmes Cinematografica
Distributor:Titanus
Runtime:102 minutes
Country:
  • Italy
  • West Germany

La morte risale a ieri sera (translation: Death occurred last night) is a 1970 crime film directed by Duccio Tessari. The film was written by Tessari and Biagio Proietti and based on the novel I milanesi ammazzano al sabato (translation: The Milanese Kill on Saturdays) by Giorgio Scerbanenco.

La morte risale a ieri sera stars Raf Vallone and Frank Wolff. The film's score was composed by Gianni Ferrio, whose baroque and psychedelic contributions to the soundtrack were described by one critic as inconsistent with the tone of the film.The film was distributed internationally under the title Death Occurred Last Night in 1970, which only had a 95-minute running time.

Plot

Following the disappearance of his beautiful but mentally disabled daughter, Avanzio Berzaghi (Raf Vallone) travels to Milan to track her down. Local detective Duca Lamberti (Frank Wolff) investigates the city's pimps and prostitutes for clues, eventually finding the girl's burnt body in a field. The pimps disposed of the young girl when they heard investigators were looking for her. Berzaghi vows to find the girl's murderer, eventually tracking down his quarry from a clue related to the girl's teddy bear. Berzaghi exacts his revenge but finds no satisfaction from having done so.

Cast

Production

La morte risale a ieri sera was written by Biagio Proietti and director Duccio Tessari. the film is based on Giorgio Scerbanenco's 1969 novel I milanesi ammazzano al sabato (translation: The Milanese Kill on Saturdays). The book was published just a few months before the author's death. Several of Scerbanenco's works featuring the detective character Duca Lamberti were adapted to film around this time, including Milano calibro 9 in 1972 and Il caso Venere privata in 1970.

The film's soundtrack was composed by Gianni Ferrio, who had previously worked with Tessari on the 1969 Spaghetti Western Vivi o, preferibilmente, morti,[1] and would do so again on his 1971 giallo Una farfalla con le ali insanguinate. Ferrio's score spans several musical styles, incorporating psychedelic rock, baroque pop and jazz.

Release

La morte risale a ieri sera was distributed by Titanus in Italy on September 5, 1970. The film grossed a total of 568,294,000 Italian lire domestically. The film was later released in West Germany as Gemordet wird nur Samtags on July 16, 1971. The film has been distributed internationally under the titles Death Occurred Last Night, as well as Death Took Place Last Night and Horror Came out of the Fog.[2]

Reception

From retrospective reviews, Robert Firsching wrote in AllMovie that La morte risale a ieri seras plot featured "a great deal more humanity than is typical for the [crime] genre", finding that Tessari's focus on characterisation over plot was its key strength. Firsching commented on the film's score negatively, stating that Ferrio's score and its "bouncy" tone was inconsistent with the film.[3] The film, and the character of Lamberti, have been seen as precursors to the postmodernist works of American director Quentin Tarantino.

Footnotes

References

Notes and References

  1. Web site: Vivi... o Preferibilmente Morti (1969) – Trailers, Reviews, Synopsis, Showtimes and Cast . Robert . Firsching . . . May 10, 2013.
  2. Web site: BFI Film & TV Database La morte risale a ieri sera (1970) . . May 9, 2013. https://web.archive.org/web/20090207031420/http://ftvdb.bfi.org.uk/sift/title/287878. February 7, 2009.
  3. Web site: La Morte Risale A Ieri Sera – Cast, Reviews, Summary and Awards . Robert . Firsching . . . May 9, 2013.