The House by the Edge of the Lake explained

The House by the Edge of the Lake
Director:Enzo G. Castellari
Producer:Rodolfo Putignani
Screenplay:
  • José María Nunes
  • Leila Buongiorno
Story:José María Nunes
Starring:Vincent Gardenia
Music:Guido & Maurizio De Angelis
Cinematography:Alejandro Ulloa
Editing:Gianfranco Amicucci
Production Companies:
  • Cinezeta
  • Este Films
Distributor:Alpherat
Runtime:96 minutes
Country:
  • Italy
  • Spain

The House by the Edge of the Lake (Italian: Sensitività) is a horror film directed by Enzo G. Castellari.

The film was re-edited several years after, with the title Kyra, La signora del lago (Kyra, the Lady of the Lake).[1] The director Castellari defined that film as an "awful horror film with a very low cost budget".[2]

Cast

Production

Director Enzo G. Castellari explained that the film was developed between his friendship with an aspiring film maker named Jose Sanchez. Castellari met him through his doctor and started teaching him how to write a script and took him on as an assistant. Castellari stated that his script was being finished for a Spanish producer to be shot in Costa Brava which led to Castellari taking charge in directing the film. Castellari's recollections are at odds with the film's credits which credit the film to Jose Maria Nunes a writer and director who was active in the film business since the 1950s with Sanchez only being credited as an actor in a small role.

Filming began in August 1978 in Costa Brava but halted shortly after as the money for the film ran out. Castellari did not initially want his named attached to the film, but in order to gain more funds he obliged to having his name attached to the project.

Release

The House by the Edge of the Lake was released in Italy on 28 September 1979. It was released in Spain as Diabla on 11 July 1980. Distributor Rodolfo Putignani invested money his company Cinezeta created the Italian title for the film Sensivita, a word that does not exist in Italian. Castellari found that as soon as editing the film, problems with distribution began which led to further interruptions in filming. Castellari stated that "[Distributor Rodolfo]Putignani and his associate Curti finished it their own way. But my name as director stayed."

The film was re-released in 1986 with additional scenes shot by Alfonso Brescia with editing credited to "Jeffrey Bogart". Castellari did not like the re-edit of the film, recalling he was invited to a horror convention where the film was screened and that "after six minutes I walked [out of] the theater, horrified."

References

Sources

Notes and References

  1. Book: Louis Paul. Italian Horror Film Directors. McFarland, 2005.
  2. Book: Luca M. Palmerini, Gaetano Mistretta. Spaghetti nightmares. M&P, 1996.