The Night Evelyn Came Out of the Grave

The Night Evelyn Came Out of the Grave
(La notte che Evelyn uscì dalla tomba)
Directed by Emilio Miraglia
Produced by Antonio Sarno
Written by Massimo Felisatti
Fabio Pittorru
Emilio Miraglia
Starring Anthony Steffen
Marina Malfatti
Erika Blanc
Giacomo Rossi-Stuart
Music by Bruno Nicolai
Release dates
1971 (Italy)
Running time
103 min.
Country Italy
Language Italian

The Night Evelyn Came Out of the Grave (Italian: La notte che Evelyn uscì dalla tomba) is a 1971 Italian giallo film directed by Emilio Miraglia. It was released in 1971.

Plot

Alan (Anthony Steffen) is a wealthy aristocrat who has just been released from a mental institution following the death of his wife, redheaded Evelyn. Having caught Evelyn making out with an unknown man prior to his institutionalization, the psychotic Alan begins luring redheaded strippers and prostitutes to his home to torture and kill them, as a means to deal with his grief and inability to get revenge on his deceased wife.

Alan attends a séance in which the medium contacts Evelyn, causing Alan to faint. Alan's cousin (and only living heir) Farley offers to move into the mansion to take care of him. Farley takes him to a strip club and Alan takes home Susan (Erika Blanc), one of the strippers at the club who disappears after barely escaping with her life. Afterwards, Farley believes that Alan would be cured of his instability if he replaces Evelyn with a new bride that resembles her. On Farley's advice, Alan moves to London to get away from his home and marries Gladys (Marina Malfatti), another redhead.

Gladys finds herself being haunted by strange goings on at her new home and being shunned by Evelyn's brother and Alan's invalid aunt, whom Alan has taken in as staff at his mansion. Gladys tells Alan her suspicions that Evelyn faked her death to escape Alan and run away with her lover. Alan's mental state continues to unravel as Evelyn's brother and Alan's aunt are each killed by a mystery killer and when he sees a zombified Evelyn beckoning to him from her tomb, he breaks down completely.

When Alan is taken away for permanent institutionalization, Gladys and Farley celebrate as they had been trying to push Alan back into insanity, with Farley supposedly impersonating Evelyn, so that Farley would gain control of Alan's fortune and estate. After they toast their success, Susan, the stripper that Alan had taken home, appears. Farley reveals that Susan was the one impersonating Evelyn and that the champagne Gladys is drinking has been poisoned. Farley stands by as Gladys attacks and kills Susan before succumbing to the poison.

However, Alan appears along with Richard, the doctor who treated him for his first breakdown. Alan had suspected he was being manipulated and had faked his most recent breakdown to lure out the conspiracy against him, after Alan discovered proof that Farley killed Evelyn after she refused to leave Alan for him. Farley tries to escape and in the ensuing fight, a bag of sulfur-based fertilizer falls into the nearby pool. The pool turns to acid and Farley falls in, horribly burning him. Pulling him out of the pool, Farley is arrested and Alan manages to get away with his crimes.

Release

While the film was released theatrically in its native Italy in August 1971, the theatrical release in the United States (handled by Phase One) was delayed until June 1972. In the United Kingdom, it was released theatrically as The Night She Rose From The Tomb.

NoShame DVD released the officially licensed film remastered, widescreen and uncut on DVD in 2006 as part of the Emilio Miraglia Killer Queen Box Set. Prior to this the film has been released by various labels over the years with questionable legitimacy to the rights and subpar, truncated presentations.

The film was first released on Blu-ray disc by Australian distribution company Gryphon Entertainment on 20 June 2013. The film was again released, with wider distribution, by Arrow Films on May 30th, 2016 as part of the two-film Emilio P. Miraglia set Killer Dames (AV053). [1]

Critical reception

Allmovie wrote "The Night Evelyn Came Out of the Grave might make acceptable fodder for giallo fans but isn't as memorable as its reputation suggests."[2]

References

  1. "Killer Dames". Arrow Video. Retrieved November 3, 2016.
  2. Donald Guarisco. "The Night Evelyn Came out of the Grave (1971)". Allmovie. Retrieved 17 June 2012.
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