This item ships for FREE with Super Saver Shipping.
Aspect Ratio: 1.85:1
Audience Rating: Unrated
Binding: DVD
Brand: Ryko Distribution
EAN: 0827058110396
Format: Color, Dolby, DVD-Video, Widescreen, NTSC
Item Dimensions: 20
Label: Blue Underground
Languages: EnglishOriginal LanguageDolby Digital 2.0
Manufacturer: Blue Underground
MPN: 1039
Number Of Items: 1
Publisher: Blue Underground
Release Date: February 27, 2007
Running Time: 107 minutes
Studio: Blue Underground
Theatrical Release Date: April 02, 1980
Related Items:
Browse for similar items by category:
Editorial Review:Product Description:The Master Of Horror Dario Argento Brings You Terror That s Hotter Than Hell!A young woman stumbles upon a mysterious diary that reveals the secrets of The Three Mothers and unleashes a nightmare world of demonic evil. As the unstoppable horror spreads from Rome to New York City this unholy trinity must be stopped before the world is submerged in the blood of the innocent.Written and directed by Dario Argento INFERNO is considered to be the sequel to his classic SUSPIRIA. This surreal shocker stars Irene Miracle (NIGHT TRAIN MURDERS) Daria Nicolodi (DEEP RED) and Leigh McCloskey (DALLAS) and features a pulse-pounding original score by Keith Emerson of Emerson Lake & Palmer. Now transferred from the original vault negative materials INFERNO contains visually stunning sequences of horror that Argento fans consider among the best of his career.Extras:Interview with Writer/Director Dario ArgentoTheatrical TrailerStill GalleryTalent BiosSystem Requirements:Run Time: 106 minsFormat: DVD MOVIE Genre: HORROR Rating: NR UPC: 827058110396 Manufacturer No: 1039
Amazon.com:Dario Argento's sequel to
Suspiria, his first and to date only American hit, is an even more incoherent nightmare fantasy. Laden with symbolic imagery and fantastic explosions of death shot in candy-colored hues, it's a bloody feast for the eyes. Mark (Leigh McCloskey), an American music student in Rome, rushes home to New York after a frantic phone call from his sister only to find an empty apartment and obscure clues about a supernatural presence in her spooky building. It all has something to do with the mysterious
Mater Tenebrarum, one of the "Three Mothers" of Argento's murky mythology, and the fun house of an apartment house she inhabits, complete with a fully furnished underwater ballroom, miles of secret tunnels flooded in red and blue light, and hidden passageways under the floorboards. Meanwhile, there's a killer running around stabbing beautiful women for who knows what reason, a crippled bookseller attacked by rats, and a homicidal hot-dog vendor in Central Park. Why? It's best not to ponder such mysteries--Argento obviously isn't as concerned with making sense of his meticulously staged murders as he is with lighting them with just the right hue. Dramatically it's inert, a parade of quirky but faceless victims dispatched with elaborate care, but it's beautifully designed and executed, a spectacle of elaborate set pieces and magnificent decor orchestrated with a complete disdain for narrative logic.
--Sean Axmaker
Average Rating:

Rating:

-
At its essence, Inferno tells a classic horror movie tale about a haunted house. It's a bit odd, bombards the viewer with random, twisted imagery when least expected, attacks the senses with a kaleidoscope of colors, and overpowers the eardrums with pounding piano accompaniment.
Beginning in what feels like a movie half-finished, a woman is reading a book about Three Mothers (Tenebrarum, Suspiriorum, and Lachrymarum). Written by an architect/alchemist named Varelli, it tells of these ...
Read More
Rating:

-
The bleeding of colours, each stain accumulates into the abscess corners of the mind, painting an abstract consciousness that alters awareness and keeps you acclimated to the doubts that are simmering in the corners of your psyche. You bend your comprehension to adapt to the evil that surrounds you, but you're left breathing the air from the dark side of the bubble. Fear is your only god.
This movie is a smoldering mess of twisted elegance. Absolutely brilliant. A psychedelic montage ...
Read More
Rating:

-
Inferno is probably one of my favorite Dario Argento film and is one of the best films in the three mothers trilogy, the film has an intriguing and frightening story and great atmosphere but there are many flaws in the script and the acting wasn't particularly that good, but then again who watches a Dario Argento flick for the acting?. The film was beautifully shot and had a nice gothic atmosphere that almost seems like a living nightmare and there are some nicely made setpieces which were very memorable, ...
Read More
Rating:

-
Beautifully shot but poorly scripted second installment in Dario's tale of the three sisters with Goblinesque soundtrack by Keith Emerson.A journey into a surreal Hitchcockian, dreamscape of labyrinthian architecture, corridors, rooms, cellars, staircases, secret passages, dungeons, submerged rooms and alchemical mysteries, all flavoured with Dario's atypical gruesome murder scenes.
Rating:

-
Like millions of other Dario Argento fans, I am eagerly awaiting the American release of "The Mother of Tears." In the meantime, I decided to review the first two films in the Three Mothers Trilogy. The first film, "Suspiria," was based on Mater Suspiriorum, the Mother of Sighs. The second film, "Inferno," is based on Mater Tenebrarum, the Mother of Shadows.
In the prologue of "Inferno," viewers are introduced to the novel The Three Mothers. However, they soon learn that it is not ...
Read More
| Mall Directory Front Page | Shopper Favorites Web Search |
MALL.ShopperFavorites.com
|
|
|