Cold Eyes of Fear
Cold Eyes of Fear is a 1971 Italian Giallo film directed by Enzo G. Castellari, starring Fernando Rey.
Plot
A handsome young playboy picks up an Italian prostitute and brings her to his uncle's house for some fun. What he doesn't know is that a dangerous convict is lying in wait at the house. He is joined by another criminal trying to avenge himself on the young man's uncle, who was the judge who caused him to go to jail. The characters are all trapped together in the house for a very tense night, with the young playboy trying to figure out how to save himself while his uncle must avoid a bomb planted at his workplace.Cast
- Giovanna Ralli: Anna
- Frank Wolff: Arthur Welt
- Fernando Rey: Juez Flower
- Gianni Garko: Peter Flower
- Julián Mateos: Quill
- Karin Schubert: Nightclub Actress
Production
The film was shot at Cinecittà in Rome and on location in London. Castellari shot the film in sequence. During filming, Alice left Wolff. Wolff committed suicide a few months after production in December 1971 in his hotel room in Rome.
Release
Cold Eyes of Fear was released in Italy on 6 April 1971, where it was distributed by Cineraid. It grossed a total of 197,089,000 lira domestically. It was released in Madrid Spain on 21 May 1972. It was also released as Desperate Moments.Reception
described the film as a "cleverly crafted giallo-thriller", noting that the film appropriates "some of the form's penchant for cool production design and bizarre cinematography " and that a "kinky S&M stage show which, despite occurring at the start of the film, remains its most memorable sequence."The review concluded that "The rest of this loopy Italian-Spanish co-production isn't bad, however, crisply edited by Vincenzo Tomassi and well scored by Ennio Morricone" Danny Shipka, author of Perverse Titilation a book about European exploitation films stated that the film appeared to be "designed to be a thriller that incorporated some giallo constructs when the subgenre became lucrative." The review concluded that audiences of either thrillers or gialli were probably disappointed with Cold Eyes of Fear and that "there are plenty of action-packed, gore-soaked gialli to watch, but this is not one of them."