KILL, BABY... KILL! (1966) d. Mario Bava (Italy)
A BAY OF BLOOD (1971) d. Mario Bava (Italy)
Equal parts conjurer of Gothic nightmares, pioneer of modern cinematic violence, and astonishing visual stylist, Italian filmmaker and horror legend Mario Bava has delivered so many genre high water marks that it’s difficult to keep track. From the black-and-white splendor of Black Sunday to the hypnotic colored gels of Black Sabbath to establishing the hallmarks of the giallo, Bava was constantly innovating and imagining new ways to dazzle and disturb audiences.
Kill, Baby... Kill! represents perhaps the pinnacle of Bava's Gothic imagination. Set in a cursed village haunted by the ghost of a young girl, the film transforms familiar supernatural motifs into a hypnotic fever dream through its masterful use of color, lighting, and camera movement. Rather than relying on overt shocks, Bava creates an atmosphere of mounting dread, where mirrors, staircases, and abandoned rooms become spaces of uncanny terror.
If Kill, Baby... Kill! perfected Bava's supernatural Gothic style, A Bay of Blood brought to fruition the contemporary, murder-centred approach he had already explored in The Girl Who Knew Too Much and Blood and Black Lace. Dispensing with mystery in favor of an escalating cycle of betrayal and carnage, the film follows a web of greed-driven killers competing for ownership of a secluded bay. Its graphic violence, cynical worldview, and inventive murder set-pieces anticipated the American slasher boom by more than a decade, with several set-pieces famously echoed in Friday the 13th Part 2.
Join AC and his incredible panel of guests (Troy Howarth, Katie of the Night, Jon Kitley, Nicola McCafferty) as we celebrate this dazzling double feature of Mario Bava, The Maestro of the Macabre!
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