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In a contemporary review, Nigel Andrews reviewed a dubbed 88 minute version. [6] Andrews stated that despite "the brief surrealist promise of the opening scenes-a close-up of a face crawling with larvae cutting ingeniously to Niccola's head enveloped in the serpentine wires of an encephalograph", Night of the Devils had "all the usual defects of a low-budget horror quickie-careless direction ...
Sporadic articles for news papers and magazine came along until the newspaper El País published one short story "El Palo de Golf" which later made part of a series of 10 short stories La noche del Demonio (The Night of the Demon), published in 2007 by Villegas Editores.
The Devil's Nightmare (French: La plus longue nuit du diable, lit. 'The Devil's Longest Night', Italian: La terrificante notte del demonio, lit. 'The Terrifying Night of the Demon') is a 1971 supernatural horror film directed by Jean Brismée and starring Erika Blanc, Jean Servais, Daniel Emilfork, and Lucien Raimbourg.
Night of the Demon (U.S. title: Curse of the Demon) is a 1957 British horror film directed by Jacques Tourneur and starring Dana Andrews, Peggy Cummins and Niall MacGinnis. [2]
The Blind Dead (Knights Templar) villains were unofficially resurrected in the 1975 entry La cruz del diablo, directed by John Gilling. [24] The film was an influence on Mansion of the Living Dead, a 1982 film directed by Jesús Franco. [12]
The director uses colors or the composition of the shots to describe the mental state of his characters (white daisies in a blue vase versus the same blue flowers of the two mothers) or uses their bodies in an expressive and always original way, feminine or masculine, exposed as an offering, generous or reproachful (squatting), blurred (the steam in the shower before the transparency of the ...
Black Sunday (Italian: La maschera del demonio, lit. 'The mask of the demon') is a 1960 Italian gothic horror film directed by Mario Bava in his official directorial debut, and starring Barbara Steele, John Richardson, Andrea Checchi, Ivo Garrani, Arturo Dominici and Enrico Oliveri.
Dani de la Orden was born on 2 June 1989 in Barcelona. [1] An avid consumer of cinema since he was very young, he started making short films alongside his grandmother. [2] He earned a degree in direction from the ESCAC. [3]