Wunderschönes, faszinierendes, unglaubliches Kino.

Schau nach, was gerade läuft

Kritiken

SUSPIRIA - IN DEN KRALLEN DES BÖSEN

Dario Argento Italien, 1977
Above all, Argento’s Suspiria is deeply, powerfully loony, a triumph of execution over narrative, of mesmerizing image and sound.
November 2, 2018
What lingers is not a sense of evil but exhilaration in how far Argento and his fellow filmmakers were willing to go to shock and delight; the movie’s sheer exuberance is the cinematic equivalent of a blood transfusion.
Oktober 5, 2018
Ganzen Artikel lesen
It's overwhelming in the breadth and intensity of its aesthetic, offering a radical departure from the sporadic surreality of Argento’s prior gialli.
März 16, 2018
Seeing this in Italian was disorienting, and that feels right, because it's all about disorientation. Suzy seems mystified by her own mere presence in Europe, let alone her school's architecture and its spiritual pestilence. Revisiting the film in a theatrical setting eased the descent into its folk tale structure. The madness grows more incomprehensible on a giant screen, and the dark excess is more riotous.
Dezember 3, 2017
The spirit of collaboration and experimentation that would mark [cinematographer Luciano] Tovoli and Argento's work together on Suspiria manifests on screen in a visual cacophony, paralleled with exquisite intensity by Goblin's famously aggressive score.
Dezember 16, 2015
Forget the contributions of John Williams; no movie has ever been better defined by its theme than Suspiria. Goblin's layered folk guitars, simple glockenspiel and whistling synths perfectly capture the slasher film's blend of classic fairy tale tropes and modernism, Gothic by way of Pop Art.
Oktober 22, 2014
...SUSPIRIA is as much a testament to Argento's love for classical art, which can also be seen in 1987's OPERA and 1995's THE STENDHAL SYNDROME. Argento's genius is to set these films, all of them bloody and relatively sleazy, in the world of "high" art. By doing so, he not only satirizes the pompous nature of "connoisseurs" who dismiss cinema—particular genre films—as a "lower" form, but also recontextualize these "higher" forms to fit in the realm of "commercial" work.
November 22, 2013
Arguably Argento's masterpiece, an instance of an alchemical mise-en-scène engulfing and transforming what is, by most traditional standards, an essentially disjointed narrative. Confrontationally visceral, it also has a bizarrely fanciful side resulting from the filmmaker's fascination with fairy-tale fantasies, Disney's Snow White and the Seven Dwarfs in particular.
November 2, 2012
Life is disappointing. So goes the most common English translation of a famous line of dialogue in Ozu's Tokyo Story. As if to underscore that point, here is a British-released Region 2 Blu-ray disc of Dario Argento's 1977 Suspiria, quite probably the horror director's greatest work, a unique and uniquely deranged visual trip in which every shot seems charged with a near-kitschily elaborate jolt of _shock horror_.
Februar 9, 2010
In the splendid extended finale, Suzy stumbles on the coven's black mass, among other terrifying secrets... The movie climaxes with a fantastic light show of lysergic apparitions and exploding chandeliers. A veteran of Richard Foreman's Ontological-Hysteric Theater, the deadpan Harper puts her training to good use, gracefully eluding the attacking furniture and skillfully dodging the imploding set, as she flees—arms protectively crossed before her face—out into the night.
September 1, 2009
Ferdy on Films
Dario Argento's terror masterpiece is a strange work even for that stylistic champion. Like Brian De Palma, his contemporary (and probable acolyte), Argento's cinematic gamesmanship and love of macabre subjects is, above all, a meditation on the movie screen as tectonic space—a canvas, yes, but also a silk screen, a puzzle box, a set of sliding doors that can be used to reveal anything.
März 11, 2008
As with all art cinema, Suspiria is a film that requires contemplation. Its surreal compositions emulate the feel of an artist's canvas, with individual scenes being more aesthetically pleasing than the film as a whole... The most cinematically charged sequence is the opening murder scene, which is saturated with primary colours and a near-hysterical soundtrack. Both of these features are so overpowering as to distract the viewer from the gory activities that the scene details.
Dezember 2, 2003