Product Details
Short Night of Glass Dolls

Short Night of Glass Dolls
Directed by Aldo Lado

List Price: $14.95
Price: $13.49 & eligible for FREE Super Saver Shipping on orders over $25. Details

Availability: Usually ships in 24 hours
Ships from and sold by Amazon.com

25 new or used available from $5.99

Average customer review:

Product Description

The corpse of reporter Gregory Moore (Jean Sorel of LIZARD IN A WOMAN'S SKIN) is found in a Prague plaza and brought to the local morgue. But Moore is actually alive, trapped inside his dead body and desperately recalling how the mysterious disappearance of his beautiful girlfriend (Barbara Bach of THE SPY WHO LOVED ME) led to a terrifying conspiracy of depravity. Can a reporter with no visible signs of life solve this perverse puzzle before he meets his ultimate deadline?

Ingrid Thulin (SALON KITTY, THE DAMNED) and Mario Adorf (THE BIRD WITH THE CRYSTAL PLUMAGE) co-star in this unusual and startling giallo (also known as PARALYZED and MALASTRANA) that marked the debut of writer/director Aldo Lado (NIGHT TRAIN MURDERS, WHO SAW HER DIE?) and features a superb score by the legendary Ennio Morricone (THE STENDHAL SYNDROME).


Product Details

  • Amazon Sales Rank: #93231 in DVD
  • Brand: RYKODISC
  • Released on: 2008-02-26
  • Rating: Unrated
  • Aspect ratio: 2.35:1
  • Formats: Color, Widescreen, NTSC, Anamorphic
  • Original language: English
  • Number of discs: 1
  • Dimensions: 1.00 pounds
  • Running time: 97 minutes

Features

  • The corpse of reporter Gregory Moore (Jean Sorel of LIZARD IN A WOMAN S SKIN) is found in a Prague plaza and brought to the local morgue. But Moore is actually alive, trapped inside his dead body and desperately recalling how the mysterious disappearance of his beautiful girlfriend (Barbara Bach of THE SPY WHO LOVED ME) led to a terrifying conspiracy of depravity. Can a reporter with no visible si

Editorial Reviews

Channel 4 Film
"A Sensational Example Of The Genre!"

Eccentric Cinema
"Style To Burn And One Hell Of A Great Mystery!"


Customer Reviews

"Short Night of Glass Dolls" Is An Occult Thriller Rather Than A Giallo3
"Short Night of Glass Dolls" is a strange, perverse film that is more of a supernatural, occult thriller than a true giallo. Jean Sorel of Lucio Fulci`s "Lizard in a Woman's Skin" is an American reporter living in Prague. His beautiful girlfriend (Barbara Bach of "The Black Belly of the Tarantula" and "The Spy Who Loved Me") mysteriously disappears without a trace. While investigating her disappearance, he learns that other beautiful young women have disappeared and later been found dead without their clothes. Meanwhile, a hitman begins assassinating anyone who helps the reporter. In a giallo, the killer usually wears a disguise and is unknown. In "Short Night of the Glass Dolls," the killer's face is seen two-thirds of the way into the movie.

"Short Night of Glass Dolls" has the conspiratorial and Satanic elements of "Rosemary's Baby," which was released in 1969, just a few years prior. In "Rosemary's Baby," Rosemary Woodhouse (played by Mia Farrow) learns that everyone around her is a witch. Director Aldo Lado seems to mimic the more popular works of others when creating his own. His second movie, which was "Who Saw Her Die?" had a strong resemblance to "Psycho" in that the cross dressing killer has a split personality. Overall, Lado's work appears less original than that of Lucio Fulci, Dario Argento, and Mario Bava.

The most unique part of "Short Night of Glass Dolls" is that Jean Sorel finds himself in a morgue, unable to move his limbs. Through hypnosis, he has been immersed into a deep catatonic state. However, he slowly remembers the events that led up to his "death."

The movie is slow and hard to understand at times. One must be patient until the end, which is rather dark and depressing. Even the title is confusing. From the DVD's interview with Aldo Lado, we learn that it was hastily changed from "Short Night of Butterflies" to the nonsensical "Short Night of Glass Dolls" because "The Bloodstained Butterfly," another giallo, had just been released.

I would've given this movie two stars but the gorgeous Barbara Bach compels me to give it three. I can understand why Jean Sorel was desperate to find her. Bach and Sorel make a very attractive couple.

The Men Behind The Curtain4

"Short Night Of Glass Dolls" is a great
mystery.

Spoilers
***********

The plot is very interesting with
a 1970's pop-culture idea of
individual freedom which is being
suppressed by a secretive conspiracy
of cold-war, communist fascists in
Chechoslavakia who use some sort
of occult sex-magic religion as their
underlying means of control.

It seems that young woman are being
kidnapped to tap into their sexual power
which is required by those in control
of the civil government and other
aspects of culture such as the arts.

The story is delivered as the memories
of a man who is apparently dead, but
remains somehow alive and conscious,
a zombie in the voodoo sense, made so
by the above mentioned cult,
which is another mystery not explained
until the end.

His girlfriend is missing and he
must find her.
The search leads him to the discovery
of the cult.
**********

If you like mysteries with lots of
culture and politics,
I'm sure this one will do.
Great cinematography, music (Morricone)
and pacing.

The ending pays off if you stay
with the slowly paced film.
There are excellent moments and
interesting characters throughout.

It is a very influential film as
it predates other popular
films with similar themes that
were loved by many whom I'm sure
never saw nor heard of this film.