Francesca (2015) Poster

(2015)

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5/10
A Tribute To Giallo
kirbylee70-599-52617921 October 2016
When this film arrived at my doorstep I was pleased while looking at the box and artwork. In recent months I'd begun to be exposed to more giallo films than ever and have begun enjoying an appreciation of them which I hadn't in the past, for the most part because of having less access to them. To think I'd now be exposed to another made me happy. I became a tad leery when I learned it was not one of the original films but a tribute of sorts to the genre. But I plunged in headfirst anyway with some hope. Unfortunately the movie didn't live up to my hopes and expectations.

The film opens with a strange sequence involving a mother taking care of an infant and a young girl who seems to be enjoying stabbing a dead bird. Within moment we see her stabbing into the same stroller the mother was rocking and hear her mother scream. Fast forward to 15 years later.

It's been that long since the disappearance of Francesca, the young daughter of poet/dramatist Vittorio Visconti. Stabbed by her abductor he is now unable to walk and confined to a wheelchair. Visconti lives with his invalid wife who remains in a seemingly state of shock ever since the kidnapping of their daughter. Other than help they live alone.

When a series of murders in the area begins the police are baffled. Notes left at the scenes of the crime leave no clues with the exception that they are lines derived from Dante's INFERNO. Visconti was a scholar on Dante and the two police detectives turn to him for assistance in deciphering just what that murderer could be trying to tell them with these notes.

All of the trademarks from the classic giallo are there. The gloved hands of the killer. The viewpoint of the murders as seen through the killers eyes. The police investigating the murders. And yet the movie feels hollow about best and a poor substitute at worst.

Part of this is the decision of writer/director Luciano Onetti to turn this from a standard giallo into a combination of homage and experimental film. Sequences that make no sense are tossed in throughout. Characters that I either forgot or didn't recall suddenly have important roles towards the end. Clue that should have led us as viewers to a rational solving of the puzzle actually lead us nowhere down blind paths that have nothing to do with a solution or that offer clues that aren't based in reality.

The cinematography for the film felt truly lacking to me. Most of it had a strange use of color giving almost everything a blue tinge. The sharpness was also so intense that everything from beard hairs to skin pores felt like they stood out enough to take away concentration from the story itself. The gore effects were some of the worst I've seen in what should have been a prestige styled film with blood looking more like thinned out jelly.

The acting, even though I understand it was done with a foreign cast, never felt believable to me and it wasn't due to something lost in translation. I've seen far too many foreign films to think that this was the best there was/is to offer from actors in other countries. The death scene of one victim by steam iron strangulation has to be one of the worst death scenes ever filmed and completely unbelievable. The faceless killer felt as unthreatening as possible.

Unearthed Films has a lot of faith in this release. The box art is stunning and great to look at bringing back fond memories of the classic giallo films. It contains not just the blu-ray version of the film but standard DVD as well. It also offers a CD of the film's soundtrack as well, sounding much like the classic Goblin scores from earlier giallo films. A flyer is included inside the box and extras on the disc include a behind the scenes featurette, deleted scenes, an interview with director Luciano Onetti and his producer/brother Nicolas and an Unearthed Trailer reel.

I've read some reviews that have praised this film. Sorry to say I am not one of those. I call it as I see it. I'm anxious to return to viewing the actual giallo films of the past and remain hopeful that the genre will see a rise in new movies that follow the same patterns they established. This one is filled far too much with its own agenda as opposed to being a tribute for my taste. Some may find this new take refreshing but unfortunately I'm not one.
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5/10
Decent, but can't hold a candle to the genuine Gialli of the 70s.
Coventry23 April 2020
"Francesca" was my first acquaintance with the works of the Onetti brothers; - Luciano and Nicolás. As a major fan of the Italian Giallo, I instantly fell in love with the DVD-cover, bought it, and then put it safely away in my honoree-closet for more than three years because I waited for a special occasion. During these three years, however, I saw two newer and truly disappointing films of the Onetti brothers that gradually made me wary. "What the Waters Left Behind" is a dreadfully uninspired "Texas Chainsaw Massacre" clone, while also their other giallo-homage "Abrakadabra" was a serious misfire. Maybe, just maybe, it was best to lower my expectations for "Francesca" as well.

Happy to say that "Francesca" is definitely the best, or at least my personal favorite, of the Onetti tribute thus far! Still, the giallo is such a periodically and culturally specific 70s sub-genre that it simply doesn't this current post-Millennial era. Even though I admire the Onetti brothers' goodwill and enthusiasm to pay tribute to these unique films, "Francesca" just didn't evoke any feelings of nostalgia or excitement. Exceptions aside, the true Gialli came from Italy and were released between 1969 and 1975. They are wonderfully deranged movies with convoluted plots, absurd twists, graphic violence, gratuitous sex and experimental stylistic aspects. The Onettis most certainly did their homework in terms of look & feel, as "Francesca" features chaotic color patterns, a psychedelic atmosphere, perverted characters, theatrical death sequences, and bloody bizarre imagery. For some reason, however, they also assumed that an incoherent plot and a horribly slow pacing were also mandatory trademarks. That's not the case, or at least I never felt so! I honestly don't understand why a film with such a solid basic plot (a series of grisly murders leads back to the disappearance of a young girl 15 years ago) must suffer from so many needless pacing-interruptions and premature plot revelations. There are some really great aspects, like the soundtrack and certain murder sequences, but overall "Francesca" is not as awesome as that cool film-poster suggests.
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6/10
Italian Giallo brought back to life
Indyrod11 May 2018
Is this the seventies??? nope, but this is a new Italian giallo that if you are a fan of the giallo genre, you would think so. The red gloved killer, the music, all very familiar with giallo films of old. And of course, when the killer is revealed at the end, you were never supposed to guess. The plot is simple, a serial killer is at work, and the police are trying to solve the case. The killings are brutal and very well done, with a great soundtrack to remind us again, this is giallo. I love this genre, and am a huge Dario Argento fan, to me, the grandmaster of the genre. I liked it, it brought back some fond memories of so many Italian movies from that era.
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5/10
Sorry, but no
agniagray4 April 2020
As a fan of giallo movies I was very excited about this modern one. But this one was more experimental than giallo. The plot is incoherent and I still kinda do not understand why did some murders happen... overall 5.2 rating here corresponds to what I think. I had big hopes, instead I feel like I want to say a big "no" to this movie.
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7/10
Pour yourself a glass of J&B
Stevieboy66626 July 2017
Warning: Spoilers
As a giallo fan I'd never heard of this until I noticed the DVD case's quite stunning artwork staring at me from the supermarket shelf. Needless to say I couldn't resist! This is a filmed in Argentina and dubbed into Italian homage to the giallo sub-genre. Much use of colour is used her, perhaps too much at times, but the camera work is very good and the film comes with a terrific Goblin/disco inspired soundtrack. There are several dream-like surreal moments, which I also enjoyed. One thing that let the film down was that whilst the kills were typically brutal the special effects looked rather amateurish. Now before writing my review I decided to watch the film a second time, to give it a fairer chance because after my first view I felt slightly disappointed & confused. ** SPOILER ALERT ** Definitely better the second time, though the end , i.e. the identity of the killer - or indeed killers - could have been explained better, this crucial part of the film was felt too hurried. Giallo movie fans will get a feeling of nostalgia, even though it's not the real thing.
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2/10
C-grade slasher-horror disguised as arty thriller
grantss28 July 2019
Someone is viciously murdering people, people with criminal pasts. It appears that the murders may be linked to the disappearance of a young girl 15 years previously.

Incredibly bad. Is set up to look like a classy thriller but it soon apparent that it is far from that. Random plot, scenes that seem just thrown in for shock or style value, poor production values (so bad I was convinced this was made in the 1970s).

Ultimately has nothing going for it.
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6/10
For fans of the genre
ElectricBeelsebub18 April 2021
If you've been exposed to 70's and 80's Italian giallo and horror movies this will feel very familiar.

I couldn't help but smile at the bad Italian dubbing, blaring soundtrack, erratic handheld camerawork with dramatic zooms, bottle of J&B and drawn-out story with a lot of filler footage etc.

I don't know if I'd recommend this to anyone else than fans of 70's and 80's Italian giallo and horror movies, but if you are at least familiar with those genres this should be a fun ride.

6,5/10.
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5/10
This isn't a complete waste of time but I wouldn't go too out of my way to see it either
kevin_robbins30 April 2021
Warning: Spoilers
Francesca (2015) is a movie I recently watched for free off Tubi. The storyline for this modern Italian giallo is a serial killer that uses toys and dolls as distraction to set up his victims and cut them down. The murders seem to be tied to a girl who went missing 15 years ago and is back for revenge. This movie is directed by Luciano Onetti (A Night of Horror) and doesn't star any real headliners (per IMDb). The storyline had some potential as the villains attire and executions were okay. The doll was supposed to be more Eerie than it was, it came up short of American projects like Child's Play and Annabelle. They tried to give this the 70s feel of the classic Italian giallo films but it came up short and didn't have that cool "James Bond" feel to it. I really wanted to like this movie but unfortunately the entire movie, scene to scene, always left me unfulfilled and disappointed. This isn't a complete waste of time but I wouldn't go too out of my way to see it either. I'd score it a 4.5-5/10.
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7/10
Francesca's divine comedy.
DoorsofDylan22 January 2024
Warning: Spoilers
After a bit of a difficult week, I decided to cheer myself up, by watching one of the films that has been waiting to get played for years. Looking round CEX in Manchester in 2021 after a train got cancelled, I was surprised to spot a modern Giallo that I had not heard of before. After having seen the tantalizing DVD cover on my shelf since that time,I decided this weekend to finally meet Francesca.

View on the film:

Paying tribute in a post-credits scene to one of the murders from The Bird with the Crystal Plumage (1970-also reviewed), co-writer (with his brother Nicolas) / director Luciano Onetti composes a wonderfully ripe Neo-Giallo atmosphere, via shimmering, ultra-stylized whip-pans, obscured wide-shots, match-cuts and push-ins towards the killer set-pieces.

Although the limited budget is visible from the lo-res grainy digital image quality, Onetti slices through the limits with exploding primary colours being blended in with the brushes of candle-wax red, powered up by a grinding metallic Prog Jazz score, which captures the ruthless, anything goes mind-set of the killer.

Drawn from an opening disappearance of a young girl, the screenplay by the Onetti keep the unsettled status of this cold case hanging in the air, leading to this Giallo being struck with a great sense of the foreboding, thanks to the writers paying real attention to building a tense mystery and uncovering clues from The Divine Comedy, which has the last laugh,over the whereabouts of Francesca.
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5/10
Gialli made now
BandSAboutMovies19 February 2020
Warning: Spoilers
Fifteen years ago, Francesca disappeared, leaving her father, the well-known storyteller, poet and dramatist Vittorio Visconti behind. Ever since, the community has been haunted by a killer who wants to clean the city of the impure and the damned. The police are baffled and now, it seems like Francesca has finally returned.

The Onetti Brothers have made a career of emulating the field of giallo. With films like Deep Sleep, What the Waters Left Behind and Abrakadabra, they've copied the look and feel of early 70's Italian detective horror, yet transplanted to Argentina in 2015. Hell - they even got the gloves and bottles of J&B right. Luciano Onetti co-wrote the script, directed the film, handled the cinematography and even wrote the score, while Nicolas wrote the script and produced.

Any movie that starts with a small girl killing a bird with a long needle and then jamming it into her infant brother's eye is one that's going to cause you to sit up and take notice (or, if you're a normal person, turn off such lunacy).

This movie feels like a relic unearthed from 1972, a giallo that may not be at the level of Argento or Martino, but still can stand on its own.
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9/10
You Won't Believe It's Not Forty Years Old
ab-1427 June 2016
A truly stunning simulacrum of a 1970s giallo. The illusion is so convincing that I'd never have guessed it was made last year.

If you're not a fan of gialli, this one will do nothing to change your mind. It has no interest in covering new ground or breaking the well-worn mold, but if you treasure the thought of exploring a whole new one, this is the movie for you.

If we were judging by looks alone, this would be a solid ten, but some story issues (and not ones really typical of or inherent in the genre in my view) require a deduction.

I may change my mind on subsequent viewings, but I'd rate this a must-see for giallo fans. Non fans might be able to use this as a gateway, but it's probably better to start with the real thing.
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8/10
Modern giallo done right
nick12123530 March 2020
I never understood why it seemed impossible to make a modern giallo film. Everything released in the style after the 80s seemed to be quite awful, even by greats like Argento. The 90s had a few fun ones but by the turn of the century no one seemed to want to make them anymore and if they did they did it badly. I had resigned myself to thinking that very specific style just couldn't come across in the digital format or was only fun by way of kitsch- then something wonderful happened. In the 2010s there was a resurgence of 70s throwback horror and with that came a smaller, more minor giallo revival, starting with the work of Helene Cattete and Bruno Forzani. Unfortunately, although miles ahead of previous attempts, their work was mainly style focused, being incoherent and surreal. One could argue that those are points of reference for the original scene, and they are, but most gialli, even Argento's most dreamlike works, still had a logic that made sense within the movie. This duo's films seemed to be just a barrage of images dressed up Italy in the 70s. And so I was disappointed- until today. Francesca does everything right. Starting with the basics- the score, the 70s styled grainy film, the throwback sets and, especially, the dubbing. All of this comes together to create something that truly feels authentic even if you wouldn't necessarily be able to mistake it for something made back in the day. It's hard to recapture something like that, maybe impossible, but this film has come as close as ive ever seen. One thing I didn't like about it was the lack of a final girl. It almost seemed like there was no main character for much of the film, the perspective was split several ways. The excitement of most slashers, for me, comes with watching the main character escape death over and over again while everyone else around them succumbs. But other than that I have no complaints. This is a great film and I'm extremely excited to see what this guy might do next.
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8/10
Great Modern Giallo
thalassafischer25 May 2023
This homage to 1970s era giallos is on-point. I disagree that you can't tell the movie is not 40-50 years old - there are some visual clues that expose Francesca as a 21st century film that may actually be editing or cinematographic flaws - BUT it pulls out all of the stops to closely resemble the best of 70s Italian gialli flicks otherwise.

Francesca has plot twists and fabulous color, even antique furniture and accessories are used on the set. The killer's gloves are red instead of black, but elements ranging from the creepy usage of mannequins and dolls to haunting dream sequences hearken back to very specific giallo directors. I found one scene particularly disturbing in its usage of psychedelic visuals combined with auditory cacophony.

I have no idea why this does not have a higher overall rating, I know some giallo fans are sexploitation hounds and actually give higher ratings to frankly stupider giallos as long as they pile on the nudity and suggestive misogyny, so beyond a single scene of masturbatory titillation for our killer those individuals are surely disappointed. Oh well. Too bad for the misogynists, fake frowny face.
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8/10
Bask in it! Pure craftsmanship.
jspwordieitaly16 November 2016
Giallo fans can only gorge on this one. The colour contrast is worthy of Argento. There are tropes galore, the leather gloves, the scarlet blood, the mannequin doll - and a story that even evokes a canto from Dante's Inferno. It's all Italy at its best to the umpteenth power.

As with all giallo genre films, the beauty is not to be found in the plot, the dialogue or the acting, but more in the imagery. In contrast to Argento's 'Suspiria', there are numerous outdoor scenes. The eye-witness account is exploited and no venue is exempted from being a crime scene.

I spent the whole film trying to spot a non-1970s anachronism. With the possible exception of what looked like a child-proof lock on a bottle of pills, I didn't find any. My only complaint is that the acting struck me as being 'too good for a real giallo' - but that's more of an unexpected bonus really.
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10/10
A Loving Homage to the Golden Years of Giallo Cinema.
benmero8 September 2019
The amount of detail in recreating the look of the giallo from the sub-genre's heyday in the early 1970's is nothing short of painstaking. With the grainy, over-saturated picture, the lurid color palette, the fast pans/zooms, and the groovy score, if someone were to show me this movie and say it was released shortly after Dario Argento's The Bird With The Crystal Plumage, I would believe them.

In addition to the vintage aesthetics, Francesca also hits all of the narrative beats of the genre as the killer, working out a deep-seated trauma, maintains a disguise (complete with leather gloves) and a motif of brutal murder committed with a unique weapon.

In delivering this striking imagery, the film takes heavy inspiration from Mario Bava, the aforementioned Argento, and Sergio Martino.

However, Luciano Onetti brings his own unique flavor to Francesca with the use of experimental montage illustrating the brief moments when we are offered a deeper gaze into the disparate psyche of the mystery killer.

If you aren't familiar with any of these directors or the subgenre of the giallo in general, I highly recommend pursuing the subject (Run! Don't walk!).

Overall, this is a loving homage to a criminally brief period in Italian cinema--one that I am ecstatic to learn is part of a Dantesque trilogy from the Onetti brothers in company with "Sonno Profondo" and "Abrakadabra"
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9/10
Plays like a best-of gialli
stijnguillaume78825 July 2018
"Francesca" is not merely a nostalgic piece of fan-art, glorifying the best works of Argento, Bava or Martino. It's a film that stands alone and captures the feeling of the old giallo perfectly.

Mesmerising imagery, haunting score, bad dubbing, leather gloves and childhood traumas. Exactly what you are looking for if you kind of like the genre.

I had high expectations, regarding the great artwork and it didn't let me down! Can't believe it gets such a low score here...
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