Satan's Baby Doll

{{distinguish|text=the 1960s film La bambola di Satana}}

{{Infobox film

| name = Satan's Baby Doll

| image = La-bimba-di-satana-italian-movie-poster-md.jpg

| alt =

| caption =

| native_name =

| director = Mario Bianchi

| producer = Gabriele Crisanti{{sfn|Curti|2019|p=111}}

| screenplay = Piero Regnoli{{sfn|Curti|2019|p=111}}

| story = Gabriele Crisanti{{sfn|Curti|2019|p=111}}

| based_on =

| starring = {{plainlist|* Jacqueline Dupré

| music = Nino Catanese{{sfn|Curti|2019|p=111}}

| cinematography = {{plainlist|* Franco Villa

  • Angelo Iannutti{{sfn|Curti|2019|p=111}}}}

| editing = Cesare Bianchini{{sfn|Curti|2019|p=111}}

| studio = Filmarte{{sfn|Curti|2019|p=111}}

| distributor = Film 2

| released = {{Film date|df=yes|1983|2|25|Spain|1983|7|29|Italy}}

| runtime = 74 minutes{{sfn|Curti|2019|p=111}}

| country = Italy

| language =

| budget =

| gross =

}}

Satan's Baby Doll ({{langx|it|La bimba di Satana}} ″the baby girl of Satan″) is a 1983 Italian horror film directed by Mario Bianchi.{{sfn|Curti|2019|p=111}}{{cite web|url=https://dvdverdict.com/reviews/satansbabydoll.php|work=DVD Verdict|title=Satan's Baby Doll|last=Johnson|first=David|access-date=31 March 2019|archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20120225185752/https://dvdverdict.com/reviews/satansbabydoll.php |archive-date=25 February 2012}}

Plot

The daughter (Jacqueline Dupré) and brother of a dead aristocrat are placed in the care of an evil nun in a remote Spanish castle. The daughter embarks on a rampage of lust and murder after becoming possessed by the spirit of her dead mother.

Cast

  • Jaqueline Dupré as Miria Aguilar
  • Mariangela Giordan as Sol
  • Aldo Sanbrell as Antonio Aguilar
  • Giuseppe Carbone (as Joe Davers) as Isidro
  • Giancarlo Del Duca as Dr. Juan Suarez
  • Alfonso Gaita as Ignazio Aguilar
  • Marina Hedmann as Maria Aguilar

Production

For Satan's Baby Doll, Gabriele Crisanti and screenwriter Piero Regnoli opted to remake the film Malabimba – The Malicious Whore, which included casting Mariangela Giordano to reprise her role.{{sfn|Curti|2019|p=111}} Giordano spoke negatively on the role, stating that remaking Malabimba was "a stupid move. I felt used, abused and exploited."{{sfn|Curti|2019|p=111}} It was the last film Giordano made with Crisanti, ending both their professional and personal relationships.{{sfn|Curti|2019|p=111}} Unlike Cristanti's earlier films, which were hybrids of sex and horror, the target for Satan's Baby Doll was for a hardcore pornography audience.{{sfn|Curti|2019|p=112}} This included casting Italy's best known pornographic actress of the period Marina Hedman and Alfonso Gaita, who was a regular in Italian hardcore pornography films of the period.{{sfn|Curti|2019|p=112}} Jacqueline Dupré was a stagename of an actress who Mario Bianchi stated he couldn't remember her real name, but recalled that she lived in Ostia and that this was seemingly her only film.{{cite magazine|last1=Ippoliti|first1=Stefano|last2=Norcini|first2=Matteo|title=Mario Bianchi. Il mio cinema pizza e fichi|issue=5|magazine=Cine 70 e dintorni |date=Summer 2004|page=28}}

Filming began on August 17, 1981.{{sfn|Curti|2019|p=113}} Aldo Sambrell was involved in a unsimulated sex scene with Marina Hedman, which he later recalled: "We had to shoot a love scene, Marina and I... Well, I was lying on the bed, waiting for her, and when she showed up we started making out; after a while I realized that she was doing it for real and I had to stop her..." Sambrell contacted Crisanti to state he could not work under these conditions.{{sfn|Curti|2019|p=112}} Sambrell was replaced by Gaita for the explicit shots.{{sfn|Curti|2019|p=112}}

Release

Satan's Baby Doll was submitted to the Italian rating board in June 1982 in a softcore version which had a running time of a little over 73 minutes.{{sfn|Curti|2019|p=113}} The film was first released in Spain on 25 February 1983 in a softcore version titled La hija de Satanas.{{sfn|Curti|2019|p=111}}{{sfn|Curti|2019|p=113}} The Spanish version was seen by 20,230 spectators and grossed a 2019 equivalent of 30,200 Euro.{{sfn|Curti|2019|p=114}} It was distributed theatrically in Italy by Film 2 on 29 July 1983.{{sfn|Curti|2019|p=111}} Although Bianchi and Cristanti had denied a hardcore version of the film had existed, a hardcore version of the film premiered on a German DVD in 2007.{{sfn|Curti|2019|p=113}} The hardcore version runs at 88 minutes.{{sfn|Curti|2019|p=111}}

See also

Footnotes

{{reflist}}

=Sources=

{{Refbegin}}

  • {{cite book | last= Curti | first= Roberto | title= Italian Gothic Horror Films, 1980-1989 |publisher= McFarland |year= 2019 |isbn= 978-1476672434}}

{{Refend}}