The Sweet Body of Deborah (1968) Poster

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6/10
Atmospheric thriller with (a sensuous) Ms. Baker leading the picture
drownsoda904 July 2017
"The Sweet Body of Deborah" follows the American Deborah (Carroll Baker) who marries Marcel (Jean Sorel) in Europe. The two go to Geneva on their honeymoon, but find their marital bliss disrupted over accusations that Marcel caused his ex-girlfiend's suicide.

The first of many horror and giallo films that Carroll Baker made in the late 1960s–mid-1970s in Italy, "The Sweet Body of Deborah" is one of the more amusing ones—significantly melodramatic, and bolstered with atmospheric set-pieces and cinematography. The first half of the film feels fairly one-note, but it begins to gain steam at the midway point. Lush cinematography of the Geneva Alps contrasted with the sunny atmosphere of Nice leaves the film visually interesting.

The film was clearly dubbed in post-production (in English no less, the language it was shot in in the first place), so there is a disconnect between the filmed performances themselves and the vocal supply that leaves something to be desired. In any case, Baker seems to be enjoying herself here, playing the sensuous new bride who finds herself in grave danger. Jean Sorel is watchable as her hunky leading man.

Overall, "The Sweet Body of Deborah" is a decent giallo mystery with light tinges of horror. It's a treat for fans of Baker, but stands on its own as a solid early entry in the Italian thriller subgenre. Not a masterpiece by any means, but a surprisingly amusing, atmospheric romp. 6/10.
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7/10
Convoluted thriller that benefits from a brilliant twisted conclusion
The_Void6 June 2006
Considering the talent on display, it really has to be said that The Sweet Body of Deborah is something of a disappointment. The script is penned by Sergio Martino's long-time collaborator Ernesto Gastaldi (who put pen to paper on classics of the genre such as The Strange Vice of Mrs Wardh and The Case of the Scorpion's Tail), the director is Romolo Guerrieri, who also made the highly rated 'The Double', and it stars a trio of Giallo regulars; Carroll Baker (Lenzi's Kiss Me, Kill Me), George Hilton (The Strange Vice of Mrs Wardh) and Jean Sorel (Fulci's One on Top of the Other). There's also a producer's credit for Sergio Martino's brother and workmate, Luciano Martino. The Sweet Body of Deborah is a rather early Giallo as it was released prior to the boom of the subgenre in the early seventies, and so it's something of a front runner; which somewhat explains why the film doesn't stand up to best that the genre has to offer, although many directors; such as Mario Bava and Umberto Lenzi has already made successful films prior to the release of this one.

The plot is one of the film's strongpoint's, as a seemingly chance encounter between the central couple and a man who claims Jean Sorel murdered his girlfriend opens up into a twisted and complex tale of lust and greed. The major problem with the film stems from the handling, as although the twists and turns are well worked; there isn't a lot of suspense in the plot, and the film boils down to snail pace far too often. Furthermore, despite coming from soon to be esteemed Giallo cast members, the ensemble is rather flat and no one gives a particularly strong performance. The director does have an eye for detail, however, as the locations are stunning and Carroll Baker gets to don some of Giallo's most outrageous outfits. The film is typical of Ernesto Gastaldi in that there are a lot of twists and no one is ever quite what they seem. The climax is highly improbable and far too convoluted, but it's carried off well and director Guerrieri does a good job of presenting a number of twists in quick succession to ensure that the movie ends on a high. Overall, this isn't a classic of the genre; and Giallo fans can feel free to skip it, but I love a good twisted film and the ending really made it for me.
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7/10
Beautiful decadence
Falconeer25 October 2012
"Il Dolce Corpo di Deborah" is a lushly filmed romantic thriller, starring Carroll Baker and Jean Sorel, certainly one of the most beautiful on screen couples of all time. In fact everything about this production is gorgeous, from the actors and the magnificent interiors and fashions, to the absolutely fantastic film score from Nora Orlandi. All this combined elegance makes for an intoxicating viewing experience that takes the audience into an opulent world, where nobody is quite what they seem. Mistakenly labelled as a 'giallo' film, but this is hardly a giallo, so I don't understand the connection. There are no violent, stylish murder set-pieces to mention at all. So those looking for a giallo will most likely be disappointed, and I think that contributes to the films rather low score here. Instead we have a film more in the vein of Luchino Visconti; a study of deception and betrayal, and greed, among the beautiful "jet set," in opulent and exclusive surroundings. This reminded me of Visconti's "Conversation Piece" for instance. Filmed throughout Switzerland, and then the French countryside, this is escapist cinema at it's finest, with an intriguing story that unfolds at a leisure, elegant pace. It possesses the unique Euro-style film making that is most impressive here. "Il Dolce Corpo Di Deborah" is a classic in it's own right.
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7/10
Carroll Baker got the protagonism which she never had in America!!
elo-equipamentos23 April 2021
The eye candy Carroll Baker was up and coming in Hollywood when decides change scenery to Europe on late sixties, perhaps seeking for the protagonism which she rarely had at America, your trip gave what she wants, however on a highest price, at the expense of much nudity scenes, her main attribute, it's a psycho-giallo, sets in fancy landscape as Geneva at frosty Switzerland and the seashore Nice on France and outskirts, whilst a slow pace on first section takes off from middle to forward, with right to an unexpected turnaround at the end.

The plot is weak at first glance, commonly in this genre, Marcel (Jean Sorel) a Swiss citizen is back at his hometown Geneva to spend his honeymoon with wealthy American girl Deborah (Carroll Baker), nonetheless such city brings bad recollections of a not distant past whereby Marcel was blamed for a death by misadventure on car accident of his former girlfriend Suzanne Boileau (Evelyn Stewart), mainly by his closest friend Philip (Luigi Pistilli) still distrauted, thus they decides depart there for breezy air of Nice and shortly thereafter Deborah rents an expensive country-house looking for a peace, but a snooper neighbor Robert (George Hilton) enters in the scene, meanwhile strange things happen concerning Suzanne's death, the ghost strikes back.

Stays clear all that glitters is not gold, the director handles the audience with rare mastery, fine outcome for a lousy story, Also Romolo Guerriere exploited the Carroll Baker's sexual appealing to the utmost of the boundary beyond reasonable, for a relief of lucky viewers!!

Thanks for reading.

Resume:

First watch: 2020 / How many: 1 / Source: DVD / Rating: 7.
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6/10
OK...
markovd11119 July 2022
"The Sweet Body of Deborah" has a very slow start, but once it get's going, it's a decent mystery/crime movie which can entertain you during it's runtime. However, it should be noted that even though the movie has style and isn't amateurishly made or acted, it isn't anything special. There is also a scene where main characters play twister. That cringe has to be seen to be believed. All in all, I give the movie 6.5/10! It's an OK movie for genre fans, but isn't something everyone should see, unless you are largely attracted to Caroll Baker...
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5/10
THE SWEET BODY OF DEBORAH (Romolo Guerrieri, 1968) **
Bunuel197619 February 2010
Carroll Baker made several excursions to Italy throughout the late 1960s and 1970s, notably a series of erotic gialli; this was the first of them and, though a rather inauspicious beginning, several that followed (even those made by other hands, such as Sergio Martino – actually serving on the film under review as Production Manager!) can be seen to have adhered pretty closely to the formula unveiled here. Though contributing to the low rating was the atrocious sound quality – which not only seemed to have inherent hiccups (whereby lines get repeated every so often) but the English dialogue track featured a few unaccountable 'intrusions' of Italian and French! – the movie itself is a mainly listless affair which contrives to wake up only during the last 20 minutes (with the expected bevy of improbable twists and turns)!! To be fair, I was drawn to this principally by the notable cast – which also includes Jean Sorel (who followed his career highpoint, Luis Bunuel's BELLE DE JOUR [1967], with a number of gialli: for the record, he and director Guerrieri would subsequently collaborate on the infinitely more rewarding THE DOUBLE [1971]) and, likewise all genre stalwarts, George Hilton (who eventually rose to protagonist status under Martino's guidance), Luigi Pistilli and Evelyn Stewart. To go back to the erotic theme at the core of these type of films (perhaps to make up for the frankly tedious plots), this first entry may have seemed pretty risqué at the time but certainly feels tame when compared to later examples (not necessarily those made by the group of people already mentioned).
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"You Know It Isn't Smart To Lie To Me!"...
azathothpwiggins26 August 2021
Deborah and Marcel (Carroll Baker and Jean Sorel) are young and in love. We know this due to their shower scene, which may be the most awkward, passionless scene of its kind.

When Marcel learns of the tragic fate of his ex-mistress, Suzanne, we are treated to the "motorcycle / cow disaster" flashback sequence. Then, Marcel and Deborah hurry to Suzanne's decrepit villa, where Deborah receives a threatening phone call that couldn't possibly have been made.

THE SWEET BODY OF DEBORAH is a rather tame giallo. For her part, Ms. Baker is stunning, whether she's cutting a rug at the dance club in her green mini-skirt, or playing a game of lawn twister in one of her magnificent bodysuits!

Though it's drawn-out and convoluted, the wicked triple-twist finale makes it worth watching...
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6/10
Peeps are acting creepy - let's play Twister!
Bezenby23 June 2017
Gravy, baby! Or whatever it is that these annoying Summer of Love types say to each other while dancing to funky music in a rather awkward fashion. I guess my tolerance to these free living types strutting about underneath pop art and ridiculous clothing depends on the story. Luckily, the Sweet-Sweet-Sweetsweetsweet Body of Deborah is one of those Gialli that is all about confusing the viewer with people's motives, rather than racking up the body count.

Deborah (Baker) and Marcel (Sorel), are newlyweds heading back to Geneva from the USA to visit Marcel's home town, if they can stop shagging for two minutes in order to do so. There's trouble in paradise however as Philippe (Pistilli) appears and accuses Marcel of causing the death of his last lover, Susan, by abandoning her for some reason.

I liked how they managed to fit in the old Italian standard of the creepy mansion in this one as Deborah and Marcel visit Susan's house and Debs as she probably liked to be called gets death threats through a phone that doesn't work. Plus someone keeps playing a creepy theme tune in other rooms.

The couple scarper for a nice non-creepy villa in Nice, only to find neighbour Robert (Hilton) has his eyes on Deborah and is hilariously frank about his Peeping Tom fetish! The rest of the film is the usual viewer fooling barrage of twists right until the last second, but I don't mind films like that as I don't have a clue what it is going on and things are nicely tied up in the end.

Strangely, I'm finding that these non-formulaic gialli are more prevalent in the sixties than in the seventies - is it Dario Argento's fault. Also - check out the cheesy dance the couple do before having a game of Twister! This film has a nice jazz soundtrack too and plenty of style - I guess it's not so well known as the body count is real low (one!) and although you kind of see Baker naked, she don't float my boat.

Because she's blonde. Is that racist?
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5/10
La Baker does it again
Superwonderscope4 October 2002
IL DOLCE CORPO DI DEBORAH bears a strange resemblance with Umberto Lenzi's COSI DOLCE...COSI PERVERSA. Same lead actress (Carroll Baker), same plot, same twist ending. Made the same year...who is the copycat? Not important after all, the Lenzi's flick being far more superior in suspense & quality.

For about an hour or so, we follow newlywed Carroll Baker and husband Jean Sorel thru the Swiss Alps, Geneva, the swiss countryside... guess the Swiss authorities paid a lot to make their country have a sufficient screening time to get noticed. No plot at all, just beautiful shots of the mountains & the city. Then some hot sex scenes between Baker & Sorel. Then back to some über-chic club. Then some more hot sex. And, oh, there's Luigi Pistilli accusing Sorel of driving his ex Susan to suicide. That's the beginning of the plot. then they're getting scared by strange phone calls. Oh, er!

La Baker is viewed under any possible shot (no frontal nudity, though :these are the 60's), she can scream all right. But she really doesn't know what she's doing. Obviously, the screenplay either, as it doesn't know how to handle such screen presence. The editing doesn't help, as it jumps from flashy 60's shots of a nightclub atmsophere (flashy camera angles, too) to loooong face to face dialogues between the two leads. No rythm is given, which leads to some boredom after the first half hour.

The last 30 minutes are a bit more satisfying, as the suspense grows thicker, the rythm accelerates and the story really begins. Too bad it comes too late.

Romolo Guerrieri is not a great director here. He's just a man following Luciano Martino and Mino Loy's orders : show more Carroll Baker and to the hell with the story (who cares anyway). No special talent, no great use of the anamorphic screen (Cromoscope here). No specific direction of actors. Just plain average.

But it's not bad (in a Mattei way), it's always fun if you're into some 60's/70's sexploitation mood. (S)Exploitative indeed : the black stripper as an arty-sex show is ridiculously long and may seem infuriatingly mysoginistic today. Mizar's strip in Giuliano Carmineo's PERCHE QUELLE STARNE GOCCE SUL CORPO DI JENNIFER? avoids this trap by eing a victory over machismo. This is pure pre-giallo routine.

But you can't help looking at screen wondering how come someone like Carroll Baker made this in 1968 after HOW THE WEST WAS WON, CHEYENN AUTUMN or HARLOW.

Better stick to the Lenzi territory for some sexy-giallo stuff. COSI DOLCE...COSI PERVERSA is a really better choice.

Superwonderscope says : 5
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7/10
Great Tourism and Twist in the End
claudio_carvalho4 January 2023
The newlywed couple Deborah (Carroll Baker) and Marcel (Jean Sorel) is spending honeymoon in Europe and Deborah asks to visit his hometown Geneva. While watching a show, Marcel sees his former friend Philip (Luigi Pistilli), who tells him that Marcel's former love Suzanne Boileau (Evelyn Stewart) has committed suicide, and blames him. Marcel explains to Deborah that the wealthy Suzanne gave him money in the past to pay his debts and to travel to the United States and he has never returned to her. Then he met the wealthy Deborah in New York and married her. Now he wants to visit Suzanne's parents to know whether he is the guilty for her suicide. They find an abandoned house where mysterious things happen and Deborah is threatened by phone. They travel to Nice to forget the incidents and Deborah rents an isolated manor for them. The only neighbor is the voyeur painter Robert Simack (George Hilton) that shows interest on Deborah. Out of the blue, she is threatened again and she uses tranquilizer pills and Marcel goes to the police.

"The Sweet Body of Deborah" is a romantic-thriller with a great tourism in Europe, showing beautiful locations and landscape. The lead couple Carroll Baker and Jean Sorel shows excellent chemistry while traveling in Europe with many sexy scenes. The pace is slow most part of the film, but the twists in the end are worthwhile, despite the flaws. My vote is seven.

Title (Brazil): "O Corpo Doce de Deborah" ("The Sweet Body of Deborah")
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4/10
Umberto Lenzi should have directed this...
manchester_england200416 February 2021
Last year, I was thinking of purchasing a Blu-Ray copy of this film via a well-known auction site. For some reason, my instincts said not to - and I always follow my instincts. As luck would have it, I managed to see the film through another means.

The plot, such as it is, starts off simple. A newlywed couple return to the husband's home in Geneva. Soon after, the husband hears that his ex-girlfriend has died and is accused of murder. Later, the wife receives a phone call in which the mysterious caller tells her she will die to pay for her husband's apparent crime.

The plot becomes a lot more convoluted as is customary with gialli. The twists are admittedly good. I saw some of them coming, but not all. Unfortunately, however, there is no dramatic unveiling of these twists like you see in Lenzi's films or Argento's films. Expect no flashbacks to clues to the mystery or anything like that. The twists are just unveiled in a "here you are" fashion.

The central problem with this film is that, while it looks like a classic old-fashioned giallo of the Umberto Lenzi kind, it is incredibly slow and boring. Lenzi's gialli were generally slow, but he generally kept you engaged with bits of sleaze, character conflict, sudden turns in the plot or just a plain good mystery.

The director of this film doesn't follow the Lenzi approach. Instead, he produces what is for at least the first hour a boring melodrama with endless scenes of the couple kissing, rolling about on the lawn, driving around places in their car, sitting in bars doing not very much. Sound boring? It is. Even the sex scenes are boring.

I look upon Carroll Baker as a good contender for the title of "Queen of Gialli", even though I believe Edwige Fenech and Dagmar Lassander to have starred in better entries in the genre. Unfortunately, she is given little to do here except look glamorous and flash her breasts in seemingly every alternate scene. She was very beautiful and is a delight to look at. But this film totally wastes her talent. In the far superior, KNIFE OF ICE, a Lenzi-directed Giallo, she is given an opportunity to show what we can do acting-wise - and it's great. Again, this is because Lenzi knows how to make a film.

Jean Sorel walks through the film with the same expression on his face in every scene. I don't blame him. His character is boring too - nothing like the part he played in IN THE EYES OF THE HURRICANE (aka LUSTY LOVERS), a far better film.

The only positives I can say about THE SWEET BODY OF DEBORAH are that it is technically well-made, and the last 25 minutes or so make for reasonably good viewing.

If you want a good old-fashioned giallo of the non-gloved killer variety then I recommend KNIFE OF ICE, which Baker also stars in. Or maybe even THE FOURTH VICTIM, again starring Baker, opposite great British actor Michael Craig.

If you want one with both Baker and Sorel in it, watch A QUIET PLACE TO KILL (aka PARANOIA).

There are lots of other good "gloveless" gialli such as THE FORBIDDEN PHOTOS OF A LADY ABOVE SUSPICION, NO ONE HEARD THE SCREAM, CROSS CURRENT, HATCHET FOR THE HONEYMOON, TOP SENSATION, THE PSYCHIC (aka SEVEN NOTES IN BLACK, MURDER TO THE TUNE OF SEVEN BLACK NOTES) and THE STUDENT CONNECTION, to name just a few. They are all better than THE SWEET BODY OF DEBORAH, even though they are all quite slow-paced.

The bottom line - THE SWEET BODY OF DEBORAH is a boring entry into the giallo genre. It should have been directed by Umberto Lenzi. He would have breathed some life into it, instead of us being left with the dead corpse of a film we got.
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8/10
Great fun!
christopher-underwood14 December 2021
Some may not love this but I had a difficult to find this with subtitles and do love it. Carroll Baker had a several of these giallo films with Umberto Lenzi with So Sweet...So Perverse and Orgasmo, both in 1969 and the first with Jean-Louis Trintignant and the other Lou Castel. In this film of Romolo Guerrieri though is made in 1968 and made The Double (1971) but never had much success as most. This lovely The Sweet Body of Deborah is as good as any might with Baker with Jean Sorel and Luici Pitilli (who was in the film with The Great Silence, I see last night) and if the story is a bit strange, the bonkers fashions and dancing (and a twister game!) there is always the wonderful Nora Orlandi score. Great fun.
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7/10
Head-scratching giallo
Leofwine_draca22 March 2023
THE SWEET BODY OF DEBORAH (1969, original title Il dolce corpo di Deborah) is another giallo that leans heavily towards the mystery side of the genre to no ill effect. It stars a couple of genre mainstays in the form of Carroll Baker (ORGASMO) and Jean Sorel (SHORT NIGHT OF THE GLASS DOLLS), playing newlyweds who show up in Geneva to discover mystery and tragedy surrounding Sorel's former flame. Before long, they're being menaced by strange phone calls and a man who may just have murder in mind...

Baker shot many similar gialli around this period, always playing a woman menaced by the men in her life. This film is no exception. It's a little on the slow side at times, but it carefully builds up an intriguing mystery before letting rip with twist upon twist in the last half hour. It's neither gory nor action packed, but as with many gialli it holds the attention throughout.
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5/10
Well made but boring
dopefishie7 July 2022
Well made but boring

It's well-written and well-acted. But dear god, the first 80 minutes of the film is so boring! They honestly could have just cut it and released the last 15 minutes as a short. There are a couple twists that happen in end. None of them make a terrible bit of sense. It is well acted. And it features many giallo favorites stuffed into one film which is a treat! I just wish it were a better movie.
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2/10
Jet-setting dreck...
moonspinner5511 June 2017
French-Italian co-production featuring Carroll Baker and Jean Sorel as a newly-married couple honeymooning in Geneva, Sorel's hometown, where he is accosted by an old acquaintance and accused of being responsible for his former girlfriend's suicide. Sorel soon begins to distrust his new wife, whom he thinks may be complicit in a plot to drive him mad. Confounding, partially-dubbed travelogue/mystery with lots of coy nudity and rolling about in the sheets. Not poorly-made, but not a respectable project either, particularly for Method actress Baker, who would go on to star in a number of Euro-potboilers following this one (she must have had some serious debts to pay). The ridiculous twist-laden plot may hook some, but the titillation factor remains low. *1/2 from ****
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On a honeymoon in Switzerland a young couple is frightened of the husband's old friend who considers him the killer of the husband's previous girlfriend.
smalling4 November 1998
Occasionally suspenseful but basically rather lukewarm sub-Diabolique-goings-on, which has a flashy direction, some elaborate twists, impressive music score and a deliberately murky and grim style in the usual French-Italian manner. It suffers, however, from a maddeningly illogical narrative, platiduous dialogue, too many slow patches and surprisingly uninspired ensemble acting.

"Smalling"
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5/10
An eye for an eye, a sweet body for a sweet body
Coventry29 April 2015
The Italian Giallo is my absolute favorite sub-genre in the whole wide world of cult/horror cinema, and "The Sweet Body of Deborah" is one of the last titles I had yet to see. With its year of release being 1968, this can still be considered as a very early giallo. Even though the almighty Mario Bava had already unleashed two of the greatest classics that formed the genre, namely "The girl who knew too much" and "Blood and black Lace", the glorious heyday of the giallo would only start in 1970 and last until approximately 1974. Based on all the gialli I've seen, I pretty much conclude there are two main plots. Either a giallo handles about a masked psycho-killer who savagely butchers people – preferably pretty young models – with sharp objects, or it handles about a convoluted murder conspiracy complete with sexual intrigues, betrayal and triangular relationships. The first category obviously contains the goriest and most wickedly entertaining films, while the second category often has the most intelligent screenplays and unique stylish trademarks. "The Sweet Body of Deborah" belongs in the convoluted conspiracy category, but sadly I have to admit that I expected a whole lot more from this film. The cast is great, but the script is rather dull and routine and the pacing is intolerably slow. The story starts out good enough, but gradually gets less and less compelling and by the time the few ingenious and unpredictable twists near the end approach, I practically didn't care no more. Deborah and Marcel are two joyous newlyweds who visit Geneva together. Via Philip, an old acquaintance, they find out that Marcel's beautiful former fiancée Susan committed suicide. Philip behaves very aggressively and claims that her death was Marcel's fault. Soon after, when they are in the mansion where Marcel and Susan lived together, Deborah begins to receive menacing phone calls. While Marcel gets sucked into his own private investigation, Susan takes more tranquilizers than is good for her and gets friendly with the flamboyant painter next door. What follows are a series of far-fetched and unbelievable plot twists, but they are typical for prolific writer Ernesto Gastaldi and typical for the giallo overall. Director Romolo Guerrieri, on the other hand, inserts very few personal trademarks or stylish aspects and I mainly blame him for "The Sweet Body of Deborah" being boring to look at. The cast is excellent with stellar names like Jean Sorel, Carroll Baker, Luigi Pistilli and Georges Hilton. For them alone, and obviously for the luscious curves of Baker and Ida Galli (in flashbacks), the film is worth checking out but it certainly isn't a highlight of the genre.
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5/10
Average viewing experience that lacks thrills
acidburn-1024 January 2023
'The Sweet Body of Deborah' is a 60's Italian Giallo flick that relies more on atmosphere and the mystery aspect rather than sleazy violence and elaborate murder set pieces. The narrative is quite interesting, but the pacing is far too slow and lacking some much needed suspense and thrills that could have made this a lot more entertaining.

The plot = A newlywed couple Deborah (Carroll Baker) and Marcel (Jean Sorel) visit his hometown in Geneva, where he learns that his ex-girlfriend Suzanne (Evelyn Stewart) has killed herself because of him and soon enough the couple are subjected to death threats by her old friend Phillip (Luigi Pistilli). The couple then flee to Italy where things get even worse for them.

I don't mind a slow burning story driven plot, but only if it holds my interest and sadly this flick couldn't quite sustain momentum especially during the middle section where the plot becomes rather aimless and even the twist at the end couldn't quite save it as it felt rather predictable and forced. The only positives I could give is that the movie looks good with some stunning locations that gives this a cool picturesque quality and the cast of characters are incredibly strong, but other than that the movie is rather tame.

Carroll Baker gives a solid leading lady performance and Jean Sorel gives a convincing and fantastic performance as the male lead, but both have starred in far better Giallo's than this, hell even 'A Quiet Place to Kill' in which they both starred in together was far better than this. Another genre favourites such as Luigi Pistilli and George Hilton both give interesting and solid performances in their respective roles and again both have starred in far better than this.

Overall 'The Sweet Body of Deborah' had some interesting potential but squanders everything by lacking entertainment value. If you're die hard Giallo fan then yeah see this, but other than that it's a skippable entry.
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8/10
The Sweet Vice of Deborah.
morrison-dylan-fan23 December 2019
Warning: Spoilers
Recently viewing The Young, the Evil and the Savage (1968-also reviewed) I decided to continue digging into Gialli DVDs I've been meaning to play for years! Despite having read that she is a Queen of the genre,I have only just recently caught sight of Carroll Baker in Giallo mode with Baba Yaga (1973-also reviewed.) In the mood for more of Baker,I went to touch Deborah's sweet body.

View on the film:

Falling the honeymoon bliss of Deborah and Marcel off a knife edge into a pit of murder and betrayal, director Romolo Guerrieri & cinematographer Marcello Masciocchi wed the couple to the first psychological-driven wave of Gialli with a pristine, corrupt bourgeoisie atmosphere of the couple being wrapped in glistening white surroundings, which Guerrieri merrily spoils with dollops of candle wax blood.

One of only two Gialli he made, Guerrieri displays a sharp eye in moving towards the ultra-stylisation which would grip the genre, offering a artful eyeful of topless Deborah, and a groovy nightclub dance with Batman on the wall.

Playing on the notes of paranoia with Nora Orlandi's dreamy score bringing up Marcel's suppressed memories, Guerrieri brilliantly uses obscured angles to heighten ambiguity in the Giallo set-pieces over who is getting stabbed in the back.

Setting the stage for what Sergio Martino (who worked as a general manager here) would do in the Giallo, Sergio's brother Luciano joins Ernesto Gastaldi for a female-led, doubtful couple Giallo terror screenplay, as the writers tighten the screws on fears that Deborah and Marcel might both be losing their minds.

Dipping into the death of Marcel's past partner with fractured flashbacks, the writers raise doubts between the couple by each of them hearing music and phones ringing that appear to be coming from a unseen place. Working on both Gialli made by Guerrieri, Jean Sorel gives a terrific turn as Marcel, whose sorrow Sorel carries with a heaviness which remains even as the Giallo twist ending wraps around him, whilst George Hilton tugs at flamboyant ambiguity as Robert Simack (get the ref?)

Initially holding hands with Marcel in a cheerful state, alluring Carroll Baker gives a excellent performance as Deborah, thanks to Baker taking the loved-up state of Deborah and peeling it away to raw, calculating mistrusts which covers the sweet body of Deborah.
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10/10
Perfect giallo
BandSAboutMovies22 February 2020
Warning: Spoilers
Il Dolce Corpo di Deborah, or The Sweet Body of Deborah, is a gorgeous film that embodies the fashionable side of the giallo. It's directed by Romolo Guerrieri (Johnny Yuma) from a script by Ernesto Gastaldi (Hands of Steel, 2019: After the Fall of New York, The Case of the Bloody Iris, The Strange Vice of Mrs. Wardh - obviously this man knew what he was doing with a resume like that) and producer Luciano Martino (who, in addition to helping write The Whip and the Body and Delirium, was engaged to Edwige Fenech at one point).

Adding to this pedigree - the cast. Carroll Baker is a giallo queen if there ever was one, thanks to appearances in So Sweet...So Perverse, Orgasmo, A Quiet Place to Kill and Baba Yaga (a comic book adaption with George Eastman in it, so it's amazing that I've never written about it here). And Jean Sorel, who was in the proto-giallo Perversion Story for Fulci, appears here as well. Finally, to make every fan of the black-gloved psychosexual realm pleased, George Hilton (who once played Sartana, as well as appearing in Luciano's brother Sergio's films, such as All the Colors of the Dark and The Case of the Scorpion's Tail) is here as a voyeur.

Oh yes. We have a winner, dear reader.

Deborah (Baker) and Marcel (Sorel) have returned home from their honeymoon, just in time for them to learn that Marcel's past lover, Susan, has killed herself. The mood transforms from frolic and fun to fright, as a man from the past named Phillip (Luigi Pistilli, Iguana With the Tongue of Fire, A Bay of Blood).

Marcel - and Deborah - both start to receive threats related to Susan's death. But is she really dead? And who is Robert (Hilton) and why is he perving all over our girl?

While this isn't the best giallo you've ever seen, you get to see Baker in - and out - of some insane fashions. There's a bonkers outdoor twister scene set to some cool jazz and a nightclub with pop art all over the walls, including Batman and several sculptures of Cybermen from Dr. Who. The whole mood and tone is perfect.

Ah man. If only all films were this sumptuous. And sounded this great, thanks to a score by Nora Orlandi. You may know her from the song "Dies Irae", which was in The Strange Vice of Mrs. Wardh and Quentin Tarantino's Kill Bill: Volume 2.

There's also an amazing knife fight scene in the dark and a great ending. What else do you want?
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