Dead of Summer (1970) Poster

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7/10
Wow! Loved it!
BandSAboutMovies13 May 2022
Warning: Spoilers
Based on Dana Moseley's Dead of Summer, this movie fits into one of the many subcatagories of the giallo which I ineloquently refer to as women slowly going insane. Maybe F-giallo is a better term?

I thought that the gorgeous and doomed Jean Seberg only made one giallo, The Corruption of Chris Miller. She gives a truly once-in-a-career performance here as Joyce Grasse, a woman left all alone in a fabulous apartment in Morocco. As a sandstorm rages outside her windows and a man keeps staring into the windows, she listens to messages from her husband and gradually slides into depression, her only companion - before the maid arrives - is a blow up doll she finds in her husband's room. Does it look a bit too much like her?

After watching her neighbors have sex, she decides that she should seduce a nieghbor boy, which ends awkwardly as he runs from her. As her sanity gets more fragile, a doctor (Luigi Pistilli, A Bay of Blood, Your Vice Is a Locked Room and Only I Have the Key) appears.

Director Neio Risi purposefully made this movie one that doesn't tell you anything. Is Joyce insane? Is she trapped in a world of her own making? Has she killed her husband? Why are men both fascinated and frightened by her? Was her husband more interested in the young boys he met in this foreign country than her?

For some, this movie would be slow moving. I watched it as a hang out film, seeing Seberg fall apart over the running time, as she sits and stares into space and just lies there and listens to "Crimson and Clover." The transfer I saw had massive audio issues, warping all of the dialogue and sound design, which somehow made this even more haunting, so as she searched for Tommy James and the Shondells to remind her of what love is, the voice came back as if from the void, vibrating and angry and maybe even afraid.
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Must-see for Jean Seberg fans; a bit too obscure otherwise.
lor_12 July 2010
DEAD OF SUMMER epitomizes the hundreds of forgotten "in-between" European films of the late '60s/early '70s. It failed to make an indelible mark in its initial run, and is not sale-able in today's genre film-dominated video market. So it's gone and not even missed.

Director Nelo Risi, brother of the all-time genius Dino Risi, had an unsuccessful career, having cranked out several interesting but extremely pretentious films before losing his backing. I'm anxious to see his bete noir A SEASON IN HELL about Rimbaud & Verlaine (made before Leo DiCaprio was born), a big-deal project backed by United Artists but permanently shelved.

For DEAD OF SUMMER, which is also known appropriately as HEAT WAVE, Nelo is under the spell of Antonioni, with an emphasis on architecture and bleak vistas that would do the maestro proud. He has cast the iconic American in Europe actress Jean Seberg in what amounts to almost a one-woman-show, starring as Joyce Grassi, wife of an architect who is absent but whose presence hovers as a black & white blowup in their modern bi-level apartment.

Setting is Morocco, though with the entire cast speaking in Italian I thought it might be Ethiopia or Libya, amongst Italy's former colonies. Colonialism is certainly a key theme here, as Joyce interacts with her attractive maidservant (Lilia Nguyen, who looks Abyssinian despite her ?married? Vietnamese surname) or a pesky young guy who keeps trying to sell her stuff, door-to-door. The only other significant role is her physician Vittorio, played in surprisingly neutral fashion by usually sinister character actor Luigi Pistilli.

Taking the classic Cocteau piece "The Human Voice" as his starting point, Risi fixates on Seberg acting in one for the first 35 minutes of the movie. With the air conditioning on the blink, she's sweltering all alone in her lavish apartment, a modular affair that reminded me of the innovative sets Jerry Lewis pioneered when he turned director in the '60s. For her fans she delivers a couple of nude scenes which, as they say, are integral to the story.

As in Antonioni's cinema, the action becomes more & more abstract, with Seberg venturing outside into the scirocco-like wind and dust to drive her nifty white sports convertible to the beach and see her doctor off at the airport. After a suicide attempt she has Vittorio check her into a clinic, but there's only a tiny foreshadowing of the shock ending.

Throughout the film, Risi emphasizes the media via television broadcasts and Joyce's main form of communication is her tape recorder, playing back hubby's statements and later proving to be a key plot device. The fact that the film is carried by her physical acting and the strikingly claustrophobic Techniscope visuals means that no subtitles are really necessary for the integral Italian version now extant. I've been searching in vain for the English-track version released Stateside nearly 40 years ago by defunct Plaza Pictures, which would feature Jean's own post-synched voice, and suspect it is lost.

Remarkably beautiful and glamorous, with slightly longer hair than in her most famous roles, Seberg is terrific as the mysterious central figure. We don't really find out much about her character, languorously listening to the hit "Crimson & Clover" on the radio at one point. Having waited so long to see this nearly-lost film, I felt an odd inversion here, especially during the nude scenes, when Jean looked so uncannily like her direct screen successor, Mimsy Farmer. At any rate, had Nelo made this film several years later he would undoubtedly have cast Mimsy, as she had become the darling of both experimental and genre filmmakers all over Europe, and a near-doppelganger for Jean, haircut and all. I saw Jean's final great role, in Geissendorfer's THE WILD DUCK, back in the day in first-run, and regret her prematurely shortened career.

The overall mood of DEAD OF SUMMER suggested to me that created by J.G. Ballard in perhaps his greatest later book "Vermilion Sands", certainly the post-Colonial mood of indolence and decadence. If Risi had made the film as sci-fi instead of the unclassifiable work it is, it might have found video circulation as a cult classic, not unlike the screwy but haunting FOOTPRINTS ON THE MOON from this same period.
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3/10
Very dull
Leofwine_draca18 October 2021
A very dull, giallo version of Polanski's REPULSION, with Jean Seberg trapped in her apartment and going out of her mind. Or worrying a bit, anyway. It's a slow-as-molasses story in which very little happens and the attempts at psychological depth fell flat, at least for me. The reliable Luigi Pistilli is wasted in support and the body doubled nude scenes are pointless filler.
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2/10
Impenetrable Faux Mystery Suffers From 60s Artiness Overkill
jfrentzen-942-20421126 January 2020
Instead of the whodunit theme of most mysteries, this incomprehensible film seems to ask, "What was it?" The camera remains focused on Joyce Grasse (Jean Seberg), wife of a famous architect, as she goes from room to room in her apartment, runs from unidentified men, and drives her car aimlessly through the streets of a Moroccan city in which she lives. Joyce has obviously committed a terrible crime (did she murder her husband?) and her mental torment drives her to insanity. Unfortunately, the montage of her wanderings, poorly directed by Nelo Risi, neither reveals her agony nor explains the mystery. It simply presents a confusing and unrevealing series of unconnected elements. The only plus is the beautiful photography. Ms. Seberg was undeniably glamorous but herein she is unconvincing unless striking a pose or exhibiting a series of pained expressions. In addition, her apparent nude scenes are all very obvious body doubles.
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