Product Description
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An ancient urn is found in a cemetery outside Rome. Once opened,
it triggers a series of violent incidents: robberies, rapes and
murders increase dramatically, while several mysterious,
evil-looking young women coming from all over the world are
gathering in the city. All these events are caused by the return
of Mater Lacrimarum, the last of three powerful witches who have
been spreading terror and death for centuries. Alone against an
army of psychos and demons, Sarah Mandy, an art student who seems
to have supernatural abilities of her own, is the only person
left to prevent the Mother of Tears from destroying Rome.
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After waiting 28 years for the third feature in Dario Argentos
Mother trilogy, die-hard fans (like myself) flocked to theaters
to catch Mother of Tears. The anticipatory set-up, for example
reconciling in advance that the film will look entirely
different, and probably less sexy, than the first two Giallo
classics, Suspiria (1977) and Inferno (1980), induced anxieties
in viewers that many of us hoped would enhance the films horror
and suspense. So revered are Suspiria and Inferno that one needs
an extremely open mind to avoid instantly turning Mother of Tears
off, now that its available on DVD, and chucking the disc out
the window, insulted by its comparison to the previous two
movies. From scene one, in which a psychotic, villainous monkey
stalks Asia Argento, playing protagonist Sarah Mandy, through
Romes Natural History Museum, one realizes this film can only go
downhill. Without the colored lights, the stylized 1970s horror
aesthetic, or the terrifyingly fetishtistic speed
metal/electronica soundtrack pounding during the chase, the mood
is simply corny. Regarding the monkey, try to remember that an
oddly elegant and intelligent crow ate an eyeball to great effect
in Argentos, Terror at the Opera. Argento has always favored
animals to represent unwilling witnesses. The plot itself is also
typically Argento and does follow-up: After a tainted red tunic
is discovered in a cemetery, the third and last witch, Mother
Lachrimarum (Moran Atias), is awaken from her catacombs beneath a
mansion that she and her two deceased witch consorts, Mater
Tenebrarum, the Mother of Darkness/Shadows, and Mater
Suspiriorum, the Mother of Sighs, long ago recruited an architect
to build. The Mother of Tears has beef with Sarah Mandy, due to
Sarahs heritage, and the unholy black witch relentlessly pursues
Mandy until Mandy is forced to fight head-on. Mandys boyfriend,
Michael Pierce (Adam James), is not much help, nor is Padre
Johannes (Udo Kier), which makes sense; Argentos films are all
about empowered female characters, vengeful victims and ruthless
criminals alike. Perhaps the flaw here is Argentos casting of
his daughter, and her inability to render that illicit sexual
tension that the puerile Suzy Banyon (Jessica Harper) once did in
the halls of her bewitched boarding school. Even Mother
Lachrimarums young recruits, such as the Gothic and Lolita-style
Katerina (Jun Ichikawa), are dumb-looking with their colored
contacts and peacock hairstyles. There is only one character, the
elder white witch Marta Colussi (Valeria Cavalli), who has the
sexual draw to enchant Argento style, but she is short-lived. The
CG effects employed throughout, especially in regards to the
ghoulish antics happening amongst the Goth witch posse, are just
plain bad. Only a few s of gore really spook, and to be fair,
they are lasting images. But the only semi-interesting this about
the Mother of Tears DVD is the interview extra with the man
himself, who is still master even if he makes a few stinkers.
--Trinie Dalton