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Dilip Gohel
from U.K.!
Information
DVD SummaryUser Reviews
Whip And The Body
Whip And The Body
Price: £13.99
Availablility: Currently In Stock
Region: Region 0 / NTSC:
Will play on all DVD players worldwide.More Information
Technical Details
Director: Mario Bava
Actors: Christopher Lee, Daliah Lavi, Gustavo De Nardo, Harriet Medin, Ida Galli, Luciano Pigozzi, Tony Kendall
Year: 1963
Length: 88 min
Label: VCI (imported)
Audio:  
Video: 1.85:1
Languages: English
Subtitles:  
Also Known As
La Frusta e il corpo
Le Corps et le fouet
Night Is the Phantom
Son of Satan
The Way and the Body
What
Special Features
Commentary by Bava historian Tim Lucas
Two cut scenes hidden as "Easter Eggs." To access these, go to the Special Features menu, move the cursor to "Play American Titles," and push the left arrow button.
Bonus Music Sound Track
Trailers
Synopsis
This controversial film was mutilated in almost every country when it was initially released, is now offered in the uncut European, Widescreen version!

The hungry, haunted eyes of the voluptuous Daliah Lavi dominate Mario Bava's kinky little ghost story. Set in a cavernous castle on a lonely coast, it looks like something out of Roger Corman's Edgar Allen Poe thrillers, at least at first. Christopher Lee is the bad sheep prodigal son who returns to the family manor. A sadist whose proclivities brought about the death of a young girl and sent him into exile, he immediately lures his brother's wife (Lavi) into his sadistic games upon his return. There's no shortage of suspects when he's found dead, a dagger plunged into his neck (the same one his former lover killed herself with), but when he returns as a gray-faced ghost Bava pushes the gothic conventions and repressed desires into delirious territory. It's one of the most psychologically compelling scripts in Bava's filmography, wracked with mad passions and haunted with guilt, and he pushes the emotional hysteria to the limits with lush style, surreal color, and gorgeous imagery.

The film was drastically cut and renamed What! for its U.S. release. This edition is not only completely uncut but mastered from a gorgeous, color drenched print, restoring Bava's rich play of crimson red and cerulean blue.