
So it's interesting that except for a few more obscure standouts (What Have You Done with Solange? and Don't Torture a Duckling), the film most worth seeing in the series is atypically black and white, Bava's The Girl Who Knew Too Much, from 1963, described as the first giallo. When kohl-eyed cutie American Nora Davis arrives on the jet plane to Rome reading a detective novel (which often came in yellow book-jackets in Italy, which is where the genre got its name), it sparks an overactive imagination that sees danger in every shadow. Nora witnesses a knifing by the notorious Alphabet Murderer, but the body has disappeared by the morning. Bava remarkably creates constant tension, almost never fulfilled, in every single shot of this film. It's a masterpiece homage to Hitchock, which takes the irony in the Master's work a little more playfully and pushes the tension/irresolution further until the whole film becomes a wonderful, titillating joke. It should also be seen on film, and there's a rare chance to do so in this series.
The Girl Who Knew Too Much screens tonight at 9:30pm, and again on September 23 and 29. More info here. The Giallo series begins today and continues through September 30. More info here.