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What Have You Done To Solange? [Dual Format Blu-Ray + DVD]

4.3 out of 5 stars 13 customer reviews

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Product details

  • Actors: Fabio Testi, Cristina Galbó, Camille Keaton
  • Directors: Massimo Dallamano
  • Format: PAL
  • Language: Italian
  • Subtitles: English
  • Subtitles For The Hearing Impaired: English
  • Region: Region B/2 (Read more about DVD/Blu-ray formats.)
  • Aspect Ratio: 16:9 - 2.35:1
  • Number of discs: 2
  • Classification: 18
  • Studio: Arrow Video
  • DVD Release Date: 14 Dec. 2015
  • Run Time: 107 minutes
  • Average Customer Review: 4.3 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (13 customer reviews)
  • ASIN: B01555NYLG
  • Amazon Bestsellers Rank: 2,410 in DVD & Blu-ray (See Top 100 in DVD & Blu-ray)

Product Description

Product Description

From director Massimo Dallamano, cinematographer on both A Fistful of Dollars and For a Few Dollars More, comes giallo classic What Have You Done to Solange?, the debut feature of actress Camille Keaton (I Spit on Your Grave).

A sexually sadistic killer is preying on the girls of St. Mary s school. Student Elizabeth witnessed one of the murders, but her hazy recollections of a knife-wielding figure in black do nothing to further the police s investigations. Why is the killer choosing these young women? And what does it have to do with a girl named Solange?

Also starring Cristina Galbo (Living Dead at the Manchester Morgue) and Fabio Testi (I Spit On Your Grave), What Have You Done with Solange? features all the hallmarks of classic gialli the amateur detective, the black-gloved killerl as well as a lush score from Ennio Morricone.

SPECIAL EDITION CONTENTS

  • Brand new 2K restoration of the film from the original camera negative
  • High Definition Blu-ray (1080p) and Standard Definition DVD presentations
  • Original Italian and English soundtracks in mono audio
  • Newly translated English subtitles for the Italian soundtrack
  • Optional English subtitles for the deaf and hard of hearing for the English soundtrack
  • Brand new audio commentary with critics Alan Jones and Kim Newman
  • What Have You Done to Decency? A conversation with Karin Baal the actress shares her thoughts on Dallamano s classic giallo in this brand new interview
  • First Action Hero a newly-edited 2006 interview with actor and former stuntman Fabio Testi, including a look at his role in Solange
  • Old-School Producer a newly-edited 2006 interview with producer Fulvio Lucisano
  • Innocence Lost: Solange and the Schoolgirls in Peril Trilogy a brand new visual essay by Michael Mackenzie, exploring the themes of Solange and its two semi-sequels
  • Original theatrical trailer
  • Reversible sleeve featuring original and newly commissioned artwork by Malleus
  • Collector s booklet featuring a new article on the giallo scores of Ennio Morricone by Howard Hughes, alongside a Camille Keaton career retrospective from Art Ettinger, comprising interview excerpts with the Solange actress, all illustrated with original archive stills and posters

Customer Reviews

4.3 out of 5 stars
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Top Customer Reviews

Format: Blu-ray Verified Purchase
Quite a shocker for 1973, not for everyone, quite lurid and exploititave in one sense, yet quite compelling, definitely not a jolly romp.

The sequence that gets me in particular is when the parents of one victim are in police Inspector Bart's office, the girls' father is shown the grisly x-ray of the where the murder weapon was found ......, followed by the image of the parents faces at the funeral, genuinely emotional.

Unlike some of the stupid slasher movies of the 1980's, you feel moved by this one.
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Format: Blu-ray Verified Purchase
Watched the film on blu ray then with insightful commentary by messrs Jones & Newman on DVD with no problems on this ARROW release in U.K. When comparing it to the washed out cut version I've had for years from its showing on BRAVO channel there is a lot of detail missing.How the victims have been killed were never shown in older version although nudity and the body of dead dog were left in.Commentary explains how Germans recut it even more,as an Edgar Wallace style police led murder inquiry,though sadly not included as a bonus feature. Still we get this giallo gem as it was originally intended.
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Format: DVD
The opening to "Solange?" has the ring of familiarity to it. The setting is outdoors on a riverbank, the characters are Elizabeth (winsome English Rose) and Enrico (passionate Italian male). The camera closes in on Elizabeth's eyes as she finally succumbs to the older man's advances when images flash suddenly across the screen - a girl running, an outstretched hand, the flash of a blade - courtesy of some seamless editing. It's an exercise in how unsettling something can be when occurring on a bright sunny day. It also employs Argento's recurrent motif of skewed perception. Elizabeth (Cristina Galbó) is unsure of what she's actually seen and Enrico (Fabio Testi), exasperated by what he assumes are delay tactics, brings the boat to shore.

The following morning a body has been found on the same stretch of the Thames. A girl from Elizabeth's school has been knifed to death in a manner that will have you crossing your legs for the duration. Having left behind a piece of evidence which places him near the scene of the crime, and later caught on camera among a throng of onlookers by a TV crew covering the story, Enrico (the girls' tutor) finds himself with some explaining to do. It's not long before others fall victim to the maniac, and as pieces of the puzzle are uncovered little by little, the mystery seems tied to a particular clique of students and their association with the enigmatic girl in the title, who left the school suddenly the year before.

Right from the start we're in very assured hands.
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Format: DVD
I have seen several "giallos", and apart from those by Dario Argento, they can be on the most part, quite dull and routine police dramas. But "What Have You Done To Solange" really surprised me, in fact I would say it's the best non-Argento giallo I have ever seen. A couple taking a romantic boat ride along a river are interrupted when the young woman sees something that frightens her on the riverbank. As she is too disturbed to enjoy the boat trip any more, the afternoon ends on a sour note for the couple, only for them to find out the next day that a brutal murder was indeed commited on the riverbank. Things only get worse from then on.
What I like so much about the film is that the plot unfolds fairly and squarely before your eyes, and you get to see the clues as they appear, the same time as the investigating police do. Unlike some "giallos" where red herrings and ambiguity surround too much of the on-screen action, the clues here are uncovered logically, and you'll find that you take in each new turn of events with growing interest and try to unravel the mystery for yourself. The script and the plot twists are very clever. Very soon after the opening, you learn that the couple on the boat were in fact a married teacher and his female pupil in the midst of an illicit affair, which puts them in trouble straight away as they try and work out how to unravel the mystery without exposing their infidelity. Actually, that's just the very start of their troubles, and I won't reveal any more because I think that everybody should watch this film with as little prior knowledge as possible, and hopefully enjoy it as much as I did.
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Format: DVD Verified Purchase
One the finest examples of gialli cinema. It's beautifully made and has a deliciously dark web of mystery spun throughout the story. A superb piece of 70s Italian filmmaking (albeit set in London).
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Format: DVD
What have you done to Solange? is certainly one of the better italian giallo films of the early 1970s and is definitely worth watching if you have any interest at all in italian cinema. However, the film is quite obviously a low budget affair, and you should be prepared for the usual cheap effects, so-so dubbing, and strange plot twists that are a feature of the genre.

What first grabs the interest is that the film is set in England, with most of the action revolving around a catholic school for girls. One of the schoolgirls is murdered on the bank of the Thames and the murderous action is partially seen by another pupil who is being seduced by the sports teacher in a rowing boat drifting past the bank. The murder turns out to be the first of several, and as you would expect a range of suspects come and go and more than a few plot twists are paraded before you before the identity of the murderer and the motive is finally revealed.

What makes this stand out from the giallo pack is that despite there being some loose ends and lack of sharpness in defining the plot, the plot does actually make reasonable sense at the end, and the murderer's motive is fairly believable.

The other notable feature of the film is the presence of Camille Keaton, famous for being Buster Keaton's neice, and infamous for starring in the execrable 'I Spit on Your Grave', and Christine Galbo, who starred in 'The Living Dead at The Manchester Morgue'. Of the two Galbo puts in the better performance, although that can partly be explained by the particular demands of the part played by Keaton.

Overall then, the film is worth watching if you are really into thrillers, italian cinema, or even just for a nostalgia trip in looking at the old cars and as a reminder of how things used to be.
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