There are always well-known filmmakers who make you wonder where they actually got to. Dario Argento is one of them. In the 1970s and 1980s, the Suspiria director created one style-defining horror film after the other. From Profondo Rosso to Tenebrae and Terror in the Opera: Without Argento’s work, the giallo subgenre would be difficult to imagine.
Black gloves slowly moving into the frame. Eyes wide open, radiating pure fear. And a glistening knife that leaves a trail of red blood. The Giallo is one of them most striking film genres ever. Nevertheless, Argento found it difficult to continue his great success in the new millennium. Two films seemed to have sealed the end of his career: Giallo and Dario Argento’s Dracula.
Dario Argento returns with a new horror film
Argento has not been present in cinemas since 2012. The Italian horror master’s late work has been well received by both critics and audiences hardly met with approval. Too idiosyncratic, too abstract – and above all light years away from the atmospheric masterpieces of his heyday. With Dark Glasses, which celebrated its premiere at the Berlinale, he is back in an all the more impressive way.
You can watch the trailer for Dark Glasses here:
Dark Glasses – Trailer (Deutsch) HD
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Skepticism was definitely appropriate in advance. What kind of director has Argento transformed into during his 10-year break from cinema? Does he still have the strength after the offbeat films he recently brought to the big screen? captivating frenzy of images to stage? Or will Dark Glasses be a clumsy comeback attempt that will finally catapult Argento into irrelevance?
From the very first moments of Dark Glasses, the director makes it clear that something big is afoot. Of the The moon moves in front of the sun and darkens the earth. For a brief moment, it seems as if Argento even wants to outshine Roland Emmerich’s Moonfall. However, he is not interested in unrestrained destructiveness. He is looking for the uncanny in a spooky Rome.
The streets of the metropolis are deserted. People gather in the park and behind the windows of their homes. They gaze at the solar eclipse as if they were being controlled externally. When all heads stretch towards the sky no one is watching what is happening on earth. A serial killer who is targeting prostitutes takes advantage of this circumstance. The spectacle of the obscured sun is followed by an unparalleled fountain of blood.
Dark Glasses disturbs and touches in equal parts
A wire is stretched to the throbbing sounds of a synthesizer – and of course the black gloves are a must before the red takes over the film. Argento is back in his element. However, Dark Glasses is not just a remix of its well-known strengths in a digital guise: as soon as it focuses on the prostitute Diana (Ilenia Pastorelli), the film gains its own identity.