Support Trailers From Hell with a donation to help us reduce ads and keep creating the content you love! Donate Now
Trailers
From Hell.com

Libido  Region B

by Glenn Erickson Jan 27, 2026

Italo pioneer in Gothic horror Ernesto Gastaldi stepped up to directing with this not-bad murder thriller for the Euro exploitation market circa 1965. It’s Giancarlo Giannini’s first film, as an heir to a fortune with inconvenient psychological issues … he can’t say for certain that he isn’t a latent sex killer apt to strike any minute. Mysterious happenings at a fancy clifftop beach chateau lead to murder madness … mayhem happens so often, you’d think these Continental hipsters would see it coming.


Libido
Region B Region B Blu-ray
Radiance Films
1965 / B&W / 1:66 widescreen / 90 min. / Street Date February 23, 2026 / Available from Radiance Films / £14.99
Starring: Dominique Boschero, Mara Maryl, Giancarlo Giannini (as John Charlie Johns), Luciano Pigozzi (as Alan Collins).
Cinematography: Romolo Garroni (Romy Garron)
Film Editor, Art Director, Costume Design: Ernesto Gastaldi (George Money, Dick)
Composer: Carlo Rustichelli
Screenplay by Ernesto Gastaldi, Vittorio Salerno (Julian Berry, Victor Storff) story by Mara Maryl
Executive Producers Mino Loy, Luciano Martino, Mario Siciliano
Produced by Mara Maryl
Directed by
Ernesto Gastaldi, Vittorio Salerno (as Julian Berry Storff)

As enthusiastic as we are about classic Gothic Eurohorror, we never quite made the jump into full-on appreciation of Italian giallo thrillers. The random use of women as objects for murder ran out of interest early on, and we could only respond so far to the specialists that focused on deliriously beautiful imagery and imaginative, sadistic refinements. We didn’t mind the absurd storylines with terrible mystery plotting and narrative cheats. But gialli also tended to run short on characterization.

That doesn’t mean we don’t go nuts over every frame of  Blood and Black Lace, or admire certain situations in  The Bird with the Crystal Plumage and the audio-visual onslaught of  Suspiria. But too many shows are like  Torso — bits of travelogue in between opportunities for the director to indulge in the turn-on of destroying hyper-sexualized women. We try to resist the socio-political interpretations that are frequently imposed on genre films … but the general run of Italian gialli seem firmly based in misogynnistic degradation.

Of course, these concerns seem less bothersome when one considers the sadistic poverty of most post-millennial horror. Slaying girls with sharp knives?  Not sick enough.

What’s amusing is that Torso, aka I corpi presentano tracce di violenza carnale, was written by Ernesto Gastaldi, whose career we much admire.

 

Signor Gastaldi gets a well-earned showcase on Radiance Film’s new Blu-ray of Libido. The Region B disc apparently uses the same excellent video master prepared for Severin Films’ domestic disc of 2022. We weren’t able to review that release, but the new Radiance interview of Gastaldi adds extra interest to this somewhat overwrought thriller, that’s also co-directed by the writer.

Libido is commonly classified as proto-giallo, but audio commentator Samm Deighan is quick to liken it to Hammer’s psychological murder thrillers, the ones cobbled together by Jimmy Sangster. The advertising amplifies the movie’s claim to being a profound study of twisted psychology. But what we see is the old pseudo-psycho gimmick exploited by the Corman / Poe adaptation  The Pit and the Pendulum. Little Vinnie Price witnesses his father at work in his torture dungeon, so he naturally becomes a similar warped maniac when he grows up. Or at least, that’s what the character fears.

The movie is a very small fabrication by writers-friends as a way to move up in the Italo film world: Gastaldi, Luciano Martino and Vittorio Salerno. Lacking big star names, it relies instead on the promise of its provocatve title. As it turned out, Libido does feature a big star. It’s the first film of Giancarlo Giannini, billed under an assumed name. This is 1965, and the filmmakers are still Anglicizing many of the names in the credits.

 

Wealthy heir Christian Coreau (Giancarlo Giannini, billed as John Charlie Johns) returns to his family’s seaside chateau in Brest. He’s accompanied by his doting wife Helene (Dominique Boschero) plus two others, Paul Benoit (Luciano Pigozzi aka Alan Collins) and Paul’s wife Brigitte (Mara Maryl) a sexy exhibitionist. Paul is the caretaker both for the mansion and Christian, who has a history of mental instability linked to a horrible childhood incident that occurred in the chateau. This is Christian’s first time back after twenty years — how will he handle the psychological shock?

Not very well, is the answer. Christian is disturbed at seeing the scene of the crime, a bedroom mirrored as if in a sideshow fun house. The thoughtless Brigitte goes through his childhood toys, including a ‘Grillo Parlante’ (Jiminy Cricket) music box that Christian was holding long ago, when he saw his father George Coreau murder a sexy blonde. Things happen to make Christian think that his father’s ghost is prowling about — someone is smoking his father’s pipe, for instance. Brigitte comes on to Christian — or is he confusing her with his father’s long-ago murder victim?  He then thinks he sees his father on the cliffside terrace during a thunderstorm. Helene sends for the doctor just as Christian begins to think that she and Paul Benoit are lovers, conspiring against him. Is Paul’s protective concern a devious mask?  Has he a plan to seize Christian’s inheritance by having him declared insane?

Libido wasn’t exported much outside of Italy. It’s not at all bad, so the reason may be that it’s in B&W and was handled by a minor distributor. It was the first of six films directed or co-directed by Ernesto Gastaldi, none of which were big hits. But it plays as well as many more-celebrated Italo thrillers. We expect Libido to attempt some clever plot twists. Stage actor Giancarlo Giannini is an excellent presence, putting theatrical spin onto Christian’s nervous anxiety. He became an international star through his pictures for Lina Wertmüller, like  Love and Anarchy.

 

At this level of credibilty, the other three players contribute acceptable performances. First-billed Dominique Boschero is concerned but distant, keeping her on the list of possible schemers. Mara Maryl carries the commercially sexy content, seducing her husband in the mirror room, and wearing a tasteless cat-themed skimpy bikini to sunbathe. She affects a ‘dumb blonde’ act, but we suspect that she’s smarter than she looks. Luciano Pigozzi is appropriately ambiguous — he might not be sincere in his concern for Christian, as a clean bill of mental health for Christian will finalize the inheritance of the full Coreau estate. Pigozzi is known to Eurohorror fans as the Italian Peter Lorre.

The Coreau chateau – castle backs right up to some craggy cliffs overlooking the sea; the filmmakers do a good hiding the fact that the house and the cliff are two different locations. When young Christian sees his father’s crime, he’s carrying that Jiminy Cricket music box. Any critic should see that as a lift from Luis Buñuel’s black comedy  Ensayo de un Crimen. Buñuel uses a boy and a music box as an identical motivator of psycho-maniacal murder. As for the mirrored bedroom, it’s there both for eye candy for the trailer — multiple sexy images of Ms. Maryl — and to serve as an instant ‘room of nightmares and memories,’ as in the film noir  Fear in the Night and its remake  Nightmare. The mirrored room appears to be very near the house’s front door. Why would George Coreau live on a sea cliff with a beautiful view, yet sleep in a room with no windows.

 

In his commentary Ernesto Gastaldi admits that the film ran short and that the editor found ways to pad the running time. A prologue ‘explains’ the title, and some driving scenes are a little stretched, maybe. Because the entire film was post-dubbed, the editor reportedly repeated some footage in conversation scenes, and then had Gastaldi invent additional dialogue for the people to say.

Libido was nowhere to be found when we were college-age horror fans. We could find nothing on it save for the same two or three photo images. One showed Ms. Boschero lying on the floor with blood on her face, draped in a nightgown neatly arranged for censorship purposes. That photo came to mind when we saw Roman Polanski’s  Repulsion. The only ‘false’ composition in Polanski’s entire movie is a similarly-posed image of the nude Catherine Deneuve, carefully covered by a similar nightgown. You can easily imagine Polanski standing to one side, allowing some Compton-Tekli representative set up the shot, to serve as publicity bait for the film’s advertising.

The direction is sound, aided greatly by excellent B&W camerawork. At one point Ernesto Gastaldi and his co-director Salerno borrow directly from Riccardo Freda … the scene in which Christian sees his ‘father’ lit up by lighting bolts in a big storm, is a straight lift from  The Horrible Dr. Hichcock, right down to camera angles. But is it a steal if Gastaldi wrote both pictures?

 

 

Radiance Films’ Region B Blu-ray of Libido is billed as a 2K restoration by Severin films. Cinematographer Romolo Garroni doesn’t have big titles in his filmography but his work here is very handsome. We’re told that all of the exteriors at the ‘Mandolin Castle’ were filmed in just 3 days; the matching between the stage interiors and the sea cliff location is excellent.

Carlo Rustichelli provides a lush music track that makes its point without intruding on every scene. The show can be played in original Italian or with alternate English audio.

The extras are not the same as on the older Severin disc. Critic Richard Dyer gives an overview of the film, breaking it down in terms of Italo thrillers to follow. The Limited edition also contains a booklet with some interviews. We have reviewed from a check disc, and can’t report on what they say.

The highlight for us was Radiance’s new hour-long interview with Ernesto Gastaldi, who we are happy to see so hale and hearty. We remember photos of him on his boat 25 years ago, and knowing more about him through many revealing interviews by Tim Lucas. Perhaps the title Libido was prompted by Raptus, the alternate title Lucas discovered for The Horrible Dr. Hichcock.

Not to be prejudiced, but a video interview with the average Italian filmmaker will yield five minutes of hard insight and an hour of self promotion, posing and name-dropping. Even at 91, Ernesto Gastaldi can talk for minutes on end without losing his thread. Everything he has to say is worthwhile. We hear about parts of his career, the personalities on the movie and why he made the jump to direct as well as write. Mara Maryl was his new wife, and their long and happy marriage goes against all the advice not to marry an actress. She stars in most of the pictures he directed. We learn that Giancarlo Giannini no longer ‘acknowledges’ that he made Libido, when it’s a perfectly good actor’s showcase picture.

Gastaldi is a warm and candid presence. We hang on his words as he finishes up, talking about recent bouts with hospital visits. He knows he’ll not be around much longer yet has a winning attitude, and some touching things to say about mortality. He’s a great guy and his interview makes Libido twice as interesting.

Reviewed by Glenn Erickson


Libido
Region B Blu-ray rates:
Movie: Good + / –
Video: Excellent
Sound: Excellent
New supplements:
Audio commentary by Samm Deighan
Interview with Ernesto Gastaldi (49 mins)
Interview with Richard Dyer (24 mins)
Trailer
Reversible sleeve featuring original and newly commissioned Filippo Di Battista artwork
Limited edition booklet with interviews with star Dominique Bosquero and script supervisor Patrizia Zulini.
Deaf and Hearing-impaired Friendly? YES; Subtitles: English (feature only)
Packaging: One Blu-ray in Keep case
Reviewed:
January 24, 2026
(7464libi)
CINESAVANT

Visit CineSavant’s Main Column Page
Glenn Erickson answers most reader mail:
cinesavant@gmail.com

Text © Copyright 2026 Glenn Erickson

About Glenn Erickson

Screen Shot 2015-08-24 at 6.51.08 PM

Glenn Erickson left a small town for UCLA film school, where his spooky student movie about a haunted window landed him a job on the CLOSE ENCOUNTERS effects crew. He’s a writer and a film editor experienced in features, TV commercials, Cannon movie trailers, special montages and disc docus. But he’s most proud of finding the lost ending for a famous film noir, that few people knew was missing. Glenn is grateful for Trailers From Hell’s generous offer of a guest reviewing haven for CineSavant.

5 2 votes
Article Rating
Subscribe
Notify of
guest
4 Comments
Inline Feedbacks
View all comments
Chris Koenig

I’m a giallo fan, so I’m biased. But, I disagree about the majority of giallos being an excuse for “misogynistic degradation”. Yeah, most of the victims are women…BUT, occasionally a male gets brutally offed as well, so there is equal opportunity here-and-there in the giallo genre. But above all, these are just movies, plain and simple.

Killer Meteor

Some giallo do seem to cross the line from “pretty girls being stalked” to “let’s enjoy watching the naked woman get slaughtered/raped”. It’s especially weird when Dario Argento does it with his loved ones!

Chris Koenig

And yet, from what I can recall, some actresses that worked for Dario Argento playing the victim characters have positive things to say about his work, so figure that one out! But, I do find the whole “directors of giallos being misogynistic” a streatch; that’s like saying Phil Karston liked making brutal crime movies because he is “pro-crime”. We really can’t crawl inside our fave directors brains to discover their true intents. Rather, the filmmakers behind the giallos most likely upped the ante because of audience demand: what the audience wants, they get! Plus, these movies were aimed at a more “male” clientele; sorry ladies, if you want a softer movie, I’ll point you towards a melodrama instead.

Killer Meteor

” as in the film noir Fear in the Night and its remake Nightmare”

Funnily enough, both were also the titles of Hammer films written by Jimmy Sangster!

4
0
Would love your thoughts, please comment.x
()
x