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Tuesday, April 21, 2020

Satanik (1968; Piero Vivarelli)

The creators of the popular fumetto Kriminal, Magnus and Max Bunker, also enjoyed success in another strip featuring an arch villain: Satanik. If Max Bunker was dissatisfied with the big-screen adaptation of Kriminal, one can only imagine his thoughts about this one, as Satanik was transferred even less faithfully to the movies. 
 

Kriminal (1966; Umberto Lenzi)



One of the most durable super-villain characters in Italian fumetto was Kriminal, created by Magnus and Max Bunker (also the creators of Satanik).  Kriminal features an English master thief named Anthony Logan, who dons a black-and-gold costume with a skeletal mask. He is helped by a female companion (Lola Hudson), and is dogged by an Inspector (Milton of Scotland Yard). Apparently, Max Bunker was displeased with writer-director Umberto Lenzi’s screen adaptation, as a much younger actor played the character than depicted in the fumetto, but the source material’s sadistic tone was watered down to a more "lighthearted" approach.

The Mark of Kriminal (1968; Fernando Cerchio, Nando Cicero)


This second screen adaptation of the popular fumetto character (seen previously in 1966's Kriminal) is a marginally better followup, if because it succeeds more in the lighthearted approach than its predecessor, despite the nefarious acts onscreen. The scene where Kriminal and his wife plot to kill each other is treated in a tongue-and-cheek way that Hitchcock would have admired. It also more succeeds in capturing the flavour of a fumetto, with its bright warm colours, and sporadic insertion of comic strip panels. Whereas the original film used them only at the end, (one assumes) to lazily wrap up the story, this film uses them to display thought balloons, to cannily visualize what cannot be filmed. 

Danger: Diabolik (1968; Mario Bava)


Danger: Diabolik is no doubt the finest of the entire Italian superhero-supervillain subgenre, featuring the exploits of master criminal Diabolik (John Phillip Law) and his assistant Eva (Marisa Mell). His rival, Inspector Ginko (Michel Piccoli), pressures gangster Valmont (Adolfo Celi) to recruit the underworld (shades of Fritz Lang’s M) to help capture him!  
 

Euro Superheroes (& Villains) - Introduction

Above: Three Fantastic Supermen

Sixties European genre cinema was replete with spies, gadgets and gizmos, borne out of the decade’s “spy-fi” craze. Close cousins to these were the superhero and super-criminal films. Germany had the criminal mastermind Dr. Mabuse. France had the arch villain Fantomas.  Italy had supervillains which found their inspirations in fumetti (comic strips). Italian cinema’s fascination with fumetti can be traced at least as far back as Federico Fellini’s solo debut, The White Sheik (1952), in which a character from a beloved fotoromanzi (photo comic strip) becomes the object of one woman’s obsession. However, Italian comics series truly made the jump to cinema in the following decade.

1962 saw the release of Diabolik, a digest-sized black-and-white comic book, created by sisters Angel and Luciana Guissani. This long-running series (which celebrated its 800th issue in 2013) chronicles the exploits of master thief Diabolik and his lover-accomplice Eva Kant. Inspector Ginko attempts to bring the brigands to justice, but Diabolik always outsmarts him. The popularity of Diabolik influenced other Italian crime comics (referred to as fumetti neri, literally: black comics), including Kriminal and Satanik, both created by Magnus and Max Bunker (who would later release the wildly popular Italian secret agent spoof, Alan Ford).  Kriminal features an English master thief named Anthony Logan, who dons a black-and-gold costume with a skeletal mask. He too is helped by a female companion (Lola Hudson), and is dogged by an Inspector (Milton of Scotland Yard). Although Diabolik was more popular, Kriminal nonetheless enjoyed a print run of 419 issues from 1964 to 1974. Satanik also featured a criminal mastermind, albeit in plots with more horrific and supernatural aspects. Its origin story offers a space-age Jekyll and Hyde persona in a hideously scarred woman scientist who takes a potion to transform into an alluring younger woman, yet the serum also conjures murderous tendencies. This title also ran from 1964 to 1974, with 231 issues.

These three durable characters all had adaptations to the big screen, with varying levels of success, or faithfulness to the source material. By and large the Italian superhero boom was already underway when these arch criminals appeared before the camera. The genesis of the Italian superhero movie subgenre can also be ascribed to the Eurospy craze of its day. Some characters work for government agents, and some of the scenarios use time-worn tropes used in espionage films.

These movies also have an otherworldly feeling: no less so than the German krimis of the era, which featured London locations and Scotland Yard characters, albeit presented with a distinctive art direction and atmosphere that is representative of German cinema. Some of the films in this issue likewise have London settings, Scotland Yard detectives and English butlers enacted by Italian-speaking performers. Because of their contents, many of these films can be regarded as  “camp” (misused as that term often is), even when they’re not attempting to be spoofy, with their larger than life performances and production values. At their best, they nicely capture the look and feel of a live action comic book.

Titles Reviewed (so far):