WATCH ME
WHEN I KILL
Original
Title- IL GATTO DAGLI OCCHI DI GIADA (The Cat with the Jade Eyes), 1977, Italy
Taglines: When I go berserk...you're better
off dead!
Over
the years, there became established certain trademarks and patterns of these
films- for instance the assailant with black trench coat and fedora hat, black
leather gloves and his signature switchblade, the suspenseful stalk and chase
sequence, lurid subject matter with fashionable under-clad and promiscuous women
as well as illicit affairs between the unfortunate victims, uncomfortably close
ups of eyeballs and shots from the point of view of the murderer, numerous side
plots and red herrings, washed out but smart cops and wacky reporters. Importantly,
in most of these films, the killer would be a deranged anti-social person whose
motives were convoluted and arose from ‘repressed memories’ such as childhood
trauma or sexual abuse, which resulted in insanity in their adult lives. The ending
would more often prove to be disappointing and confusing.
Also,
most of these films did not have straightforward narratives, rather they
involved continuous or intermittent flashbacks or side-by-side narrative on the
killer’s perspective. Watch Me When I
Kill is however one of the few giallo films which have a linear story
structure and a surprisingly credible ending with the killer’s motive
sufficiently identified. The plot is
simple- a killer is attacking and murdering middle aged well to do persons with
apparently no pattern. The first victim is a pharmacist (Dezzan) who immediately
before his death had a conversation with a friend called Esmeralda and told her
about three threatening letters he has received. As he prepares to pack up for
the day, he is hit on the head with a blunt object and then the unseen killer
slits his throat. The protagonist of the film, Mara, a bar dancer, attempts to
enter the shop to purchase aspirin, and hears the voice of the killer. Immediately
thereafter, the dead body is discovered and the dancer becomes the object of
the killer’s murderous pursuit. He attempts to kill her twice-once at her
apartment and another time in her dressing room at the studio.
Mara’s
boyfriend Lukas, a sound recording artist, becomes involved in finding the
killer, both because of Mara as also because his neighbour Bozzi has received threatening
calls with strange background music, which the killer deliberately puts in
order to frighten the victims.
Lukus’s
research leads him to the trial of a convicted and escaped prisoner Ferrante in
whose murder trial, the pharmacist, Bozzi and the woman Esmeralda had served as
jury members. But Ferrari turns out to be innocent and instead Lukas discovers
that the three victims (both Esmeralada and Bozzi are also killed later- the
first by getting her face scalded in an oven, and the other by strangulation
with a metal shower hose) all belonged to the city of Pedova. He heads there
and finds that all three were Nazi sympathisers who had betrayed a young Jew
woman and her two children into the hands of the Nazis and that they had
perished after staying in a concentration camp for a month. Bozzi was the
person in whose house the unfortunate woman was taking shelter, Esmeralda was
his mistress who brainwashed Bozzi and convinced him to give them over to the
Nazis and the pharmacist Dezzan was the one who got them arrested by
collaborating with the Nazis.
In
the last scene of confrontation between Lukas the killer, it is revealed that
the murderer is the judge in the murder trial of Ferrani, and his son, and that they are the surviving family of the betrayed woman. The judge reveals that it took him twenty long
years to find the culprits and bring them to book and that his son had escaped
arrest from the Nazis. The old man however shows remorse for the killings,
agreeing with Lukas that it serves little purpose to take revenge after such a
long gap when in fact he could have forgiven and moved on. His son, however, is
intractable, and demands that Lukas and his girlfriend be killed too as they
knew too much. Instead, the judge decides to put an end to the whole episode
and shoots his son dead before killing himself.
The
movie was released in DVD by VCI Entertainment in 2002 and 2007, and in the UK
by Shameless Films in 2009.





