Giallo A Venezia (1979) May 2026
It features some of the most graphic practical effects of its era—most notably a legendary "leg-sawing" sequence that earned the film a long-standing ban in Italy.
Lucio Fulci’s gore-heavy classics like The New York Ripper . Nasty, gritty 70s exploitation cinema. The darker, unpolished side of Italian cult horror. Giallo a Venezia (1979)
Look out for Jeff Blynn’s inspector, who curiously eats hard-boiled eggs in almost every scene he’s in. For Fans Of: It features some of the most graphic practical
⚠️ This one is strictly for the hardened horror crowd. It’s mean-spirited, explicit, and definitely not for the faint of heart. The darker, unpolished side of Italian cult horror
If you think you've seen everything the giallo genre has to offer, think again. 1979 cult shocker is widely regarded as one of the sleakiest, most brutal films ever to emerge from the Italian subgenre.
Unlike the stylish thrillers of Argento, this is "trash-giallo" at its most uncompromising, blending hardcore eroticism with visceral horror.