
Overview:
A vengeful witch, Asa Vajda, and her fiendish servant, Igor Jauvitch, return from the grave and begin a bloody campaign to possess the body of the witch's beautiful look-alike descendant: Katia. Only a handsome doctor with the help of family members stand in her way.Original Title: | La maschera del demonio |
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Status: | Released (1960-08-11) |
Awards: | 1 win & 1 nomination |
Screen: | Ennio De Concini, Mario Serandrei, Nikolay Gogol |
Productions: | Galatea Film, Jolly Film |
Production Countries: | Italy |
Spoken Languages: | Italiano |

Backdrops
Posters
Similars
Recommendations
Casts
- 5685: Barbara Steele - Princess Asa Vajda / Katia Vajda
- 31545: John Richardson - Dr. Andrej Gorobec / Dr. Andreas Gorobec
- 45036: Andrea Checchi - Dr. Choma Kruvajan / Dr. Thomas Kruvajan
- 84251: Ivo Garrani - Prince Vajda
- 98485: Arturo Dominici - Igor Javutich / Javuto
- 98486: Enrico Olivieri - Prince Constantine Vajda
- 47141: Antonio Pierfederici - Priest
Crews
- 25826: Mario Bava - Director of Photography - Camera
- 15132: Mario Serandrei - Editor - Editing
- 15132: Mario Serandrei - Screenplay - Writing
- 25826: Mario Bava - Special Effects - Crew
- 98482: Massimo De Rita - Producer - Production
- 25826: Mario Bava - Director - Directing
- 50788: Roberto Nicolosi - Original Music Composer - Sound
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Reviews
talisencrw
Review text:
This was just great. My first Bava experience--hopefully I'll eventually take in his entire oeuvre.
Continue reading ->Dsnake1
Review text:
Black Sunday is a black and white gothic horror film focused on the revenge plot of an executed plot and the people trying to stop her. The plot itself is fine. It's nothing extra special, but it facilitates the movie well enough. The characters and many of the other general build ....
Continue reading ->LordVitriol
Review text:
A diabolical witch and her partner who were executed 200 years ago return from the grave to possess the body of her identical descendent. How exactly does one begin a review on such a seminal horror classic as Black Sunday? Mario Bava’s directorial debut also serves as his masterp ....
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