¡The Beguiled[New Master Edition]
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 Description
[Machine Translation] That night, the rustling of pale blood began to be heard - in the forested women-only house... A shocking film that surpasses "Rosemary's Baby"! A unique masterpiece by the golden duo of Clint Eastwood and Don Siegel has been re-released in a new master version! --At the end of the Civil War, a Union corporal with a seriously injured leg is brought to a women-only boarding house where women live a self-sufficient life. The corporal receives devoted nursing care and gradually recovers, but the women, frustrated by their isolation from the world of women only, gradually become captivated by the corporal's charms. When lust, jealousy, and competition ignite, a horrifying tragedy awaits them... Directed by Don Siegel and starring Clint Eastwood. This is the third film by this powerful duo, who have worked in partnership on five films, culminating in "Dirty Harry," and it is a film that is an outpouring of anomalies that both profess to be the best work of their collaboration. This is the only film in which Eastwood is killed by another actor (and his leg is amputated and he is killed with poison mushrooms! ), this is a very rare and precious film. During the filming of his second film with Don Siegel, "Midday Struggle," Eastwood read Thomas Cullinan's novel "The Deceived" and liked it so much that he immediately gave the novel to Don Siegel, the director. Siegel agreed that the project had great potential, and the decision was made to make it into a film. The film was a big hit, and it was a logical next step after the success of the macaroni western trilogy of "The Wilderness Bouncer," "The Gunman of the Evening Sun" and "The Gunman of the Evening Sun," as well as "Let Them Hang High" and "The Eagle's Fortress" after his return to the United States. (The Fortress of the Eagle), and "Manhattan MUJI," both of which established Eastwood as an action hero, and Siegel, who had previously directed B-grade action films and programmed pictures, were both ambitious filmmakers who were trying something completely new and breaking new ground. The content of the film was a gothic thriller about the fear of women, a complete change from the action and western films of the past. At the time of its release, however, the promotional poster featured Eastwood holding a gun in front of his face, and the artwork made it look as if he had won the Civil War in a great battle. The sight of Eastwood's leg being amputated and killed by poison mushrooms was shocking, but at the same time, the distributor probably had no idea how to promote the new Eastwood. Eastwood and Siegel were disappointed and frustrated by the attitude of the distributors, but both were very pleased with the quality of the film. For some reason, the works of Clint Eastwood and Don Siegel are not often mentioned in the category of American New Cinema due to their name value, but "An Unusual Night in White Skin" is a film that is considered to be one of the best films of the same Universal distributor, New Cinema "The Wandering Cowboy," in terms of its modest content, its contemporariness, and its relationship with its distributor. It is a film with a very similar fate to "The Wandering Cowboy" and "The Breakup," both of which were also distributed by Universal, in terms of its somber content, its contemporaneity, and its relationship with its distributor. It is a so-called "cursed masterpiece. It should be noted that Eastwood made a short film about Don Siegel, "THE BEGUILED: STORY TELLER," during the filming of this movie. This short film, which was later broadcast on TV, is a preview for his next film, Melody of Fear, which will be his directorial debut. In fact, "Melody of Fear," which Eastwood chose as his first film, is a thriller about the fear of being attacked by a woman, as if it were a direct descendant of "An Unusual Night in White Skin," rather than an action or western film, which were Eastwood's forte and could draw an audience. As such, "An Unusual Night in White Skin" is one of Eastwood's most favorite films, and can be seen as the starting point of Eastwood as a filmmaker rather than an action star.

Original Release Year: 1971

凌 Credits
Clint Eastwood
Elizabeth Hartman
Jo Ann Harris
Darleen Carr
Geraldine Page
Don Siegel
Thomas Cullinan
Lalo Schifrin

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