BBC
Sadistically beautiful and viciously exciting, welcome to true terror with Dario Argento's shockingly relentless Tenebrae.
Critic Rating
(read reviews)User Rating
Director
Dario Argento
Cast
Anthony Franciosa,
John Saxon,
Daria Nicolodi,
Giuliano Gemma,
Christian Borromeo
Genre
Horror,
Mystery,
Thriller
Peter Neal is an American writer who has traveled to Rome to promote his latest book, “Tenebrae,” but he is stalked by a serial killer bent on harassing him and killing all people associated with his work on the book. A riveting, suspense filled look at the intersection of art and reality.
BBC
Sadistically beautiful and viciously exciting, welcome to true terror with Dario Argento's shockingly relentless Tenebrae.
Slant Magazine by Ed Gonzalez
Tenebre is a riveting defense of auteur theory, ripe with self-reflexive discourse and various moral conflicts. It’s both a riveting horror film and an architect’s worst nightmare.
BBC by Almar Haflidason
Sadistically beautiful and viciously exciting, welcome to true terror with Dario Argento's shockingly relentless Tenebrae.
Entertainment Weekly by Chris Nashawaty
Directed by Dario Argento, a.k.a. the Italian Hitchcock, the remastered giallo Tenebre is crammed with artsy camera work, intricate Rube Goldbergian death scenes, and a gruesome final reel where blood flows like the Tiber.
The A.V. Club by Keith Phipps
Franciosa and John Saxon (as his agent) turn in amusing performances, and Argento makes some points about the intersection of art, reality, and personality, but the director's stunning trademark setpieces, presented here in a fully restored version, provide the real reason to watch.
IndieWire by Russ Fischer
Executed with wicked control to induce the sort of gut-level discomfort that is rare even in this genre of perverse pleasures.
Slashfilm
It’s easily the most straightforward of Argento’s films, and that works to its advantage in delivering a suspenseful thriller with bloody, terrifically crafted murder set-pieces... and a killer reveal that’s both surprising and satisfying.
Screen Rant
It is one of Argento's finest works to date that captures the sub-genre he helped popularize in mainstream cinema.
Empire
Tenebrae is essential viewing for fans of the Italian stallion thanks to some of his most arterial gore to date.
Slashfilm by Rob Hunter
It’s easily the most straightforward of Argento’s films, and that works to its advantage in delivering a suspenseful thriller with bloody, terrifically crafted murder set-pieces... and a killer reveal that’s both surprising and satisfying.
Screen Rant by Mara Bachman
It is one of Argento's finest works to date that captures the sub-genre he helped popularize in mainstream cinema.
Empire by Mark Dinning
Tenebrae is essential viewing for fans of the Italian stallion thanks to some of his most arterial gore to date.
Chicago Sun-Times
It’s a thrilling, vexing film, a kind of ode to aberrance, teeming with preoccupations and fetishes that exist only for their own delectation.
TV Guide Magazine
Although the mystery itself is nothing special, Argento uses the narrative structure as a jumping-off point for his virtuoso murder sequences, which are incredibly well orchestrated and inventive.
Chicago Sun-Times by Glenn Kenny
It’s a thrilling, vexing film, a kind of ode to aberrance, teeming with preoccupations and fetishes that exist only for their own delectation.
TV Guide Magazine by Staff (Not Credited)
Although the mystery itself is nothing special, Argento uses the narrative structure as a jumping-off point for his virtuoso murder sequences, which are incredibly well orchestrated and inventive.
Time Out
It does confirm Argento's dedication to the technicalities of constructing images - Grand Guignol for L'Uomo Vogue, perhaps - but you'll still end up feeling you've left some vital digestive organs back in the seat.
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