
Even though I still have a mountain of film reviews to get to, I’m compelled to chat about some of my favourite female characters from giallo films. As someone who loves both giallo and slashers, the former often leads into the latter, so the giallo queens are often progenators for scream queens and final girls in most cases.
These heroines would largely differ from their counterparts by being maturer in age (although, not considerably), independently spirited and stunningly glamorous. Therefore, they were another captivating element to a fashionable world full of blood, leather gloves and shameless product placement.
Without further ado, here are five of your host's favourite giallo queens:
Edwige Fenech
You might say it’s cronyism, but Edwige Fenech truly deserves her
giallo crown, regardless of being married to Luciano Martino, the producer of
many of her best gialli — and many of which were also directed by her
brother-in-law, Sergio. She showed she was a versatile actress beyond having to just yell ‘Pronto? Pronto? Pronto?’ into a phone like many of her
peers. For instance, drinking dog’s blood at a Satanic cult shindig in
All the Colours of the Dark (1972)..
She had the opportunity to go beyond just playing the damsel in distress waiting to be rescued. She was practically a villain flirting with her uncle and getting off with her aunt in
Your Vice Is a Locked Room and Only I Have the Key (1972).
Plus,
Fenech’s amazing on-screen chemistry with spaghetti western star and
giallo king George Hilton in three classic films made them the Vivien
Leigh and Clark Gable of the giallo world; albeit with plenty of nudity and sex.
Fenech also starred in Andrea Biachi’s Strip Nude for Your Killer
(1975), which, aside from the unintentional sleaze and endless
depravity, ends with the possibility of her being sodomised for the sake
of a comedy ending. She also co-starred with Michael York and Donald Pleasence in
Ruggero Deodato’s late-game entry Phantom of Death (1988), a film that is often labelled a giallo, although it's liberally applied here.
In Italy, Fenech is mostly known for a bunch of Italian sex comedies; the
nation’s very own Barbara Windsor, if you will. For the rest of us,
she’s better known for starring in some of the best gialli ever produced,
which makes her the numero uno giallo queen.
Recommendations:
Barbara Bouchet
Bouchet shone in Emilio P. Miraglia’s gothic-tinged The Red Queen Kills Seven Times (1972) and Lucio Fulci’s controversially provocative Don’t Torture a Duckling (1972), which really put her on the map as a standout actress in the giallo genre.
She also starred in some of the more erotic films in the genre. Silvio Amadio’s Amuck!
(1972) is a prime example, where she finds herself in the crosshairs of
a couple with questionable tastes, played by the experienced Hollywood
actor Farley Granger and the Italian enchantress Rosalba Neri (another
entry on this list).
Another
film that is worth mentioning is her brief appearance as an unfortunate
prostitute who meets a gruesome end in the strange film The French Sex Murders.
This film features a host of cult Euro-film stars, Anita Ekberg, Howard
Vernon and the aforementioned Rosalba Neri to name a few. However, the
film’s real highlight is its detective character, played by the American
actor Robert Sacchi, who obviously got the part for remarkably looking
like Humphrey Bogart. By no means a recommendable film, but an strange
oddity for giallo addicts.
Barbara Bouchet also ventured into Eurocrime and Poliziotteschi action thrillers, such as the fantastic Italian gangster film
Milano Calibro 9 (1972),
Ricco: The Mean Machine (1973) and the unbelievably misogynistic
Cry of a Prostitute (1974) starring Henry Silva. Her films are the very reason Quentin Tarantino looked like a
gormless film nerd when photographed with her.
Recommendations:
Anita Strindberg

Swedish actress Anita Strindberg's legacy in giallo is as well defined as her cheekbones.
With her captivating looks and outstanding acting, she quickly moved from supporting roles such as Lucio Fulci’s
A Lizard in a Woman’s Skin (1971) to the main protagonist in Sergio Martino’s jet-setting thriller,
The Case of the Scorpion’s Tail (1971).
Her
most remarkable role, and perhaps the best in the entire giallo genre,
is that of the wife of a decadent author who is both physically and
mentally mistreated by him in Sergio Martino’s,
Your Vice Is a Locked Room and Only I Have the Key (1972). In a perfect world, Liza Minelli should have given her Best Actress Oscar for
Cabaret (1972) to Anita Strindberg for her
outstanding performance in this Edgar Allan Poe-inspired giallo.
Strindberg would also play a grieving mother alongside one-time Bond actor George Lazenby in Aldo Lado's whodunnit
Who Saw Her Die? (1972). A dark film where the killer is dressed like a
Monty Python granny.
This giallo ought to interest fans of '70s British horror as it
contains some uncanny similarities to Nicholas Roeg's classic
Don't Look Now (1974), despite preceding it by a couple of years.
Yet to see The Two Faces of Fear
(1972) and believe me, I've tried tracking it down countless times. Therefore I can't recommend it. I
have seen the Haitian giallo Tropic of Cancer (1972), but it's
largely forgettable, other than Anita Strindberg being in it. The same goes for Puzzle (1974), where she has a very minor role.
Murder Obsession
(1981) was one of her final films before she from acting. It's
sometimes described as a giallo, but it's more of a supernatural
slasher, in my opinion. Regardless of genre, it's an underrated film and
deserves more love from Italian horror fans.
Recommendations:
A Lizard in a Woman's Skin (Lucio Fulci, 1971) Suzy Kendall
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Suzy
Kendall might not have starred in as many gialli as the rest of her
peers, but quality over quantity is more than applicable for the former
missus of one half of
Derek and Clive. Her films are legitimately amongst the best in the genre.
The British actress, best known for
To Sir, with Love (1967) and
Up the Junction (1968), would get a taste for the psychological thriller in the obscure home invasion film
The Penthouse (1967). A foray of thrillers would follow, most of which were giallo, but the bizarre thriller
Assault (1971) is worth a mention on account of it being produced by Eric Rogers of the Carry On film series.
The actress made her official debut in giallo with Dario Argento's classic The Bird with the Crystal Plumage (1970). The terror laced scene where she is trapped in her apartment whilst
the killer whittles
her front door with their knife, is one of the seminal set pieces in the
film and one of the obvious examples as to why it helped reinvigorate the
genre.
Kendall would also appear in Sergio Martino's Torso
(1973), a giallo which can just as easily be labelled a slasher, thanks
to containing many elements with it. Above
all, it's the final act of the film, where Kendall's character finds
herself trapped in a country home while the killer chops up her
classmates oblivious of her presence, that truly takes it into slasher territory.
Umberto Lenzi's problematically named giallo
Spasmo
(1974) would mark her final role in the genre. Perhaps not one of the
director's best known films, but it's one of his better entries in the
genre. Well worth checking out as it features one of giallo's most
recognisable faces in Italian genre cinema, Ivan Rassimov. It also boasts a
great score by Ennio Morricone, too.
Decades
after retiring from film, Kendall would make a return as Toby
Jones's mum in Peter Strictland's fantastically surreal Berberian Sound Studio (2012); a hypnotic ode to Italian film set in the '70s.
Recommendations:
Torso (Sergio Martino, 1973)
Nieves Navarro (AKA Susan Scott)

Spanish actress Nieves Navarro began making real moves in
spaghetti westerns
in the 1960s. Her glamorous appeal was a match made in heaven when she
transitioned into a giallo queen at the star of the 1970s.
The
actress would play memorable supporting roles in some major gialli, but
it wasn't until the Death... films, directed by her husband Luciano
Ercoli, that she would get to play more leading roles.
Navarro's
fiery, Latin temperament made the characters she played stand out from
the more timid and fragile female protagonists one would find in gialli.
This virtue would also lend to being a weakness at times, as she would
avoid major red flags and be completely unaware of any potential dangers
until it eventually comes knocking at her door.
After
the classic era of the giallo had passed, Navarro would appear in much
smuttier genre offerings, notably some of the Black Emanuelle films
starring the cult actress Laura Gemser. As much as I'm a fan of Joe
D'Amato's
Emanuelle and the Last Cannibals (1975), it's hard to argue with these films not being a
low point for any actor, sadly.
Recommendations:
The Forbidden Photos of a Lady Above Suspicion (Luciano Ercoli, 1970) Marina Malfatti
Even though Marina Malfatti never had a lead role in a giallo, she has played many supporting roles where she is a genuine scene-stealer and far more memorable than the main female character. Therefore, Malfatti is a sound choice to complete this list.
A big part of what makes her interesting is her posh persona, no matter the character she plays. It is often enhanced by a posh English accent for the international dub version.
However, what really makes her stand out is the outrageous outfits she wears. Her signature look is usually revealing her midriff and showing off a lot of cleavage, whether she is in sparkly tops or sheer gowns with plunging necklines that go all the way down to her navel.
My favourite Malfatti role is her playing Edwige Fenech's bourgeios, British neighbour in Sergio Martino's classic
All the Colours of the Dark (1972). She's perhaps at her most stylish as she's dressed similarly to
Ingrid Pitt's iconic blue gown from Countess Dracula (1971), replete with a choker. Her piercing stares and graceful poise reinforce the untrustworthy aristocrat vibe exuding from her roles. As evident when I recently watched for the first time
The Blood-Stained Lawn (1973); which is not a giallo, in my opinion, given it features a blood-sucking robot.
Recommendations:
I had planned to include ten giallo queens in this list, but since I started working on it during the summer heatwave (which I admit was on and off), it might have taken another five months to wrap it up. Still, it’s a great reason to create another list down the road when I have more time to dedicate and focus on this subject matter.
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