She Killed in Ecstasy (1971)

She Killed in Ecstasy (1971)

She Killed in Ecstasy movie storyline. Dr. Johnson is happily married with his beloved wife Mrs. Johnson and is researching human embryos using animal cells. When he brings his findings to the Board of the prominent Dr. Franklin Houston, Prof. Jonathan Walker, Dr. Crawford and Dr. Donen, the committee rejects his researches and destroys his laboratory. Dr. Johnson has a nervous breakdown and commits suicide, and the disturbed Mrs. Johnson seeks revenge, seducing each member of the Board and killing one by one while having sex with his victims.

She Killed in Ecstasy (German: Sie Tötete in Ekstase, Spanish: Mrs. Hyde) is a 1971 West German-Spanish erotic thriller film directed by Jesús Franco. The film’s plot borrows elements from previous Franco films Miss Muerte and Venus in Furs. The film’s productions staff includes many cast members and nearly the same crew as his previous film Vampyros Lesbos.

She Killed in Ecstasy (1971)

The film was shot in July 1970 in Calp, Spain, less than a month after finishing his previous film Vampyros Lesbos (1971) Franco utilized the same cinematographer, film editor, and film composers as he had on Vampyros Lesbos as well as some of the cast including Soledad Miranda, Ewa Strömberg and Paul Muller.

The architecture of Ricardo Bofill features prominently in the film. The film re-uses plot elements from Franco’s previous films Miss Muerte and Venus in Furs (1969). She Killed in Escstacy was released on December 10, 1971 in Germany. The film was released on DVD in the United States by Synapse Films in 2000. It was subsequently re-released by Image Entertainment in 2004. Both versions are currently out of print.

She Killed in Ecstasy (1971) -- Soledad Miranda
She Killed in Ecstasy (1971) — Soledad Miranda

Film Review for She Killed in Ecstasy

She Killed In Ecstasy tells the story of Mrs. Johnson (Miranda), the widow of a young doctor (Williams) who kills himself after a medical committee terminates his research into human embryos, considering it too inhumane. She seeks revenge on those who drove her husband to his death by luring each member of the committee into compromising (OK, sexy) situations and then killing them one by one.

Overwrought, melodramatic. Just two words that could be used to describe She Killed in Ecstasy. For Franco’s movie is a slice of Euro-cheese that, honestly, could only ever be directed by Jess Franco. The sheer madness of the film – not just the crazy plot but the odd characters, the gloriously overt sexuality (Franco loves to play with that zoom lens when naked women are around), and a soundtrack that is hypnotic in its repetitiveness – just screams the work of this much-maligned auteur.

She Killed in Ecstasy (1971)

But whilst Franco’s reliance of overwrought melodramatic would hamper a lot of his other productions, here it doesn’t… It is overcome thanks to the central performance of Soledad Miranda, who gives her all to her revenge-seeking-wife role. She becomes Mrs. Johnson – the distraught widow – and after watching her at work, it’s clear there was nothing the actress would not do in the pursuit of perfection. She raised the game for Jess Franco in ways many of his other regulars performers could not. Such a shame then that she would not live to see the release of this movie.

In a fair cinematic world, Soledad Miranda’s character should be held up to the same acclaim as Camille Keaton’s role in Meir Zarchi’s I Spit on Your Grave. For Mrs. Johnson’s revenge is just as vicious, just as cunning as Jennifer’s – though I’ve no doubt the sexuality of Soledad Miranda, and her characters propensity to get her kit off every other minute is the reason it isn’t. Well that and this is a Jess Franco film – woe betide anyone who would dare to praise Franco’s work (note the sarcasm).

She Killed in Ecstasy (1971)

Picture quality on both discs is amazing considering not only the age of the films, but the throwaway nature in which many of Jess Franco’s movies were made. Both Vampyros Lesbos and She Killed in Ecstasy are presented in fully restored, fully uncensored versions – even if that means some of the inserted footage (especially in She Killed in Ecstasy) is of a lesser quality, both in terms of image and audio, but in exchange for having uncut versions of both films? I can live with that. Besides, for the most part, both films have crisp, colourful prints and feature minimal amounts of excessive grain – grain which only really becomes noticeable during the aforementioned inserted scenes – but otherwise both titles look stunning in HD.

This Blu-ray from Severin is packed with special features, including interviews with Jess Franco himself, one of the stars of She Killed in Ecstasy – Paul Muller, interviews with Franco experts Amy Brown (Soledad Miranda historian) and Stephen Thrower (author of Murderous Passions: The Delirious Cinema Of Jess Franco) and the German trailer for the film.

She Killed in Ecstasy Movie Poster (1971)

She Killed in Ecstasy (1971

Directed by: Jesús Franco
Starring: Soledad Miranda, Fred Williams, Paul Muller, Howard Vernon, Ewa Strömberg, Horst Tappert, Jesús Franco, Rudolf Hertzog, Karl Heinz Mannchen
Screenplay by: Jesús Franco
Production Design by: Rudolf Hertzog
Cinematography by: Manuel Merino
Film Editing by: Clarissa Ambach
Music by: Manfred Hübler, Bruno Nicolai, Sigi Schwab
MPAA Rating: None.
Distributed by: Cinerama Filmgesellschaft mbH (Munich)
Release Date: December 10, 1971 (Germany)

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