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(known as "Mill of the Stone Women" aka "Il mulino delle donne di pietra" aka "Le Moulin des supplices" or "Die Mühle der versteinerten Frauen")

 

Directed by Giorgio Ferroni
Italy / France 1960

 

Before Black Sabbath, before I Vampiri, director Giorgio Ferroni (The Lion of Thebes, Blood for a Silver Dollar) introduced audiences to period horror Italian-style with his chilling 1960 shocker Mill of the Stone Women – a classic tale of terror redolent with the atmosphere of vintage Hammer Horror.

Young art student Hans von Arnam (Pierre Brice, Night of the Damned) arrives by barge at an old mill to write a monograph about its celebrated sculptures of women in the throes of death and torture, maintained and curated by the mill’s owner, the hermetic Professor Wahl (Herbert Böhme, Secret of the Red Orchid). But when Hans encounters the professor’s beautiful and mysterious daughter Elfi (Scilla Gabel, Modesty Blaise), his own fate becomes inexorably bound up with hers, and with the shocking secret that lies at the heart of the so-called Mill of the Stone Women.

The first Italian horror film to be shot in color, Mill of the Stone Women prefigured a raft of other spaghetti nightmares, including the work of maestros Mario Bava and Dario Argento. Arrow Video is proud to present this brand-new restoration of one of the foundational titles of Italian horror.

***

Hans von Arnam travels to a Flemish village to study a strange carousel located in an old windmill that displays famous murderesses and other notorious women from history. Professor Gregorius Wahl, owner of the windmill, warns Hans to stay away from his mysterious daughter Elfi, in order to keep Hans from discovering the horrible secret shared by the Professor and Elfi's Doctor.

Posters

Theatrical Release: August 30th, 1960

Reviews                                                                                                       More Reviews                                                                                       DVD Reviews

 

Review: Arrow - Region FREE - Blu-ray

Box Cover

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Bonus Captures:

Distribution Arrow - Region FREE - Blu-ray
Runtime

Italian and English export versions: 1:35:36.376

French Version: 1:29:51.010

US Version: 1:34:29.288

Video

Italian and English export versions:

1.66:1 1080P Dual-layered Blu-ray

Disc Size: 49,106,409,438 bytes

Features: 28,461,672,520 bytes

Video Bitrate: 31.93 Mbps

Codec: MPEG-4 AVC Video

1.66:1 1080P Dual-layered Blu-ray

Disc Size: 49,095,227,168 bytes

French version: 23,785,891,392 bytes

US version: 25,021,703,232 bytes

Video Bitrate: 31.96 Mbps

Codec: MPEG-4 AVC Video

NOTE: The Vertical axis represents the bits transferred per second. The Horizontal is the time in minutes.

Bitrate Italian and English export versions Blu-ray:

Bitrate French version Blu-ray:

Bitrate US version Blu-ray:

Audio

Blu-ray 1

LPCM Audio Italian 768 kbps 1.0 / 48 kHz / 768 kbps / 24-bit

LPCM Audio English 768 kbps 1.0 / 48 kHz / 768 kbps / 24-bit
Commentary:

Dolby Digital Audio English 192 kbps 2.0 / 48 kHz / 192 kbps

Blu-ray 2

French Version:

LPCM Audio French 768 kbps 1.0 / 48 kHz / 768 kbps / 16-bit

US Version:

LPCM Audio English 768 kbps 1.0 / 48 kHz / 768 kbps / 16-bit

Subtitles English, None (and English SDH for the English versions)
Features Release Information:
Studio:
Arrow

 

Blu-ray 1

Italian and English export versions:

1.66:1 1080P Dual-layered Blu-ray

Disc Size: 49,106,409,438 bytes

Features: 28,461,672,520 bytes

Video Bitrate: 31.93 Mbps

Codec: MPEG-4 AVC Video

Blu-ray 2

1.66:1 1080P Dual-layered Blu-ray

Disc Size: 49,095,227,168 bytes

French version: 23,785,891,392 bytes

US version: 25,021,703,232 bytes

Video Bitrate: 31.96 Mbps

Codec: MPEG-4 AVC Video

 

Edition Details:

• New audio commentary by Tim Lucas, author of Mario Bava: All the Colors of the Dark (on the English export versions only)
• Mill of the Stone Women & The Gothic Body, a new visual essay on the trope of the wax/statue woman in Gothic horror by author and critic Kat Ellinger (24:08)
• Turned to Stone, a newly edited featurette containing archival interviews with actress Liana Orfei and film historian Fabio Melelli (27:05)
• A Little Chat with Dr. Mabuse, an archival interview with actor Wolfgang Preiss (15:05)
• Rare opening titles from the UK release, re-titled “Drops of Blood” (1:28)
• German opening titles (2:44)
• US and German theatrical trailers (2:02 / 3:19)
• Gallery (1:18)

Limited edition packaging with reversible sleeve featuring original and newly commissioned artwork by Adam Rabalais
Illustrated collector’s booklet featuring new writing on the film by Roberto Curti, an in-depth comparison of the different versions by Brad Stevens, and a selection of contemporary reviews
Fold-out double-sided poster featuring original and newly commissioned artwork by Adam Rabalais
Six double-sided, postcard-sized lobby card reproduction artcards


Blu-ray Release Date:
November 29th, 2021
Custom Blu-ray Case (see below)

Chapters 12 / 12 / 12

 

 

Comments:

NOTE: The below Blu-ray captures were taken directly from the Blu-ray disc.

ADDITION: Arrow Blu-ray (November 2021): Arrow have transferred Giorgio Ferroni's Mill of the Stone Women in 1080P presentations of four different versions of the film on two dual-layered Blu-rays: the original 96-minute Italian and English export versions on the first disc and the 90-minute French version, containing exclusive footage, and the 95-minute US version, containing alternate dubbing, re-ordered scenes and added visual effects on the second Blu-ray. It is cited as being from a "New 2K restoration from the original negative by Arrow Films".

Subkultur Entertainment out of Germany came out with a Blu-ray in 2016 (reviewed HERE) that has four versions of the film; Italian, International (both with English language options), then French and German theatrical. We've compared screen captures to this Blu-ray as well as the Mondo Macabro DVD from 2004, and Neo Publishing (with English and French versions) also from 2004.

The Italian and English export versions are seamlessly-branched (notable opening title/credit difference) on the first Blu-ray. Predictably the Arrow transfer looks marvelous - an obvious upgrade in the image with tighter lines, fine texture and plenty of depth. The only weaknesses are in the opening credits and various title with the rest of the HD presentations looking impressive.    

NOTE: We have added 65 more large resolution Blu-ray captures (in lossless PNG format) for DVDBeaver Patrons HERE

On their Blu-ray, Arrow use a linear PCM mono tracks (24-bit for the first Blu-ray and 16-bit for the second.) Mill of the Stone Women has a few aggressive moments that come through flat but very clean with a score by Carlo Innocenzi (many sword + sandal Italian films including Son of Samson, Caesar Against the Pirates, The Vengeance of Ursus and Atlas Against the Cyclops), there is also a singing act in the local public house, all sounding clean with fairly obvious DUB'ing in the lossless transfer. The second disc US version differs from the original export version on the first Blu-ray with alternate dubbing, re-ordered scenes and added visual effects. The French and Italian versions don't have any English DUB options and all Arrow's versions offer optional English subtitles (with SDH for the English versions) on their Region FREE Blu-rays.

The Arrow Blu-ray offers a new commentary by favorite Tim Lucas - only on the, disc 1, English export version. He accurately covers other films of the 'Gothic' genre in the 60's, Galatea Film production, the fetishism, necrophilia expressions, connections for production designer Arrigo Equini, many of the actors; Pierre Brice, Hans von Arnim, Scilla Gabel, Wolfgang Preiss, Dany Carrel, Liana Orfei and director Giorgio Ferroni, who only did one other horror, 1972's Night of the Devils. He references Mario Bava and mentions one the most impactful scenes that hunted him a s child, and happily paying $60 the Neo Publishing VHS decades ago. His commentary certainly helped appreciation of Mill of the Stone Women. There is a new visual essay on the trope of the wax/statue woman in Gothic horror entitled Mill of the Stone Women & The Gothic Body, a new visual essay by Kat Ellinger running over 24-minutes. Also included are "Turned to Stone"- a newly edited featurette containing archival interviews with actress Liana Orfei and film historian Fabio Melelli for close to 1/2 hour. There is a 1/4 hour archival interview with actor Wolfgang Preiss called "A Little Chat with Dr. Mabuse" and the opening titles from the UK release, re-titled “Drops of Blood” as well as German opening titles, US and German theatrical trailers and an image gallery. There is a fold-out double-sided poster featuring original and newly commissioned artwork by Adam Rabalais, six double-sided, postcard-sized lobby card reproduction artcards and an illustrated collector’s booklet featuring new writing on the film by Roberto Curti, an in-depth comparison of the different versions by Brad Stevens, and a selection of contemporary reviews.   

Giorgio Ferroni's Mill of the Stone Women is slightly risqué (bound women, medical procedures), creepy mechanically animated statues, Gothic-drenched horror with some cool, if budget-conscious, sets including misty docks and a shadowy, lavishly decorated, Mill. This certainly isn't Giallo although it is in the pre-cursor vicinity with a stylish edge. The Arrow Blu-ray, and its multiple language versions, is the best way to see this 60's Italian shocker, and it is very much worth owning for genre fans. Lucas commentary, Ellinger video essay, booklet, interviews - a keeper. Buy with confidence.  

Gary Tooze

 


Menus / Extras

 


CLICK EACH BLU-RAY CAPTURE TO SEE ALL IMAGES IN FULL 1920X1080 RESOLUTION

 

 
1) Arrow (Italian translation) - Region FREE Blu-ray TOP
2) Arrow (English export) - Region FREE Blu-ray SECOND
3) Arrow (French version) - Region FREE Blu-ray THIRD
4) Arrow (US version) - Region FREE Blu-ray BOTTOM

 

 


 
1) Mondo Macabro - Region 0 - NTSC - TOP
2) Neo Publishing (English Version) - Region 0 - PAL  - SECOND
3) Neo Publishing (French Version) - Region 0 - PAL THIRD
4) Italian Version from DE - Region FREE Blu-ray FOURTH
5) Arrow (Italian and English export versions) - Region FREE Blu-ray FIFTH
6) Arrow (French version) - Region FREE Blu-ray SIXTH
7) Arrow (US version) - Region FREE Blu-ray BOTTOM
 

 


1) Subkultur (International Version ) - Region FREE Blu-ray TOP
2) Subkultur (French Version) - Region FREE Blu-ray SECOND
3) Subkultur (Italian Version) - Region FREE Blu-ray THIRD
4) Subkultur (German Theatrical) - Region FREE Blu-ray FOURTH
5) Arrow (Italian and English export versions) - Region FREE Blu-ray FIFTH
6) Arrow (French version) - Region FREE Blu-ray SIXTH
7) Arrow (US version) - Region FREE Blu-ray BOTTOM
 


 

More full resolution (1920 X 1080) Blu-ray Captures for DVDBeaver Patreon Supporters HERE

 

 

 
Box Cover

CLICK to order from:

  

Bonus Captures:

Distribution Arrow - Region FREE - Blu-ray


 


 

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