![]() ![]() ![]() | New York Ripper It seems like only yesterday that a series of armed police escorted the UK's most dangerous offender out of the country and back to its native Italy, so concerned were they of the effect this vicious criminal would have on UK residents they banned it ever to return. Twenty years later it was given the permission to return to the UK providing its message was heavily censored, having made a few limited appearances the results were less than pleasing. But in 2007 it was time to try again... Of course I'm not talking about a person I'm talking about Lucio Fulci's The New York Ripper, one of the original "video nasties" and although it still has been cut by 34 seconds the fact that this DVD is widely available on UK shelves is a breath of fresh air. It would seem pertinent then that when new DVD company Shameless were scheduled to launch their business in the UK they would pick one of the most iconic and revered titles they could. In the 1970's a director best associated with comedies and musicals began making horror movies, that director was Lucio Fulci who was and still is one of the most influential men in shaping modern horror. His successful movies The Beyond, Zombi, House By The Cemetery, and City Of The Living Dead were landmark zombie movies. But not content to rest on his laurels Fulci was pushing into new styles of horror, his intention to make horror possible in a realistic sense. The result of this was The Black Cat, and New York Ripper both the sort of horror we could encounter every day.
Lt. Fred Williams (Jack Hedley) is called in to solve the case, but then a cyclist is found murdered on the Statten Island Ferry, killed in the most brutal of ways. The chief of police (a cunning cameo from director Lucio Fulci) insists that Williams gets to the bottom of the killings sooner rather than later "We don't want another Atlanta!" he warns, and with that seemingly gives Williams the keys to the New York Police's bank account.
Shot on the hoof so to speak in New York, the movie shows a pretty accurate view of New York back in the early 80's. It shows the classdifferences, the devastation and almost wasteland as industry has left the city for more rural locations. There is nothing clean looking about the majority of the movies locations. In case you wonder about my on the hoof comment as was commonplace with Italian horror movies no permission was gained from the places they filmed, certainly when out of the UK. Often filming took place by literally people jumping out of the car filming a few shots and then heading off before the police arrived; this is blatantly obvious here by the length of the outdoor scenes.
About The DVD
There is a trailer for New York Ripper, which apparently shows a second of the edits from the movie. I will say this is a pretty sexy old trailer and likely to encourage the brown mac brigade to watch and purchase.
The case is yellow (as is the plastic amaray case that the cover goes in) making the DVD's clearly distinctive. The kitsch look of the covers echoes the 1980's when the trend was to make video covers as strikingly horrific as they could. The cover is very detailed even noting a missing finger on the killers hand as he shows his control over New York, looming over the city like a black cloud. Looking at the back cover you could easily believe the movie should still be banned, photographs of dead bodies, throat slashings, knife attacks, and sado masochism illustrate the harshness of the movie. | ||||||







