Odds are pretty good that it would not have been shown on television with those scenes intact or in widescreen (this was the eighties before that was as common as it is now). Adding to the mystery behind this is the fact that judging by the substantial amount of nudity on display here, the film is either uncut or at the very least the R-Rated US version (which would seem more likely given the English dubbing and credits). One thing that stands out while watching the Elvira segments is that when she references parts of the film and they playback for her, they do so not from the widescreen print used for this DVD but from a fullframe video source. The castle makes for a great and macabre set, the women are all lit quite seductively and while there isn't as much atmosphere as, say, Castle Of Blood or Black Sunday there are still some very memorable visuals and sets. It's formulaic, to be sure, but that doesn't make it any less enjoyable particularly when it's shot as well as it is here thanks to some slick cinematography from the late, great Joe D'Amato. This isn't a complex character study of any kind, it's simply a by the numbers vampire film with some serious T&A tossed into things to spice it up a bit. Neri, no stranger to on screen nudity having bared it all in countless Italian films of the era, gets plenty of screen time in her birthday suit and when she's not changing into a bat (in some unintentionally hilarious scenes) she's sucking blood or flashing what the good lord gave her and as base as it might sound, it works in the context of the movie. One would expect a movie with a fair bit of skin on display from the director of Nude For Satan and that's what we get. As he spends more time with the Countess he soon falls under her spell, his quest for the ring taking a backseat to his quest for vampire booty, but his wanton ways will soon find him in some rather hot water. The Countess doesn't live in the castle alone, however, she's got a lesbian servant and a wagon driver type who serve her when she needs them. Once he's had his way with the buxom young lass he heads off the castle, leaving his magical protective amulet at the inn by mistake, and soon he meets Countess Dracula (the gorgeous Rosalba Neri, credited here as Sara Bay in the English language credits, of Lady Frankenstein fame). It seems that once a year they sacrifice a few virgins to the horrible creatures that live inside the walls of the castle that lay on the outskirts of town, the very castle that is his destination. While spending the night in the local inn and making time with the owner's foxy young daughter he learns that he has arrived on the eve of a full moon that finds the locals in a bit of a frenzy. A man goes in search of the fabled Ring of Vermougglian, the very one referred to by Wagner in his writing, and he tracks it down to Castle Dracula in Transylvania. The story for this film is a bit of a mess. This time out, the movie is Luigi Batzella's 1973 gothic flavored The Devil's Wedding Night, which has been a somewhat elusive find on DVD until now. She'd go on to star in her comic book spin offs and even a feature length film and now her old horror host bits have found new life through the wonder of DVD. The insanely buxom horror hostess thrilled audiences for years on TV, introducing horror films both good and bad on her late night Movie Macabre show, the success of which made Cassandra Peterson's alter ego quite the star. Cult movie fans all over the world know how Elvira, Mistress Of The Dark is.
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