Vampiros, espectros, seres sobrenaturales. Las películas desde sus inicios inspiraron la imaginación del ser humano, explorando todo tipo de temáticas.
Black Sabbath, Las tres caras del miedo en español (en italiano I tre volti della paura) fue una película exhibida en 1963 y que fue observada luego por miembros de la banda Black Sabbath en 1969. A ellos les llamó la atención la gran popularidad que recibió esta película, más tratándose de ser cine de terror. Por ello decidieron utilizar ese nombre para su banda.
Si deseas observar esta -influyente película- puedes ahora hacerlo, reproduciendo el siguiente video:
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Información sobre la película Black Sabbath
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Black Sabbath (Italian: I Tre volti della paura) is a 1963 Italian horror film anthology directed by Mario Bava. The film comprises three horror stories: «The Wurdulak» (based on the novella The Family of the Vourdalak by Aleksey Konstantinovich Tolstoy, and starring Boris Karloff), «The Drop of Water» and «The Telephone». The Italian original is considerably different from the American version released by American International Pictures. It uses a different sequence of the episodes («The Telephone», followed by «The Wurdalak», followed by «The Drop of Water»), a different music score and has different introductory scenes involving Karloff as the narrator, some of which are tongue-in-cheek. The stories themselves are somewhat different as well. The Italian version of «The Wurdalak» is slightly gorier than the US version, but the biggest difference is with «The Telephone»: in its original Italian version, the segment contains a lesbian subplot that is eliminated in the English-language version by removing a couple of scenes, changing the dialogue in those that are left and reshooting a key insert shot involving a letter. As a result, the American version has been turned into a ghost story, whereas the Italian original is a non-supernatural, noirish exercise in vengeance and murder. In a review for their online blog, Fangoria called it «an extremely effective and entertaining example of anthology horror done absolutely right.»