poster

Phenomena (1985)

6.8 | Jan 25, 1985 (IT) | Horror, Thriller | 01:50
Budget: 3 800 000 | Revenue: N/A

Jennifer has a few million close friends. She's going to need them all!

A young girl, with an amazing ability to communicate with insects, is transferred to an exclusive Swiss boarding school, where her unusual capability might help solve a string of murders.

Featured Crew

Screenplay, Director, Producer, Story
First Assistant Director
Costume Design
Makeup Effects
Sound Effects Editor
Special Effects
Screenplay, Story
Sound Effects Editor
Makeup Artist
Songs, Original Music Composer

Cast

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Jennifer Connelly
Jennifer Corvino
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Daria Nicolodi
Frau Brückner
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Fiore Argento
Vera Brandt
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Fiorenza Tessari
Gisela Sulzer
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Dalila Di Lazzaro
Headmistress
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Patrick Bauchau
Inspector Rudolf Geiger
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Donald Pleasence
Professor John McGregor
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Alberto Cracco
UBS Bank Teller
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Kaspar Capparoni
Karl, Sophie's Boyfriend

Teasers

US Original Theatrical Trailer

Original Trailer [Subtitled]

Original Trailer

Reviews

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talisencrw
8 | May 09, 2016
Both a great chance to see two acting icons (one, Donald Pleasence, at his prime, and the other, Jennifer Connelly, just starting out on her filmic journey) and one of the films on director Argento's great run of horror classics, this is worth purchasing the finest print and will award the horror aficionado many great times in rewatches. Cinephiles often called Argento 'the Italian Alfred Hitchcock', and this would be a great Exhibit A for their evidence. Essential for connoisseurs of the arcane.
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John Chard
6 | Oct 03, 2014
Phenomena, doo-doo doo-doo-doo. Arriving at a Swiss Academy for girls, Jennifer Corvino (Jennifer Connelly) gets embroiled in the workings of a serial killer. Her friends the insects and Professor John McGregor (Donald Pleasence) are on hand to help if possible. Directed and co-written by horror legend Dario Argento, Phenomena is a mixed bag. Ignoring the butchered American version, which was titled Creepers, the full uncut version is still messy. Argento the director is doing good work here, which explains why the film has a sturdy reputation. His eye for striking imagery and horror scene staging is evident here for sure, but Argento the writer (along with Franco Ferrini) fails to string a decent enough narrative together. Pace is all over the place, the dialogue often boorish, while wasting Donald Pleasence is a crime against horror film making. Still, there’s enough good Argento at work here to keep Phenomena above average, even if it’s more for the eyes than the brain. 6/10