Before Dario Argento and his many imitators set in stone what many people expect a Giallo to be, in steps Damiano Damiani's slow-paced, heavily psychoanalytical A Rather Complicated Girl, which despite abundant eroticism and psychedelic visual flourishes shuns graphic murder set-pieces to concentrate on the long psychological build-up to a single significant killing. It's a rather hypnotic experience, serving up squirm-inducing moments of psychological cruelty; certainly not a perfect film by any means, with a tendency to scrutinize rather than empathize with the damaged protagonists that renders things rather cold along with a nagging sense beneath the pseudo-psychological posturing lurks an old fashioned exploitation film. Yet Damiani pulls off a rather clever conceit playing around with the classic motifs of film noir murder mysteries and some interesting direction; there are only so many erotic daydreams about sexy naked women in psychedelic body paint doing provocative things with telephones that one can indulge in before an intervention needs to be staged. All are accompanied by a groovy soundtrack composed by Fabio Fabor with a dance-along children's chorus that treads a fine line between playful and ominous. As someone who isn't very well versed in a lot of Giallo filmmaking, A Rather Complicated Girl certainly made for an interesting experience, one that's more interested in class and elitism than it is blood and transgressive sexuality, with moments of darkness, amidst the mid-day sun and more than a hint that the 60s self-indulgent heyday may be coming to an end.