Kiss Me Killer (1977) Poster

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6/10
A Step Up From Franco's Usual Nonsense
gavin69429 April 2013
Although Jess Franco was allegedly a big jazz enthusiast, he seemed to rely on what would now be called porn music more than anything else (and heck, with his subject matter, that might not be uncalled for). I was very pleased to hear the score in this film (courtesy of Daniel White) which is very jazzy, very fast-paced, and keeps the suspense going.

I am also glad to see this is more of a thriller and not one of Franco's sex romps (poorly) disguised as a horror film. Which is not to say it is not a sex romp disguised as a thriller -- we cannot simply ignore the scene of same-sex butt-licking. Though I would say it is not as poorly hidden; there is actually a real story here.

Worth checking out for those who think Franco cannot do anything right. This is definitely one of his better attempts.
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4/10
Remake and remix
BandSAboutMovies12 February 2023
Warning: Spoilers
Death Whistles the Blues was 15 years ago, but Jess Franco loves jazz and understands the refrain and sometimes his universe opens to revise films that he has already made to try - sometimes with success - to recreate them now that he has more experience in this world.

Alberto Dalbés is Freddy Carter, which would be Federico de Castro from the original, a role much better acted by Conrado San Martin.

So yeah, Freddy's dead after a crime gone bad and his two co-criminals - Paul Radeck (Francisco Acosta) and Carlos Moroni (Olivier Mathot) - have run away and assumed those new names. Even more of a punch in the heart is that Radeck also stole away Freddy's wife Linda (Alice Arno). Now, Moiry Ray (Lina Romay, astounding and rubbing against a stone statue and somehow making it...ah, you get it) is at the Radeck's club and so is the maybe still alive Freddy.

Really, you don't have to make a choice between the two films. You can enjoy them both for what they are and the fact that Spanish censorship was gone at this point and we can enjoy Lina lapping at a statue's granite genitals. Yes, we may have seen it before, but Franco welcomes us and asks us to see it all again through a set of eyes that has seen so much since he first brought this to the screen.
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7/10
Daniel White's allright
prohibited-name-114226 June 2001
This Eurociné production of a Jesus Franco movie is centered around a nice little jazzy theme by Daniel White, and the idea isn't bad... A remake of Franco's LA MUERTE SILBA UN BLUES (aka 007 Opération Jamaïque), shot in the sixties, this one has a stunning cast composed of Jesus' regulars.

The locations are gorgeous; it's hard not to be amazed by some of the shots and camera angles. Since Franco is no longer under the strict laws of censorship, the lascive scenes are multiplying, being maybe one of the low point of the movie. Alice Arno and miss Romay are sure a lot of fun to look at, but when erotism interfere with the storyline and slows it, it's a bit annoying.

There is almost no humor here - apart from some of the dialogues and a surprising Franco cameo where he appears as a crazed guru shouting catastrophic predictions all around - and it's what makes the atmosphere interesting. Being used to see Olivier Mathot take off his pants in a flash, I couldn't help being puzzled by his stoned faced performance.

The theme of the dead guy coming back to face his murder has been used many times by Franco - somehow eerily in VENUS IN FURS - and is almost banalised here. No one wonders how Freddy Carter he managed to survive.

Echoes of other Franco movies surface here and there, particularly in a cabaret scene featuring Lina Romay and a statue, a scene which was later re-used in TENDER FLESH, involving the plastic Amber Newman instead.

Overall a fascinating movie, with a lush jazzy score by Daniel White that perfectly fits the mood and pace of the film.
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Fair Franco
Michael_Elliott22 March 2008
Kiss Me Killer (1974)

** (out of 4)

Jess Franco's remake of his very own 007 Operation Jamaique is a film that offers quite a bit but I must admit that the story lost me. I'm not sure if it was the horrid English dubbing or what but I could never really catch on to what was going on for the most part. The film deals with drug smugglers, a Inspector (Paul Muller) and a stripper (Lina Romay) who is working undercover. Even though I wasn't able to follow the story, there's still quite a bit here that makes the film worth at least one viewing. For starters, there's a very steamy and erotic sex scene between Romay and Alice Arno, which ranks among Franco's best scenes of this type. Franco can open himself up to being bashed quite a bit but when it comes time to do an erotic scene then no one can top him. The highlight of the film has to be a sequence where Romay, working as the stripper, tries to get a nude statue aroused by licking around his certain areas. I think this is the greatest period for Romay and she turns in a good performance but it's certainly her beauty that takes over and delivers the goods. Daniel White's brilliant music score is the best thing about the movie and I think it ranks right up there with the best work of his career.
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