Inferno
A young man (Leigh McCloskey) returns from Rome to his sister's (Irene Miracle) satanic New York apartment house. Together they investigate a series of killings in both locations where their resident addresses are the domain of two covens of witches.
12 July 1945, Naples, Campania, Italy
28 February 1957, Rome, Lazio, Italy
10 October 1942, Milan, Lombardy, Italy
7 September 1940, Rome, Lazio, Italy
19 June 1950, Florence, Tuscany, Italy
6 October 1938, Bucharest, Romania
11 March 1920, Geneva, Switzerland
24 January 1954, Stillwater, Oklahoma, USA
6 October 1905, Moscow, Russian Empire [now Russia]
April 25, 1913 in Viadana, Lombardy, Italy
21 October 1953, Rome, Lazio, Italy
20 January 1945, Ashtabula, Ohio, USA
April 3, 1944 in Rome, Lazio, Italy
31 May 1921, Pola, Istria, Italy [now Pula, Istria, Croatia]
21 June 1955, Los Angeles, California, USA
24 July 1929, Bodio, Ticino, Switzerland
February 28, 2002
[Argento's] stories are not supposed to make sense, but we can at least ask them to be watchable.
October 30, 2011
second-tier stuff
June 15, 2003
Visually striking, utterly incoherent, largely enjoyable.
September 14, 2010
the ending, while certainly fulfilling the title's promise, disappoints with its cheap parlour tricks and cheesy Halloween costumery.
August 01, 2015
The narrative is incoherent, but the film's visual richness sustains it.
December 04, 2001
More so than any other Argento film, this one is for the fans.
October 30, 2012
Just because it's not A-list Argento, that does not mean it cannot be an effective surrealist horror film.
July 04, 2008
This film is a fascinating and frustrating phantasmagoria of the mysterious and the unexplained, a strange journey into realms beyond human understanding, where events happen without rhyme or reason, and little or no explanation is given.
November 07, 2015
The most oneiric of Argento frights

