Trauma (1993 film)

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Trauma is a 1993 film directed by Dario Argento who also co-wrote the screenplay. The film can be described as a giallo, that is a film with influences from the horror, mystery, and thriller genres.

Trauma

Some Nightmares Haunt You. Some... Can Kill You.
Directed by Dario Argento
Produced by Dario Argento
Chris Beckman
David Pash
Written by Franco Ferrini
Gianni Romoli
Dario Argento
Starring Christopher Rydell
Asia Argento
Piper Laurie
Frederic Forrest
Music by Pino Donaggio
Cinematography Raffaele Mertes
Editing by Bennett Goldberg
Distributed by Anchor Bay Entertainment
Release date(s) 1993
Running time 106 min
Country Flag of Italy Italy
Flag of the United States United States
Language English
Budget $7,000,000 (estimated)
IMDb profile

Contents

[edit] Plot synopsis

An anorexic young woman escapes from a psychiatric clinic and meets a young man who wants to help. She is caught and returned to her parents, who are soon beheaded by a garrotting stranger making the rounds about town, apparently striking only when it rains. The orphaned young woman and her new lover launch their own investigation and are endangered when a link is discovered with the victims and a particular operation performed years before.

[edit] Cast

  • Christopher Rydell as David Parsons
  • Asia Argento as Aura Petrescu
  • Piper Laurie as Adriana Petrescu
  • Frederic Forrest as Dr. Judd
  • Laura Johnson as Grace Harrington
  • Dominique Serrand as Stefan Petrescu
  • James Russo as Capt. Travis
  • Ira Belgrade as Arnie
  • Brad Dourif as Dr. Lloyd
  • Hope Alexander-Willis as Linda Quirk
  • Sharon Barr as Hilda Volkman
  • Isabell O'Connor as Georgia Jackson (as Isabell Monk)

[edit] Alternate Versions

  • A special uncut version reportedly available on video features 7 minutes of footage omitted from foreign prints including:
    • a new introduction of the Aura and David characters: David (Chris Rydell) drives Grace (Laura Johnson) at the airport and sees Aura (Asia Argento) being beaten by a man whose plane ticket she tried to steal;
    • a new scene features Grace visiting David at the TV station and asking him about Aura; David invites Grace to his house and then calls Aura at home to ask her if she needs any food; Aura lies to him and tells she's already eaten;
    • Aura visits a market and is spotted by Dr. Jarvis (Frederic Forrest), who tries to catch her;
    • After David and Aura escape from the Marigold, she tells him she's taken a little souvenir from Nurse Volkmann's purse; another new shot shows the Marigold's owner talking to the police;
    • David checks into a hotel after following Linda Quirk's car and asks for a room overlooking the parking lot;
    • David asks for information about Dr. Lloyd in a saloon;
    • After David calls Grace and asks her for prescription forms, she meets and confronts him, trying to make him face the fact that he's become a junkie;
    • The death scenes of Linda Quick and of the killer are more graphically explicit (the wire is seen cutting through Linda's neck).
  • The UK video release has been cut by 6 seconds by the BBFC. There are 2 cuts, both to shots of wire cutting into the necks of Hope Alexander-Willis and Piper Laurie. It should also be added that the UK video release is the shorter version, missing around 8 minutes of narrative.

[edit] Technical Facts

  • Budget: $7,000,000 (estimated)
  • Taglines:
    • Some Nightmares Haunt You. Some... Can Kill You.
    • A dark secret, a twisted mind, an insane desire for revenge.

[edit] Trivia

  • This was Dario Argento's first American production.
  • The role of Grace was originally offered to Bridget Fonda.
  • An opening sequence was supposed to feature Tom Savini being accidentally decapitated while the event is witnessed by the killer therefore triggering his/her dormant trauma.
  • The character played by Asia Argento is inspired by her half-sister Anna (Nicolodi's daughter from a previous marriage) who actually suffered from anorexia. Anna died in a scooter accident in 1994 shortly after the film's release, but she is seen in the actual movie during the closing credits dancing in the balcony.
  • Argento's usual collaborating rock band Goblin was originally suggested to write and perform the music score for the film, but were declined by the American producers who wanted something more friendly to the American audience, therefore Pino Donaggio's orchestral score was used.
  • Piper Laurie revealed in 1997 that she never even bothered to see the finished film because she heard it was terrible, and that she and Frederic Forrest would constantly sit through the entire shooting laughing.
  • This film was referenced in Lucky McKee's 2002 horror film May.
  • Piper Laurie's death was much more violent in the shooting script. The wire was supposed to cut through her mouth therefore splitting her head in half and not through her neck. Tom Savini also claims Argento wanted to shoot it from the inside of Laurie's mouth, so he asked to work on an over-sized mouth model in order to place the camera. But after Argento came up with the idea of the head saying "Nicholas", the set-piece was scratched out.

[edit] External links