Quentin Tarantino is famously a superfan. He named his production company (a reference to a different film), but he directly lifted the final act structure for Kill Bill Vol. 1 (The Bride’s training montage, the silent rampage, the list of names). However, where Tarantino winks at the audience, Thriller stares through you. This is the nihilistic, punk-rock older brother to the Hollywood blockbuster.
Beyond Exploitation: Revisiting the Surgical Precision of Thriller: A Cruel Picture (1973) – The Extended 1080p Experience Thriller - A Cruel Picture -1973- Extended -108...
This post focuses specifically on the version. If you have only seen the truncated, soft-pan VHS copies, you have not seen this film. You have only felt its shadow. Quentin Tarantino is famously a superfan
Long before Kill Bill painted the screen in bloody bridal white, there was Madeleine. If you consider yourself a connoisseur of cult cinema, hard-hitting revenge thrillers, or the darker corners of 70s European filmmaking, (original Swedish title: They Call Her One Eye ) is a mandatory rite of passage. Directed by Bo Arne Vibenius, this 1973 film isn't just exploitation—it is the blueprint for the arthouse grindhouse hybrid. However, where Tarantino winks at the audience, Thriller
★★★★☆ (4/5) Deducting one star only for the pacing in the middle act, but adding a trigger warning for nearly everything else.
Look for the release by (US) or Arrow Video (UK). Ensure the box specifically says "Extended Version" or "Uncensored." The 1080p disc includes fantastic extras, including a long interview with the now-elderly Christina Lindberg, who reflects on the film with surprising fondness for a role that typecast her forever.
Madeleine (played by the mesmerizing and real-life mute actress Christina Lindberg) is a young, mute woman who falls prey to a horrific trap. Lured by a fake job offer, she is drugged, kidnapped, and forced into heroin addiction by a ruthless pimp named Tony (Heinz Hopf). To control her, he surgically removes one of her eyes.