Oasis of Fear (1971)
Two British teenagers, Dick and Ingrid (played by Ray Lovelock and Ornella Muti), set out for Italy. The little scam artists sell porn and pictures of themselves posing nude to pay their way until they get busted and have 24 hours to get out of Italy. Instead of leaving immediately, they get robbed by some rather polite bikers and then get mistaken for a pair of German robbers. When they run out of gas, Dick and Ingrid stop at the house of Barbara Slater (Ingrid Papas), a bored (and strangely suspicious) housewife. The naive pair party with Barbara but soon discover her terrible secret.
Umberto Lenzi (Seven Blood Stained Orchids, Eyeball) does it again with Oasis of Fear, a sex obsessed and rebellious thriller. Though it’s a bit dated with all the hippie themes and some obvious symbolism, this is still a tense and fun film deftly directed by a real stalwart of Italian genre cinema. Oasis of Fear is edited by Eugenio Alabiso who cut many, many gialli including The Case of the Bloody Iris and The Fifth Cord. The score by Bruno Lauzi is a mix between awesome jazz and crappy generic hippie rock.
The cast totally rocks with the seductive and gorgeous Ornella Muti and the lovely but scheming Irene Papas (Don’t Torture a Duckling). Ray Lovelock is quite charming and believable as a desperate but overall good-natured conman. The always dependable Umberto Raho (The Night Evelyn Came Out of the Grave) shows up as a police inspector.
Oasis of Fear is a smart and excellently made giallo. It has its eye-rolling moments of hippie cheese but the grand design of the story is very cynical and intriguing. Lenzi could make some great thrillers and this one is no exception. I got a kick out of the parody of the Italian prudishness and Catholic guilt. The fact that these two kids can make a huge profit off of selling foreign smut to the squares is hilarious. Oasis of Fear is available on a Region 0 PAL DVD from Shameless Films. You should pick it up sometime. Go on, make Mr. Lenzi smile.
“Come on, Dick, kiss her. It’s in the stars.”