TetroVideo is proud to announce the release of the The last train of the night (Italy - 1975), the cult film written and directed by celebrated Italian director, screenwriter and writer Aldo Lado.
Pre-order will go live on October 15 at 6 pm.
TetroVideo offers the film in its most complete edition, with new audio and video restoration, language and subtitles in Italian and English:
– STANDARD EDITION: Digipack cover A/B + Blu-ray + Slipcover + Poster + Card;
– LIMITED EDITION (200 copies only): Digipack + Blu-ray + Slipcover + Poster + Soundtrack CD by Ennio Morricone + 2 Cards + Booklet (20 pages).
On the official website TetroVideo you can also purchase the T-Shirt with exclusive artwork by Shin Nagai in collaboration with Italian cartoonist Claudio Montalbano.
In the LIMITED EDITION included is the soundtrack CD edited by the legendary Ennio Morricone and including the opening track sung by Demis Roussos. The booklet, on the other hand, features the special "Evil Woman: How Females Can Be Perpetrators of Violent Crime in The Last Train Of The Night." by Zoë Rose Smith (Ghouls Magazine).
Blu-ray special contents: trailer, original trailer, photo gallery, and "The Disobedient" video interview (lasting 83 minutes) conducted by Carcass to Aldo Lado.
Considered one of the crudest and most violent films ever made in Italy, The last train of the night is a critique of bourgeois society and features two young girls, victims of unconscionable and gratuitous atrocities aboard a train car.
Plot: the Christmas vacations, Lisa Stradi (Laura D'Angelo) and her cousin Margareth (Irene Miracle) leave Germany for Italy. However, due to an assassination attempt, the two girls are forced to change trains, becoming victims of a ruthless and sadistic game.
The cast includes Flavio Bucci (Suspiria), Macha Méril (Profondo Rosso), Enrico Maria Salerno (Death Sentence), Laura D'Angelo, Irene Miracle (Midnight Escape), Marina Berti (The 'Private Venus' Case) and Franco Fabrizi (Abuse of Power).
The screenplay is by Aldo Lado and Renato Izzo and is based on a story by Roberto Infascelli.
Aldo Lado is best known for directing, in the 1970s, the thrillers The short night of the glass dolls and Who saw her die? but also the dramatic Buried alive and the sci-fi action The humanoid.
In the 1980s, he turned to TV movies and then returned to thrillers in the early 1990s with Perfect alibi and Black Friday.
Complete promo with standard edition (Cover A and Cover B), Limited edition and T-shirt:
Standard Edition Cover A:
Limited Edition (only 200 copies):
The B cover of the Standard edition:
Exclusive artwork by Shin Nagai and Claudio Montalbano (cover A of the Standard Edition and Limited Edition):
Soundtrack: