Development According to director
Lucio Fulci,
Sette note in nero gestated over several years in
development hell because producer
Luigi De Laurentiis was unsure about what type of film could be made out of it.
Ernesto Gastaldi stated that he had written a twelve-page outline of the film with director/producer Alberto Pugliese, titled
Pentagramma in nero () or
Sinfonia in nero (). The story dealt with a woman who dreams of a murder, and believes it will happen in real life. Film critic and historian Roberto Curti has noted that there exists a script kept at the
Centro Sperimentale di Cinematografia library, titled
Incubus (Pentagramma in nero), which is credited to Gastaldi,
Sergio Corbucci and Mahnamen Velasco and is dated March 1972, but states that this was, in fact, an early title for
La morte accarezza a mezzanotte (1972); however, Curti notes that both
La morte accarezza a mezzanotte and
Sette note in nero share near-identical premises of women having premonitions of murder.
Sette note in nero was written by Roberto Gianviti and
Dardano Sacchetti. Fulci and Gianviti had collaborated on several films together, including
Operazione San Pietro (1967),
One on Top of the Other (1969), ''
A Lizard in a Woman's Skin (1971), Don't Torture a Duckling (1972), White Fang (1973) and Challenge to White Fang (1974). Sacchetti would later collaborate with Fulci on Zombi 2 (1979), City of the Living Dead (1980), The Beyond (1981), The House by the Cemetery (1981), and The New York Ripper'' (1982). Fulci and Gianviti had been put under contract by De Laurentiis and his son
Aurelio based on the success of their earlier
gialli; given creative freedom to conceive a project in the same genre, they chose to adapt writer (later a film critic and distributor) Vieri Razzini's 1972 mystery novel
Terapia mortale. Described by Curti as "a banal and rather poorly written
whodunnit", the novel follows
parapsychologist Patrick Delli as he investigates the death of his friend Mark, which he discovers to have been an act of murder through the use of psychic powers, and that Mark's wife Veronica (who Patrick is in love with) is another potential target.
Barbara Bouchet was originally intended as one of the film's leads; in a July 1974 interview, she revealed that filming was intended to take place in
İzmir. However, the De Laurentiises were not satisfied with Fulci and Gianviti's material, and Sacchetti was brought on board to work with the pair in summer 1975. Sacchetti noted that Fulci and Gianviti had little to show for half a year's work on the project, largely because the former misinterpreted the novel's portrayal of parapsychology as a type of magic instead of psychoanalysis. Fulci initially resented Sacchetti due to the success of his collaborations with
Dario Argento and referred to him as "De Laurentiis' spy", but eventually warmed to him after Gianviti approved of his additions to the script, which served to "unblock" difficulties that Fulci and Gianviti had originally encountered, while remaining true to the spirit of the novel. After Fulci, Gianviti and Sacchetti's initial draft was rejected by the De Laurentiises, Sacchetti suggested that they work on a new story from scratch, and asked Fulci what his biggest obsession was. When Fulci informed him that this obsession was "
fate", he returned the next day with an entirely new outline that met with Fulci and Gianviti's approval. Fulci impulsively devised the title
Sette note in nero after Sacchetti informed him that a carillon would serve as a key plot device in the story. Sacchetti attributes "70%" of the resulting script to Gianviti, and described his contributions as "a touch of Argento to a traditional mystery plot. The 'touch of Argento' were the suspenseful situations in general, the modalities of the deaths, especially the victim's point of view". Although an announcement that production of the film, then bearing the novel's title, would begin in November 1975 was deposited at the Ministry of Spectacle, the film was shelved again by the De Laurentiises, as their company was in financial trouble due to
political and social unrest in Italy. Within several months, Fulci was able to make a deal with a smaller production company, Cinecompany, and distributor
Cineriz to make the film. Aside from sharing a theme of psychic powers and the character of Luca Fattori being a parapsychologist who harbors romantic feelings for the married Virginia, the resulting film bares little resemblance to Razzini's novel. Curti notes that
Sette note in nero features several scenes and themes influenced by Fulci's earlier films, including the potentially unjust imprisonment of a man for the murder of his wife (
One on Top of the Other), precognition (''A Lizard in a Woman's Skin
) and a character who falls to their death on a cliffside (Don't Torture a Duckling
); other possible influences on the narrative include the novel Night has a Thousand Eyes
by Cornell Woolrich (whose works were possible influences on One on Top of the Other
and A Lizard in a Woman's Skin
) and the films Don't Look Now (1973) and Death Rite'' (1976).
Filming The film was shot between September and November 1976 under the working title
Dolce come morire. It was shot at the Incir-De Paolis Studios in Rome and at
Arezzo,
Siena in Italy and in
Dover in England. Fulci's daughter Camilla stood in for photographs of Agnese Begnardi. Cameraman Franco Bruni commented on the cinematography in the film, stating that "we did a frantic use of zoom in this film" and "often used the tracking shot backwards, to reveal things. The camera was moving all the time."
Music Composer
Fabio Frizzi also contributed to
Paura nella città dei morti viventi, ''...E tu vivrai nel terrore! L'aldilà
, Manhattan Baby'', and Fulci's 1990 film
Un gatto nel cervello. The film's score was performed on a
carillon, accompanied by stringed instruments, synthesisers and piano notes. The score has been described as "simple, elegant and gravely beautiful", and has been noted for "steer[ing] clear of rampant atonality and shrieking strings", unlike typical giallo film scores. Some of the film's music was later used in the 2003 American film
Kill Bill Volume 1, directed by
Quentin Tarantino. A medley of the score was later included as part of Frizzi's 2013
Fulci 2 Frizzi live tour, including the 2014
live album release
Fulci 2 Frizzi: Live at Union Chapel. ==Style==