Suspiria was released in Italy on 1 February 1977.
20th Century Fox acquired the American distribution rights; due to its violent content, they were hesitant to release
Suspiria, but eventually premiered the film in July 1977 through a
shell company, International Classics. The original American prints were cut by a total of eight minutes in order for the film to pass with an
R-rating. The
Los Angeles Timess
Kevin Thomas wrote that the film was "consistently suspenseful and diverting" despite being "marred by stilted, poorly dubbed English dialogue". John Stark of
The San Francisco Examiner was critical, writing: "
Suspiria is mostly gore, with little plot or intrigue."
Gene Siskel of the
Chicago Tribune expressed similar sentiments, criticizing Harper's role to being "reduced to cowering in corners" and "costumed to look much younger than her years"; while praising Argento's "visually stylish" direction, he felt that
Suspiria was inferior to his directorial debut
The Bird with the Crystal Plumage (1970) and "plays like a weak imitation of
The Exorcist (1973)".
Dave Kehr of the
Chicago Reader gave a favorable review, claiming that "Argento works so hard for his effects—throwing around shock cuts, colored lights and peculiar camera angles—that it would be impolite not to be a little frightened". Although
J. Hoberman of
The Village Voice gave a positive review as well, he called it "a movie that makes sense only to the eye". Bob Keaton of the
Fort Lauderdale News praised the film's "well-crafted plot", likening elements of it to the works of
Edgar Allan Poe, adding: "For the seekers of superficially devilish thrills,
Suspiria is just the thing." A review in the
Colorado Springs Gazette deemed it "a film to experience and for lovers of cinematic suspense...
Suspiria may prove to be the most harrowing shocker ever filmed."
Retrospective assessment In the years since its release,
Suspiria has been cited by critics as a
cult film. In the book
European Nightmares: Horror Cinema in Europe Since 1945 (2012), the film is noted for being an "exemplar of
Eurohorror... it is excessive but here the excess seems to entail a more forceful retardation of a narrative drive, to the extent that the narrative periodically ceases to exist."
Suspiria has been praised by film historians and critics for its emphasized employment of color and elaborate set-pieces; film scholar
John Kenneth Muir notes that "each and every frame of
Suspiria is composed with an artistic, remarkable attention to color."
The Village Voice ranked
Suspiria #100 on their list of the 100 greatest films made in the 20th century. Adam Smith of
Empire magazine awarded the film a perfect score of five out of five.
Empire magazine also ranked
Suspiria #312 on their list of the 500 greatest films ever as well as number 45 on their list 'The 100 Best Films of World Cinema'.
AllMovie called it "one of the most striking assaults on the senses ever to be committed to celluloid... this unrelenting tale of the supernatural was—and likely still is—the closest a filmmaker has come to capturing a nightmare on film." A poll of critics of
Total Film ranked it #3 on their list of the 50 greatest horror films ever. One of the film's sequences was ranked at #24 on
Bravo's
The 100 Scariest Movie Moments program.
IGN ranked it #20 on their list of the 25 best horror films. On the
review aggregator Rotten Tomatoes, the film holds a 94% score based on 64 retrospectively collected reviews, with an average rating of 8.50/10. The website's critical consensus states: "The blood pours freely in Argento's classic
Suspiria, a
giallo horror as grandiose and glossy as it is gory." Rotten Tomatoes also ranked it #61 on their list of the top 100 horror movies. On
Metacritic, the film has a weighted average score of 79 out of 100, based on 11 critics, indicating "generally favorable reviews".
Home media Suspiria was released on
DVD by
Anchor Bay Entertainment in a three-disc set on 11 September 2001. This release, which was a limited edition run restricted to 60,000 units, features a
THX-certified video master of the film, with a second disc consisting of a 52-minute documentary and other bonus material; the third disc is a
CD consisting of the original film score. Goblin frontman
Claudio Simonetti later formed the
heavy-metal band Daemonia; the DVD also contains a video of the band playing a reworking of the
Suspiria theme. A standard single-disc edition was released by Anchor Bay the following month. On 19 December 2017, the independent home media distributor
Synapse Films released the film for the first time on
Blu-ray in the United States in a limited
steelbook package. This release also consists of three discs which include a
4K restoration of the feature film, bonus materials, and the original score on a compact disc. On 19 November 2019, Synapse released their restoration in 4K but without the soundtrack CD nor an accompanying Blu-ray disc. In Italy, the film received a 4K-remastered Blu-ray release via the Italian distributor Videa in February 2017. It did not use the same 4K restoration as the US Synapse release. == Related works ==