The House with Laughing Windows
Stefano, a restorer hired to uncover a fresco in a small church in an isolated village in Emilia. From the beginning, the setting is oppressive: a quiet town inhabited by evasive characters and marked by a dark past tied to the painter of the fresco, Legnani, known as "the painter of agonies." Gradually, Stefano uncovers that art and madness have become sinfully intertwined, and what initially appears to be mere local superstition slowly reveals itself as a tangible nightmare.
The House with Laughing Windows is an unconventional masterpiece of Italian cinema—a film suspended between psychological thriller, rural horror, and gothic tradition, showing how true terror can stem more from suggestion than from explicit violence. Directed by a masterful Pupi Avati, the film stands out for its deeply unsettling atmosphere and its expert use of suspense.
Avati builds horror with surgical precision, using a slow pace to generate anxiety and opting for a restrained yet elegant direction. The film's true protagonist is what remains unsaid: the silences, the glances, the distant noises, and the overwhelming sense of isolation that pervades the village. The sparse soundtrack, controlled editing, and realistic settings help create a world that is disturbing yet believable.
The film anticipates many modern trends in psychological horror: more akin to The Wicker Man than to the contemporaneous Deep Red, it avoids the baroque aesthetic of the Italian giallo in favor of chilling realism. Still, Avati doesn’t shy away from moments of pure symbolism, such as the mysterious “laughing windows,” a perfect emblem of the madness that watches—and mocks—the viewer.
The House with Laughing Windows is a film that works under the skin, leaving its mark not through shock but through lingering unease. A rare example of intellectual horror cinema—deeply Italian, yet with a universal resonance. A deserved cult classic.