The Three Mothers

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The Three Mothers
Le Tre madri

"Zum Walfisch" ("The Whale" in German), a famous building in Freiburg, served as one of the witch's homes in Suspiria.
Directed by Dario Argento
Produced by Claudio Argento
Written by Dario Argento, Daria Nicolodi, Jace Anderson, Adam Gierasch
Music by Goblin, Keith Emerson, Claudio Simonetti
Country Italy, United States
Language English

The Three Mothers (Le Tre madri in Italian) is a trilogy of supernatural horror films by Italian film director Dario Argento. It consists of 1977's Suspiria, 1980's Inferno and the 2007 film The Mother of Tears. Each film deals with one of the titular "Mothers", a triumvirate of ancient and evil witches whose powerful magic allows them to manipulate world events on a global scale.

During the 2007 Toronto International Film Festival, Argento stated he had not ruled out the possibility of shooting a fourth film dealing with the Three Mothers.[1] His daughter Asia "joked" that one day there might be a prequel.[1]

Contents

The story of the Three Mothers begins at the dawn of the 11th century, when three sisters created the pernicious art of witchcraft on the coast of the Black Sea.[2] In the years that followed, they wandered the world and amassed great personal wealth and power, leaving only death in their wake.

In the late 19th century the women commissioned E. Varelli, an Italian architect based in London, to design and construct three stately buildings. From these enchanted, bastion-like homes the Three Mothers "rule the world".[3] According to Varelli's memoirs, entitled The Three Mothers by an anonymous colleague, the architect learned too late of the women's evil nature. (At least five copies of the book are known to have existed. Four may have been destroyed at the end of Inferno.) The residences he designed will become so corrupted that eventually the land they were built on will become pestilential. An unpleasant, bittersweet smell of evil already pervades the area surrounding Mater Tenebrarum's home.

Both Mater Suspiriorum and Tenebrarum have claimed that the Mothers are Death personified.

The wizened Markos, slain in the hidden lair beneath her school.
The wizened Markos, slain in the hidden lair beneath her school.

Mater Suspiriorum, the Mother of Sighs, is the oldest of the Three Mothers. Her given name is Helena Markos. She was also known as The Black Queen. The actress who portrayed Markos in Suspiria was uncredited. According to Jessica Harper, "the witch was a ninety-year-old ex-hooker Dario had found on the streets of Rome."[4]

Markos, a Greek émigré, was exiled from many European countries and had written several books on a variety of arcane subjects. In 1895 she founded the Tanz Akademie ("Dance Academy" in German), a school for dance and the occult sciences, in the Black Forest outside Freiburg, Germany. The locals feared her, having intuited that she was a witch. As Markos' wealth grew so did suspicions about her true nature. To avert this unwanted scrutiny, she faked her own death in a fire in 1905. Control of the academy, which became solely a ballet school, was said to have gone to Markos' prize pupil. In reality, this was Markos herself. (The Akademie bears a plaque stating that Desiderius Erasmus once lived there.)

In Suspiria Markos is the Directress whose presence is concealed by her coven, headed by Madame Blanc (Joan Bennett). A young American, Suzy Banyon (Jessica Harper), discovers the hidden chambers beneath the school after several pupils are killed by Markos' proxies. The aged witch attempts to use her magic to kill the girl, but her powers — including that of invisibility, illusion casting, and telekinesis — prove insufficient due to her enfeebled state. Banyon defeats Markos by stabbing her through the neck. The witch's death causes the foundations of her home and coven to fail.

"Your journey has come to an end. Everything around you will become dark, and someone will take your hand."
"Your journey has come to an end. Everything around you will become dark, and someone will take your hand."

Mater Tenebrarum, the Mother of Darkness/Shadows, is the youngest and most cruel of the Three Mothers. Her true name is not given; her home is located in New York City and was christened in 1910. The house's number is 49 and bears a plaque that states that Georges Ivanovich Gurdjieff once resided there.

In Inferno the character is portrayed by Veronica Lazar. She masquerades as Professor Arnold's nurse for much of the film. At the climax, Mark Elliot (Leigh McCloskey) descends into the bowels of her burning home. He learns that Arnold is in fact the architect Varelli, and essentially Tenebrarum's slave. When Elliot comes across her, Tenebrarum laments cryptically that "It's all going to burn down... just like before."[3] After sealing the room she laughs psychotically, makes an ambiguous speech, and disappears. However, her reflection remains in a mirror and bursts out moments later as Death. Elliot flees the room by breaking down the door. In the final scene of the film, the skeletal Tenebrarum appears to perish in the flames of her crumbling home.

In The Mother of Tears it is revealed that one of Mater Tenebrarum's victims from Inferno, Elise Stallone Van Adler/Elisa Mandy (Daria Nicolodi), was a white witch. In the final film Elise acts as a spiritual guide to her daughter Sarah, who later defeats Mater Lacrymarum.

The "musical student" in Inferno was, in reality, Mater Lachrymarum.
The "musical student" in Inferno was, in reality, Mater Lachrymarum.

Mater Lachrymarum, the Mother of Tears, is the most beautiful of the Three Mothers. Like Tenebrarum, her true name is unknown. Inferno suggest that her home in Rome, Italy may be located near No. 49 Via Dei Bagni - the Abertny Foundation's Biblioteca Filosofica - when Sara (Eleonora Giorgi) notices a strange smell in the air. In The Mother of Tears Lachrymarum's home is revealed to be the Palazzo Varelli.

In Inferno Lachrymarum attempted to spellbind Mark Elliot during a music lecture in Rome. According to Argento, "Ania Pieroni will not be reappearing [as Lachrymarum in The Mother of Tears], as she now has five kids!"[5]

Lachrymarum is portrayed by Israeli actress Moran Atias in The Mother of Tears.[6] The witch has been hibernating for centuries in Rome, and is awakened when Sarah Mandy (Asia Argento) opens the urn in which her relics (a red tunic, dagger, three statuettes) and ashes are stored. As her minions wreak havoc on the city above, Lachrymarum hides below ground in the basement of her Palazzo, regaining her strength. She is defeated when Mandy discovers her subterranean lair and rips her red tunic, causing the Palazzo to collapse. Lachrymarum is killed when an ornamental obelisk from the top of the building crashes into the catacombs and impales her.

The idea of "Three Mothers" comes from "Levana and Our Ladies of Sorrow", a section of Thomas de Quincey's Suspiria de Profundis. The piece asserts that just as there are three Fates and Graces, there are also three Sorrows. They include Mater Lachrymarum (Our Lady of Tears), Mater Suspiriorum (Our Lady of Sighs), and Mater Tenebrarum (Our Lady of Darkness). The attribute of each woman (tears, sighs, shadows/darkness) is a direct translation of her name from Latin. (Mater being the Latin word for "mother".)

Suspiria clearly derives its title from the woman delineated in de Quincey's work. However, Inferno's title does not reference Mater Tenebrarum. Thus, Argento's 1982 film Tenebrae is sometimes mistaken as the second installment in the trilogy.

  1. ^ a b "TIFF: Dario Argento Teases 'Fourth Mother' Film!", Bloody-Disgusting.com, 2007-09-09. 
  2. ^ Codacci-Pisanelli, Angiola (5 April 2007). "Bella Strega d'Argento". L'Espresso. Retrieved on 11 April 2007. 
  3. ^ a b Inferno. Dir. Dario Argento. Perf. Irene Miracle, Leigh McCloskey, Daria Nicolodi, and Alida Valli. 1980. DVD. Anchor Bay Entertainment. April 25, 2000.
  4. ^ Jones, Alan. Profondo Argento: The Man, The Myths And The Magic. Godalming, UK: FAB Press, 2004. Page 91. ISBN 1-903-25423-X
  5. ^ "Argento to raise THE THIRD MOTHER", Fangoria, 2003-12-09. 
  6. ^ Jones, Alan. "La terza madre", Dark Dreams, 2006-11-17. 

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