Francesco Mulè, born in 1926 in Rome, was a versatile Italian actor who made his mark in the 1960s and 1970s with a variety of roles. He appears in The Seventh Grave (1965) as a character actor, showcasing his range in the realm of cult cinema. Mulè's comedic timing shines in Dr. Goldfoot and the Girl Bombs (1966), where he navigates the absurdity of the genre. His work in When Women Had Tails (1970) and its sequel When Women Lost Their Tails (1972) further cements his status in the exploitation film landscape, blending humor with the outrageous.
The Seventh Grave
A group of heirs gather in a castle in Scotland for the opening of the will of their wealthy relative, an eccentric doctor called Sir Reginald, who has apparently died from leprosy, but nothing is as it seems.