Vinegar Syndrome Drive-in double feature
Anatomy of a Psycho (Boris Petroff, 1961) ***1/2
Hot on
the heels of the release of Elia Kazan’s “On the Waterfront”, Fred F. Sears
made “Rumble on the Docks”, which was basically a cheap juvenile re-imagining
of the more famous film. This of course was only part of a larger, endearing exploitation
pattern, because knocking off familiar properties surely is a whole lot easier
than coming up with an entire original idea yourself. Judging by the title itself,
“Anatomy of a Psycho” does this one
better and piggybacks on not one, but two famous movies: ‘Otto Preminger’s “Anatomy
of a Murder” and Alfred Hitchcock’s “Psycho”. So we get a court sequence and
some vague sense of the inadequacies of the judicial system as in Preminger, at
the same time as the movie delves into the troubled mind of an adolescent. Nobody
would expect a movie as good as its two most famous predecessors, but there’s
really a lot to enjoy here. The beautiful Darrell Howe makes for a truly fascinating
psycho, even if he is obviously acting in the angst-ridden James Dean mode and it’s
a shame this seems to have been his only claim to fame. Juvenile picture
mainstay Michael Grange puts in an appearance too and everything is directed
with more than some sensitivity by Boris Petroff. I’ve never seen one of those
public domain releases that have been floating around, but they probably don’t
even come close to this new Vinegar Syndrome release, which simply looks
incredible. Of course there’s some damage here and there, but surprisingly
little of it actually, because most of it looks almost brand new. The beautiful
contrast gives the movie a whole lot more class than you’d normally expect from
a movie like this. Cheaply shot as it may have been, it still had all the
advantages of the Hollywood Studio System behind it and this really shows on
this DVD release.
The Lonely Sex (Richard Hilliard, 1959) ****
While “Anatomy
of a Psycho” is far from a waste of
time, what makes this new drive-in double feature from Vinegar Syndrome truly
worth watching is the second half of its double bill, the wonderful “The Lonely
Sex”. The theme of lonely people trying to connect with other people has
inspired so much of our greatest artists and artworks, from Paul Fejos’ “Lonesome”
to John Cassavetes’ “Minnie and Moskovitz” and from Antonioni to Wong Kar-Wai. One
of the reasons for this is obviously because it’s a theme very close to the
heart and one that almost always seems to ring true emotionally – no matter how
poorly executed, these films always are at the very least easy to identify
with. On the most low-budget end of the spectrum comes “The Lonely Sex”, which
is one of those movies that seems to give the dictum ‘less is more’ its true
meaning. Beautifully shot in an impressionistic style with a minimum of
dialogue, this obviously is much closer in spirit to an avant-garde short than
a pure sexploitation (although these ARE naked tits in the beginning of the
movie!), which probably makes it somewhat unsuitable for some people, but makes
it all the more interesting for the more adventurous viewer. It’s a film loaded
with moments that are at once poetical and recognizable, both haunting and sad.
Especially the subplot with Mister Wyler (who, had the film been made 20 years
later would’ve been played by Paul Bartel) has some true melodramatic zest in
it and makes you realize his situation is really not that different from that
of the criminal protagonist. We all have to stay sane inside insanity, as ‘The
Rocky Horror Picture Show’ would have it. The image doesn’t look nearly as good
as ‘Anatomy of a Psycho’, but it’s certainly more than adequate. Just keep your
expectations in check and let yourself be hypnotized by the beauty of the film
itself.
Labels: Vinegar Syndrome
1 Comments:
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