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The PackageActress and sometime director Sondra Locke seems destined to be best known as Clint Eastwood’s ex, but in DEATH GAME (a.k.a. THE SEDUCERS, 1976) she creates one of the most memorable psycho bitches in movie history, a character both hopelessly deranged and deeply seductive in the top hat, magician’s cloak and black nylons she wears throughout the latter half of the film (B-movie veteran Colleen Camp is nearly as potent as her partner in crime). That’s despite the fact that in her 1997 autobiography Locke bemoans the film’s cluttered shoot and director Peter Traynor, who apparently “didn’t have any idea what he needed to be, was, or should be doing.” She also claims actor Seymour Cassel was so appalled by the chaotic nature of the production he refused to loop his lines, meaning all his dialogue was redubbed by the film’s cameraman David Worth! Getting
back to the good stuff, we can credit production designer Jack Fisk, who
creates a disturbing subconscious landscape that’s fully up to the high
standards set |
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The StoryGeorge,
a contented middle-aged man, settles into his luxurious The
next morning, however, George finds them in his kitchen cooking breakfast.
After some arguing (they threaten to tell the police they’re underage,
a claim that seems pretty spurious) George agrees to drive them to a bus
station…but when he arrives home later that evening the girls are back in the
house waiting for him. In short
order they tie him up and dump all the food in his refrigerator onto his head.
This inspires a call to a grocery delivery boy, who ends up drowned in
George’s fish tank by the increasingly unhinged twosome.
Next the girls stage a mock trial and sentence George to death in the
morning, leading to more wholesale destruction during which George’s cat is
thrown through a window. In the
morning, however, the ladies decide to let George live; they exit his house in
high spirits, but are mowed down by an ASPCA van--revenge, I guess, for killing
the cat! |
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The DirectionAt first DEATH GAME looks every bit like the tawdry exploitation programmer it was no doubt intended as. Those who abandon the film in the opening twenty minutes will have no idea of what makes it so effective, but I can’t say they wouldn’t be justified in doing so: the opening credits aren’t exactly inspiring, scored as they are by an obnoxiously pretentious pseudo-kiddie song called “My Dear Old Dad.” There’s an equally ridiculous title card that tries—and fails—to coat the proceedings in a veil of social responsibility. And the outrageous three-some between Cassell, Locke and Camp simply must be seen to be believed, decked out with so many dissolves that any potential eroticism is completely obliterated, and scored with high spirited disco music that’s completely out of place. But
the film’s latter half is something else entirely: a deeply unnerving descent
into insanity with an authentically deranged ambiance.
If Locke is correct in her claim that director Peter Traynor didn’t
know what he was doing than perhaps that explains the strange way the camera
lingers over Locke and Camp’s freaky doings; she writes that “whenever the
director didn’t know exactly what he was doing, which was all the time, he
would suggest that either Colleen or I break something, or eat something”.
Also notable is the hallucinatory feel of |
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Vital StatisticsDEATH
GAME (a.k.a. THE SEDUCERS) First
American Films Director:
Peter Traynor Producer:
Larry Spiegel, Peter Traynor Screenplay:
Anthony Overman, Michael Ronald Ross Cinematography:
David Worth Cast:
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