A thriller without any
real thrills, The Destructors is
nonetheless quite watchable simply because of narrative economy, production
values, and star power. Shot on location throughout picturesque Marseille and
Paris, the movie zips along at a strong pace, throwing together an assassin, a
drug dealer, and a pair of policemen in a plot filled with deception and
intrigue. The film has enough beautiful women, fast cars, and shootouts
at unusual locales for a James Bond flick, and its cast is topped by three big
names: Michael Caine, James Mason, and Anthony Quinn. Plus, as photographed by
the great British DP Douglas Slocombe, the movie is slick and occasionally
beautiful, with scenes set at dusk featuring particularly interesting qualities
of light. What’s missing? Well, that would be tension, of course.
It’s hard to
tell whether screenwriter Judd Bernard or director Robert Parrish dropped the
ball, but whatever the case, The
Destructors might be the politest movie ever made about killers. Nobody
ever seems especially upset about being targeted for murder, and only Caine summons
a smidgen of intensity during his most dangerous scenes. Still, if likeable
actors and pretty locations are enough to make so-so romantic comedies
palatable, can’t those qualities be enough to make a so-so thriller palatable?
The story itself isn’t the problem, because the same narrative material treated
with more passion could have rendered livelier results. Steve Ventura (Quinn),
an American drug-enforcement agent stationed in Europe, decides to seek revenge
for the murders of several colleagues by operatives of an aristocratic French
drug kingpin, Jacques Brizzard (Mason). Acting on a sly tip from a French cop,
Ventura hires jet-setting hit man John Deray (Caine)—who turns out to
be an old friend of Ventura’s—to kill Brizzard. Deray then seduces Brizzard’s
sexy daughter, Lucienne (Maureen Kerwin), as a way of gaining access to the
highly protected criminal. Meanwhile, Ventura figures out a way to snare
Brizzard legally, so he tries to call off the hit. Double-crosses and other
twists ensue.
Caine is great fun as Deray, all smiles during off-hours and all
business when taking out victims—his handling of a rooftop hit is pricelessly
nonchalant—and Mason is appropriately oily in his small part. However, Quinn is
just awful, mugging and quipping his way through an amateurish performance.
He’s not quite enough to sink the movie, though it sure seems as if that’s his
goal. FYI, watch for former JFK speechwriter Pierre Salinger, in one of his
only acting roles, playing an extended cameo as Ventura’s boss. (Available as part of the MGM Limited Collection
on Amazon.com)
The Destructors: FUNKY
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