Apparently hopeful that
lighting would strike twice in terms of creative inspiration and box-office
returns, director Brian De Palma followed up his breakthrough movie, the 1976
supernatural shocker Carrie, with
another horror flick about killer psychics. Yet while The Fury has bigger stars and glossier production values than its
predecessor, it’s so far-fetched and gruesome that it lacks anything
resembling the emotional gut-punch of Carrie.
That’s not to say The Fury is devoid
of entertainment value—it’s just that De Palma badly overreached in his attempt
to blend elements of the conspiracy, horror, and supernatural genres into a
sensationalistic new hybrid. Written for the screen by John Farris, who adapted
his own novel, the convoluted movie pits former friends Ben (John Cassavetes)
and Peter (Kirk Douglas) against each other. They’re both secret-agent types,
and Ben is exploring the possible use of psychics as trained killers. One of Ben’s star
pupils is Peter’s adult son, Robin (Andrew Stevens), although Ben expects even
greater things from Gillian (Amy Irving), a gifted but troubled woman Robin’s age.
You can probably guess where this goes—the young psychics fall in love even as they realize they’re being manipulated, Peter tries to rescue his son, and corpses hit the floor when the psychics get pushed too far.
You can probably guess where this goes—the young psychics fall in love even as they realize they’re being manipulated, Peter tries to rescue his son, and corpses hit the floor when the psychics get pushed too far.
This being a De Palma picture, one
is unwise to expect restraint on the part of the filmmaker, and, indeed, the
movie’s finale involves a human body exploding. Moreover, despite the sophisticated contributions of cinematographer Richard H. Kline and
composer John Williams, nearly every scene in The Fury ends with the cinematic equivalent of an exclamation
point. Hell, the picture even features two performances (provided by Douglas and Stevens) distinguished by
actors indicating intensity by flaring their nostrils. Regarding the other leads, Cassavetes sleepwalks through a paycheck gig as per the norm, and Irving elevates her scenes with the
delicate sensitivity that distinguishes most of her work. None of
the major performances is particularly good, per se, but each is lively in a different way, so at least De Palma achieves a certain overcaffeinated tonal
consistency. Considering its assertive direction, colorful cast, and outlandish storyline, The Fury should be memorable in a comic-book sort of way, but ultimately, the picture is as anonymous as
the silhouetted models featured on the poster—instead of delivering unique jolts, it’s Carrie Lite.
The Fury:
FUNKY
3 comments:
Did you ever have the experience of seeing a movie - and being familiar with many of the locations used in the filming?
The Fury was shot mostly in an around Chicago, my old home town.
One location they used was Water Tower Place, which was newly constructed in 1972. It was (and still is) a mercantile establishment; when The Fury was made, there was a movie plex on the second level - and that's where I saw The Fury for the first time.
The glass elevators in the atrium well, where Kirk Douglas and Carrie Snodgress had one of their meetings, was no more than a couple hundred feet from the theater where we were all seeing it on screen - now there was a disconnect ...
The film spends too much time with Douglas who was a producer and should have spent more time with Robin who's not in the film enough. The scene between Irving and Douglas on a bus is an awful. The other students at Paragon seem to disappear as does Irving's mother. The end is drawn out, yet there are spectacular set pieces.
DePalma's best films ("Blow Out", "The Untouchables") come together when he combines solid character development with the ability to create real tension. Too often, he goes overboard with garish visuals (the luridly fascinating "Dressed to Kill" treads that territory, as does the flawed, but interesting pastiche "Body Double"), dated camera tricks (ostentatious use of split screen in the mostly-great "Carrie") and histrionic acting (looking at you, Mr. Pacino, in the mind-pulverizingly overrated "Scarface").
"The Fury" teeters toward the risible, although that last scene is a masterful Grand Guignol finish.
Post a Comment