Low-budget
filmmaker Charles B. Pierce was relentless about trying to recapture the
success of his first movie, The Legend of
Boggy Creek (1972), a backwoods monster movie that was shamelessly sold as
a true story, even though it wasn’t. For instance, Pierce’s last flick of the ’70s,
The Evictors, wasn’t a true story
either, despite hype to the contrary. Set in Louisiana circa 1942 (with extensive
flashbacks to the same area in 1928), The
Evictors employs the scary premise of displaced psychos tormenting the
current residents of the psychos’ former home. Unfortunately, the movie is far
less interesting than the concept. To the dismay of viewers suckered by the
spooky poster and trailer, The Evictors
comprises an hour of boring preamble and about 30 minutes of underwhelming
climax. Like Pierce’s other Southern-fried shockers, the picture has atmospheric
widescreen cinematography and decent production design, but there isn’t enough
narrative to sustain a feature. The picture begins with a sepia-toned flashback
of cops trying to evict rednecks from an attractive rural home in 1928. Bloodshed
ensues. Cut to 1942, when newlyweds Ben Watkins (Michael Parks) and Ruth
Watkins (Jessica Harper) decide to buy the house from overly solicitous realtor
Jake Rudd (Vic Morrow). For the next hour, Ruth grows worried based on cryptic
written threats and the resulting vague suspicions. (The acting in The Evictors is exactly as lifeless as
the material deserves, though cult-fave starlet Harper is a uniquely vulnerable
presence in any context.) To get a sense of how ineptly Pierce tries to build tension,
consider the bit where Ruth walks into her property’s barn, looks directly at a
group of chickens, then yelps when one of the chickens hops off the ground.
Pierce tries to jack up moments like these with spooky music, but the sum
effect is still ridiculous. Occasionally, the movie livens up with a grisly
flashback—as when someone gets murdered with a horseshoe attached to the end of
a stick—and, of course, when “the evictors” finally show up at the end of the
movie, a few minutes of chasing and running and screaming occur. This is followed by a
head-scratcher of a “twist” ending.
The Evictors: LAME
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