Creepy, provocative, and sexy, this psychological
thriller asks what might happen if a rational modern man began to suspect that
he was the reincarnation of someone else—and then complicates that central
question by implying that the soul haunting the modern man’s body came back to
settle some nasty unfinished business. Michael Sarrazin, perfectly cast because
his wide eyes and slim build give him an ethereal quality no matter the
circumstances, stars as Peter Proud, a West Coast college professor whose life
seems perfect. He’s happy, respected, successful, and romantically involved
with a beautiful fellow teacher, Nora (Cornelia Sharpe). Yet when Peter starts
experiencing disturbing nightmares and phantom pains that doctors can’t
explain, he seeks out help from a paranormal researcher, Samuel (Paul Hecht).
Samuel suggests that Peter may be reliving memories from a past life.
Determined to resolve the situation, Peter tracks down the Massachusetts city
in which his nightmares/memories take place. Finding the city confirms to Peter
that the reincarnation is real. Next, Peter connects with Marcia (Margot Kidder), the widow of
Peter’s prior incarnation, and Ann (Jennifer O’Neil), Marcia’s daughter. Peter doesn’t
explain to either of these women why he’s in Massachusetts, partially because
he doubts they’ll believe him and partially because in the recurring
nightmares/memories, Marcia murders Peter’s prior incarnation. Obsessively
investigating the past-life mystery damages Peter’s present-day life, because
Nora bails on Peter when the going gets weird. Later, things get even worse when
Peter’s relationships with Ann and Marcia gain Freudian dimensions.
As helmed
by J. Lee Thompson, who mixes carnality and savagery in this film much as he
did in the great Cape Fear (1962), The Reincarnation of Peter Proud is
efficient, erotic, and evocative—an offbeat mixture of sleazy thrills and
thought-provoking concepts. Although the film loses points for its troika of
mediocre female performances (Kidder, O’Neill, and Sharpe are each
gorgeous but amateurish), Sarrazin’s intensity keeps the piece on track.
Written by Max Ehrlich, who adapted his novel of the same name, The Reincarnation of Peter Proud fits
into the mid-’70s trend of sensationalistic pseudoscience in popular culture. Furthermore, the writer gives decent lip service to the
philosophical and theological implications of Peter’s experience, because—as
the story’s paranormal researcher says at one point—the revelation that
reincarnation is real could permanently alter the human experience by erasing
fear of death. No dummy, Ehrlich delivers all of this heady material in the
form of a story filled with sex and violence.
And while the film’s brutality is
fairly minor, the film’s sexuality is quite intense. Both lurid
aspects of the picture converge in a climactic scene (no pun intended)
featuring Marcia masturbating in a bathtub while recalling the brutal
affections of her late husband. This startling vignette was almost certainly
the most graphic depiction of female self-pleasure in a mainstream movie until
the release of Brian De Palma’s Dressed
to Kill (1980). Yet the presence of such moments gets to the heart of why The Reincarnation of Peter Proud is so
watchable. With strong elements ranging from the disturbing psychosexual
connotations of the story to the unnerving score by the great Jerry Goldsmith
(love those electronic accents!), The
Reincarnation of Peter Proud engages the viewer on myriad levels
simultaneously. It’s not high art, per se, but it’s definitely not low art,
either.
The
Reincarnation of Peter Proud: GROOVY
Wow, I never would've guessed!
ReplyDeleteA very sexy and disturbing movie - saw it as a kid and could not sleep without a night light for months! Years later, watched it again. Still a pretty groovy picture. Sarrazin was a very compelling and attractive actor..his career crashed in the 80s, don't know why....didn't he also play a very sexy Frankenstein's monster in a late 1970s miniseries?
ReplyDeleteI assume Margot Kidder has old age makeup at some point, since she and Jennifer O'Neill were both born in 1948? (And O'Neill was born first!)
ReplyDeleteThink I'll hop over to TCM.com and suggest this movie. Haven't even seen it.
ReplyDeleteA great score. Haunting movie
ReplyDelete