Good luck deciphering the
plot of Medusa, a jumbled
mystery/thriller shot in Greece with two American leading actors accompanied by
a European supporting cast. Perpetually tanned pretty boy George Hamilton, who
also produced this disaster, stars as Jeffrey, some sort of debauched jet-set
type who flits around Europe looking for a good time. The picture opens with a
scene of Jeffrey dying on a boat and then, in voiceover, promising the audience
an explanation for his demise. The rest of the picture is an extended
flashback, but clarity surrounding Jeffrey’s circumstances—or, for that matter,
his characterization—never emerges. Instead, Medusa grinds through one seemingly unrelated vignette after
another. In one scene, Jeffrey crashes a party while dressed in an Elvis-style
white jumpsuit, then jumps onto a table and sings until he’s dragged away. In
another scene, he reacts with horror upon discovering that his gangster
acquaintance, the sadistic Angelo (Cameron Mitchell), has murdered someone. And
yet in the scene following that one, Jeffrey himself commits murder, since it
appears that he’s either a serial killer or the accomplice of a serial killer. (The
last thing this dunderheaded flick needed to do was play perceptual games.) Worst
of all, Jeffrey chews up long periods of screen time by spewing
bargain-basement philosophy, suggesting that, on some level, Hamilton
envisioned Medusa as a character
study of a playboy in decline. Whatever the intentions, the culprits behind
this absolute mess of a movie (including director Gordon Hessler and
screenwriter Christopher Wicking) can’t lock into a coherent storyline or a
consistent tone for more than a few minutes at a time. After all, the same
movie containing the frivolous scene of Jeffrey crashing the party also
features an extended sequence of Angelo torturing some poor guy to death by
pumping his stomach full of water until the guy drowns.
Medusa:
SQUARE
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