The beautiful French actress
Corinne Cléry endured an unusual amount of onscreen punishment in her early
roles. Throughout the softcore epic The
Story of O (1975), she’s beaten, psychologically tormented, and used as a
sexual plaything. And throughout the lurid Italian road movie Hitch-Hike, she suffers much of the same
treatment. Although the latter picture has strong cinematic merits, including a
deep wellspring of plot twists and a wickedly fast pace, it’s difficult not to
view Hitch-Hike through the prism of
Cléry’s characterization. Hitch-Hike
is a twisted sort of male fantasy, so the presence of a comely woman who gets
off on being abused feeds into the picture’s overall themes of masculine energy
run amok. Partisans of the picture, including the actors, perceive Hitch-Hike as a serious examination of troubling
concepts, and that interpretation has some validity. Yet at the same time, the
movie is shamelessly exploitive and sensationalistic. Unlike other ’70s movies
that mixed notions of gender and violence in provocative ways, however, Hitch-Hike doesn’t shield itself against
criticism through the use of believable characters and immaculate plotting.
After all, Cléry’s character ignores several opportunities to escape captivity, and the main villain ludicrously survives many near-death
encounters. In other words, Hitch-Hike
is a thrill ride first, and a movie of ideas second. The difference matters.
Shot in Italy but designed to look like it was photographed in the
California/Nevada desert, Hitch-Hike
begins by introducing Walter Mancini (Franco Nero) and his wife, Eve (Cléry),
two vacationing Europeans. Walter, a journalist of dubious credibility, is a
self-loathing drunk who physically, sexually, and verbally abuses Eve. Theirs
is a marriage of convenience, since Eve’s father is Watler’s boss, but they’re
bonded by a vivacious sex life. One afternoon, the couple picks up a
hitchhiker, Adam Konitz (David Hess), who turns out to be an escaped bank
robber. Before long, Adam makes sport of tying up Walter and then raping Eve in
front of her helpless husband—even though, per the deviant spirit of the movie,
Eve enjoys being raped as much as she enjoys her usual rough sex with Walter.
Violent plot twists pile atop each other as the movie speeds toward a
nihilistic climax.
Cowritten and directed by Pasquale Festa Campanile, from a
novel by Peter Kane, Hitch-Hike has
energy to burn. The cinematography by Franco Di Giacomo and Giuseppe Ruzzolini
is vibrant, the editing by Antonio Siciliano is almost savagely fast at times,
and the music by Italian-cinema mainstay Ennio Morricone is suitably bizarre.
(Even the dubbing, de rigeur for Italian movies of the period, is better than
usual, so lip movements and voices match fairly well.) Htich-Hike is executed with above-average skill on every level
except perhaps the most important ones. The story prioritizes excitement over logic and taste, Cléry and Nero give enthusiastic but unpersusive
performances, and Campanile plays a tricky game of simultaneously celebrating
and satirizing the male animal; after all, Campanile’s camera spends as much
time lingering on the contours of Cléry’s nude body as do the eyes of the
predators who bedevil her character. There’s a conversation piece buried in
this gruesome movie, but the conversation it invites is not a pleasant one.
Hitch-Hike:
FUNKY
Wow, I've never heard of Corinne Cléry! Thank you.
ReplyDeleteI always knew her mainly as the girl Hugo Drax sets his vicious dogs on in "Moonraker." It seems she never could catch a break.
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