Confusing, dull, and ugly, the crime
thriller Scorchy stars sexy
actress/singer Connie Stevens as an FBI agent who works undercover as an
international smuggler. The general thrust of the story is that the heroine's
life becomes complicated once she learns that a wealthy acquaintance has become
a smuggler, meaning that to catch a criminal she must betray a friend. Not
exactly the freshest story. In fact, the only things separating Scorchy from the average TV movie of the
same era are gory kills and topless shots. That said, lurid action movies have
their low pleasures, so it's not as if a film of this type needs to accomplish
much. Yet meeting even minimal expectations is more than the folks behind Scorchy can manage. The storyline is
needlessly convoluted, as evidenced by the presence of at least three major
villains; character development and recognizable human emotion are as absent
from the script as basic logic; and the stop-and-start pacing makes Scorchy feel disorganized, episodic, and
repetitive.
For example, the movie stops dead halfway through its running time
for an epic chase scene that involves characters pursing each other on foot, in
a commuter train, on dune buggies, and finally on motorcycles, suggesting the filmmakers wrongly assumed that a big jolt of action would generate a few moments
of interest. Alas, because the action is staged as clumsily as everything else
in Scorchy, the chase scene does not
have the desired effect. The movie’s banter is just as bad. After Stevens'
character tells her supervisor that he should relax by saying, "You need a
good blowjob," he cheerfully replies, "You're a fruitcake, you
bitch." Stevens, who found her biggest success as a Las Vegas
entertainer, is attractive but vapid, and the caliber of the supporting cast
is reflected by the inclusion of future small-screen player Greg Evigan (BJ and the Bear), who made his
big-screen debut with Scorchy. Only
B-movie veteran William Smith, playing one of the many villains, delivers the
kind of teeth-gnashing intensity one expects from this sort of slop. Adding
insult to injury, some available prints of Scorchy
feature a godawful synthesizer score that was added to the movie for its VHS
release in the 1980s.
Scorchy:
LAME
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