An embarrassing credit for
everyone involved, this sleazy killer-thriller emerged from the bowels of Roger
Corman’s ’70s operation, representing all the worst qualities of the Corman
brand and none of the best—with the exception of giving a promising filmmaker
his first crack at directing. Curtis Hanson, who later graduated to
sophisticated dramas and thrillers including L.A. Confidential (1997), displays zero flair while helming the
sordid saga of Eddie Collins, a twisted gym teacher who gets off on killing
pretty young women and, eventually, sexually violating their corpses. In the
fine tradition of low-rent shockers that rip off Alfred Hitchcock’s Psycho (1960), Sweet Kill also introduces a mother fixation, since Eddie’s
problems date back to a childhood trauma. In any event, the movie is painfully
dull to watch because long stretches of time pass during which nothing happens;
worse, even when Hanson unleashes something colorful like the disposal of a
body, events unfold in quasi-real time, thereby eliminating momentum and
suspense. Plus, naturally, the movie reflects Corman’s tendency to compensate
for weak narratives with gratuitious nudity, so nearly every actress who appears
in Sweet Kill parades around either
topless or fully nude in sequences that are more perfunctory than erotic. (The
movie actually climaxes with a sort of greatest-tits montage comprising quick
glimpses of all preceding skin scenes.) Adding to the overall awfulness of Sweet Kill—which is occasionally
exhibited by the alternate titles The
Arousers and A Kiss from Eddie—is
the presence of 1950s heartthrob Tab Hunter in the leading role. While his
willingness to play against type is admirable, he attacks the part with more
gusto than skill, resulting in a flat and somewhat inept characterization.
Sweet Kill:
LAME
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