Had this picture been
written, performed, or filmed with even a modicum of sophistication, it could
easily have become a disturbing thriller contrasting the everyday life of a
killer with that of an unlucky individual doomed to cross the killer’s path.
Unfortunately, the execution of Forced
Entry adheres to the grindhouse playbook, with cheap-looking images of
amateurish performances stitched together by way of jumpy editing and married
to screechy music and sound effects. Instead of being creepy and provocative,
the picture is mostly sluggish and unpleasant. For the first hour or so, Forced Entry cross-cuts scenes featuring
deranged rapist/murderer Carl (Ron Max) with scenes of frustrated housewife
Nancy (Tanya Roberts). Carl works as a mechanic, but in his spare time he picks
up women, drags them to remote locations, and defiles them. Because the movie
also includes scenes of Carl doing his work conscientiously and being kind to
his elderly neighbor, the gist is that he’s got issues with pretty young women.
Meanwhile, Nancy feels ignored by her husband even though she enjoys raising
their children in a luxurious suburban home. The characters intersect when
Nancy brings her car into Carl’s garage for service. Soon afterward, he breaks
into her house (hence the title) and torments Nancy. As to what happens next,
the film’s alternate title, The Last
Victim, should offer more than a hint. One can almost feel a credible film
trying to emerge from beneath Forced
Entry’s sensationalistic surface, but the storytelling is too clumsy to
take seriously, especially with the vapid Roberts—who later joined the cast of Charlie’s Angels during the show’s last
season—providing the film’s emotional center. Interesting footnote: Because Forced Entry was unofficially adapted
from a 1973 X-rated movie of the same name, it’s among the few examples of
mainstream Hollywood borrowing story material from the porn industry.
Forced Entry: LAME
Written and co-produced by Archie and DC comics artist Henry Scarpelli, father of '70s teen idol Glenn Scarpelli.
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