Apparently placed on a shelf for several years
after it was completed, the slow-moving thriller Die, Sister, Die! must have struck audiences as hopelessly
old-fashioned when it was finally released in 1978—the movie doesn’t come close
to delivering the type of sexually charged supernatural scares promised by the
lurid poster art. In some respects, Die,
Sister, Die! feels like an artifact from the genteel 1930s, perhaps because
that's when composer Hugo Friedhofer, who created the picture’s dense
orchestral score, began his career. However, don’t let the preceding
description get you thinking that Die,
Sister, Die! is some classical shocker in the Hitchcock mold; that level of
narrative sophistication is well beyond the powers of producer-director Randall
Hood and his collaborators. This forgettable picture offers nothing more than a
creaky murder story, so while it’s not a screamingly bad cinematic experience,
it’s so predictable and sluggish and stodgy that it disappears from memory
immediately after it concludes, if not sooner.
Here’s the setup. After aging
society lady Amanda (Edith Atwater) attempts suicide, her craven brother,
Edward (Jack Ging), fumes because her survival means he cannot collect the
family inheritance. Edward hires a nurse, Esther (Antoinette Bower), who has a
checkered past—she was driven from a previous job amid accusations of malfeasance.
Edward instructs Esther to “let nature take its course” should Amanda attempt
suicide again, offering a share of the inheritance in exchange. Complicating
matters are Esther’s conscience, the investigative labors of a local physician,
and Amanda’s personal demons. The reasons why Amanda wishes to die stem from
intrigue involving Edward, their father, and a third sibling.
Strangely, had
the filmmakers exercised even more restraint—up
to and including a different title—Die,
Sister, Die! could have become a decent suspense picture. Alas, it suffers
the familiar neither-fish-nor-fowl syndrome, because it’s too trashy for
discriminating viewers and not trashy enough for the grindhouse crowd. Oh,
well. At least Friedhofer’s sturdy score is a pleasant sonic throwback.
Die,
Sister, Die!: FUNKY
The poster reminds me of Isaac Hayes' performance of the Theme from Shaft during the Oscars in the 70's.
ReplyDeleteThe terrific Intrada label issued Friedhofer's score on CD. It's OOP now, but I bet eBay has it.
ReplyDelete