Before he started making
idiosyncratic character studies, Alan Rudolph got his directorial career
started with a pair of low-budget genre pictures, the first of which was this
underwhelming thriller about hippies running afoul of demonic flowers. Rudolph
also wrote the movie. Dull, shapeless, and vague, the flick begins with
lackadaisical musician Neil (Carl Crow) working as an assistant to Professor
Kilrenny (Victor Izay) during a research trip into the desert. They discover a skeleton
in a field dotted with vibrant red flowers, and Neil has weird visions. Some
time later, after Neil has parted ways with the professor, Neil assembles a
rock trio and takes his bandmates to a remote cabin, where they practice tunes
and romance compliant hippie chicks. Unfortunately, those pesky red flowers
bloom near the cabin, so Neil’s bandmates begin experiencing visions. Mayhem
ensues, with a major character falling victim to the flowers’ influence—or something
like that. The deliberately ambiguous Premonition
leaves viewers as bewildered as the characters, but that type of narrative
approach only works when storylines are grounded in memorable events. Alas,
nothing in Premonition is memorable.
Neil spends a lot of time gawking while he reacts to dark visions, and he yaks to
his buddies about how upsetting the visions were, but he never does much of
anything to improve his situation. Although Premonition
benefits from slick photography by future A-list Hollywood shooter John Bailey,
the movie is so bereft of actual events that it’s excruciatingly boring, and
Rudolph misses the opportunity to draw ironic parallels between the herbs that
the hippies smoke onscreen and the plants that might or might not be the source
of their troubles. At least Premonition
got Rudolph’s unique career going, so props to the filmmaker’s father, veteran
TV helmer Oscar Rudolph, who executive-produced his son’s directorial debut.
Premonition: LAME
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