Released fairly early in
the cycle of movies about Vietnam vets wrestling with PTSD upon returning to
America, Jud deserves some credit for
tackling serious issues at the very moment they were gaining sociopolitical
relevance. Unfortunately, writer-director Gunther Collins has more passion for
his subject matter than he does cinematic skill or psychological insight, so Jud echoes its protagonist’s
angst-ridden journey by flailing about in search of meaning. The title
character brawls, mopes, and wanders, pushing away nearly everyone who tries to
form an emotional connection with him, and he endures flashbacks to
horrific moments from overseas combat. Collins does an adequate job of
conveying his leading character’s anguished metal state. Yet Collins fails to
build an actual story around the character, so events in Jud just sort of happen, without any sense of a narrative shape.
Worse, the climactic moment, which involves the death of a supporting
character, is extrinsic to Jud’s journey, because the doomed character had
major psychological problems well before he crossed Jud’s path. A more unified
approach to this sort of material would have tethered the narrative’s ultimate
tragedy to Jud’s PTSD, thereby conveying a theme about war claiming victims
even after soldiers leave the battlefield, somewhat in the vein of the classic
WWII drama The Best Years of Our Lives
(1946). With its barrage of directionless ennui and empty lyricism, Jud is a jumble.
Set in Los Angeles, the
picture begins with Jud Carney (Joseph Kaufmann) renting an apartment in a
small building run by busybody landlord Fred Hornkel (Norman Burton). Two
tenants glom onto Jud immediately—lonely single lady Shirley (Alix Wyeth) and
self-loathing closeted homosexual Bill (Robert Deman). Jud shuns both of
them, gravitating to pretty girls for company, first Sunny (Claudia Jennings),
with whom Jud trysts on the beach, and later Kathy (Bonnie Bittner), with whom
Jud attempts to build a real relationship. Sometimes, Jud seems like he has
everything together, as when he expertly prevents a used-car salesman from
swindling him, and sometimes, he’s a hair-trigger menace, as when he beats a
guy whose girlfriend resembles the woman who dumped Jud while he was in
Vietnam. Despite smothering the film with plaintive folk songs, Collins never
gives the audience a clue as to what they’re supposed to make of everything
that happens onscreen. At the time of its release, perhaps Jud said something fresh about how the experiences of Vietnam
veterans differed from those of servicemen in previous wars. Seen today, it’s
sincere but inadvertently shallow, a near miss at best. For cult-movie fans,
the main point of interest is presumably Jennings’ participation, as Jud was the first movie credit for the
short-lived Playboy
model-turned-actress.
Jud:
FUNKY
2 comments:
where I find this movie subtitled in Spanish?
It is on YT in 2 parts, but US dialogue.
Post a Comment