Even if one ignores
the story’s implications of incest, Out
of Season is a creepy little number. Cliff Robertson plays an American who
visits the seaside British hotel run by his old flame, played by Vanessa
Redgrave, then rekindles their affair—even as he sleeps with her adult
daughter, played by pouty-mouthed sexpot Susan George. Oh, and more than half
the film’s scenes comprise bitter arguments, with the mother and daughter spitting
venom at each other while the ex-lovers trade vicious accusations and
criticisms. This stuff never quite reaches the level of high art, but Alan
Bridges’ stately direction, an intelligent script, and three strong
performances give Out of Season a
certain dark magnetism. And even though the picture is quite talky, one could
do worse than listening to Redgrave and Robertson issuing reams of dialogue.
George acquits herself well, compensating for one-dimensional shrillness by
raising the movie’s temperature considerably during erotic scenes. It’s not fun
to watch three people eviscerate each other, but Out of Season holds the viewer’s attention for nearly all of its 90
moody minutes. As for
the film’s provenance, reports differ—some sources indicate that the picture is
based on a play, though the credits are vague, and it appears the British dramatist Harold Pinter was at one point set
to direct the picture. (He made his cinematic directorial debut with the
previous year’s Butley, a similarly
cruel film.)
In any event, Joe (Robertson) shows up one day and surprises Ann
(Redgrave), whom he hasn’t seen in 20 years. Both were married to other people
in the intervening period, and Ann is caught in a nasty cycle of squabbles with her daughter, Joanna (George), who resents living in a tiny
town. Watching Ann and Joe fall back in love drives Joanna mad with jealously,
so she throws herself at Joe, who’s too much of a drunken, self-involved cad to
refuse her. There’s more to the picture than that, but those are the broad strokes, so Out of Season unfolds like a
thriller—how far will Joe take his illicit affair with Joanna, and when will
Joanna spring her trap by revealing what’s happening to her mother? The story isn’t quite meaty enough to support an entire feature,
so the narrative energy flags periodically; Bridges and his collaborators would
have done well to add a subplot or two. Taken for what it is, Out of Season gets the job done.
Robertson’s macho intensity strikes sparks against Redgrave’s pained coldness,
and George plays sexual games with such uninhibited insouciance that she’s
simultaneously seductive and unbearable, just the right toxic mixture for the
situation. Pity the filmmakers didn’t stick the landing, but so be it.
Out of Season: FUNKY
1 comment:
Where can this movie be found?
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