After having watched
countless low-budget ’70s movies about the brutalization of women, it’s hard to
know what to say about them anymore. These are vile movies catering to vile
appetites. To be clear, there’s a world of difference between something like
Sam Peckinpah’s Straw Dogs (1971),
which explores horrific psychosexual terrain as a means of exploring difficult
questions about what makes people tick, and something like The Bloody Slaying of Sarah Ridelander. While far from the worst
movie of its type, not only because it’s made with a modicum of skill but also because the exploitation scenes aren’t stretched out to fetishistic length,
this picture is still so fundamentally grimy as to make the sensible viewer
feel sullied by the time the closing credits roll. Anyway, to get a sense of
what to expect, consider the flick’s various titles: In
addition to The Bloody Slaying of Sarah
Ridelander, the picture is known as Cycle Psycho and Savage
Abduction (hence the above poster). In fact, put those titles together, and
you get the basic plot: A bloody slaying leads to cycle psychos committing a
savage abduction. After a woman named Sarah Ridelander is murdered, her
husband, Dick Ridelander (Tom Drake), escapes police scrutiny because of an
airtight alibi. Yet he’s actually the guilty party, since he hired a maniac named
Harry (Joe Turkel) to kill his wife. (Harry violated the
corpse afterward.) Dick’s dreams of getting away with crime are derailed when
Harry blackmails him with audio recordings of Dick ordering the murder. The price for silence is a pair of pretty girls Harry can rape and murder for kicks,
so Dick enlists a group of bikers to kidnap would-be victims. Unpleasantness
ensues. For those who care about such things, this movie provides a good
showcase for offbeat character actor Turkel, familiar to cinema fans for
his work in movies ranging from Paths of
Glory (1957) to Blade Runner
(1982). His performance isn’t imaginative, but his characterization is sufficiently
loathsome and twitchy to create a few unnerving moments.
The Bloody Slaying of Sarah Ridelander: LAME
1 comment:
I happily watch most any cinematic mongrel but, as you put it so well, these are the lowlest of the low. The poster blurb ('Drag them to a house in the woods..') is staggering, even for the sick '70's.
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