The Adulteress is basically a Harlequin romance viewed through the fashionably
downbeat prism of early-’70s cinema. The setup is a compendium of erotic-fiction
clichés, and the payoff represents a laughable attempt at tragic heaviosity. What’s
more, the acting is wildly uneven, no small problem seeing as how The Adulteress is an intimate character
piece with only three major roles. One evening, middle-aged Carl Steiner
(Gregory Morton) drunkenly stumbles out of a bar, so studly young drifter Hank
Baron (Eric Braeden) drives Carl home. Carl’s decades-younger wife, Inez (Tyne
Daly), insists that Hank crash on the couch as repayment. The next day,
sobered-up Carl offers Hank a handyman job, and Hank learns that Carl and Inez
lost a young son a while back in a car accident, hence Carl’s self-destructive
drinking. Seeing shirtless Hank working hard gets Inez hot and bothered, so
Carl, who is impotent, asks Hank to impregnate his wife. Predictably,
lovemaking leads to feelings, and the resulting three-way relationship gets
dangerously messy. Everything about The
Adulteress is contrived and false. Braeden’s far too wooden an actor to
portray a hip Vietnam vet, and Daly is too grounded and tough to play a woman
who lets her life spin out of control. There’s also zero heat between the
actors, no matter how many signifiers for virility co-writer/director Norbert
Meisel throws onscreen. (At various times, Braden rides a horse and a
motorcycle, because, you now, power between his legs and all that.) The film moves
at a deadly pace, with innumerable scenes of pointless conversation, and the
wannabe passionate high point—Daly straddling Braeden while he’s astride a
horse—is like one of those Fabio book-cover paintings come to life.
The Adulteress: LAME
The poster art looks more suitable for a Harry Novak or Dave Friedman epic.
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