There is rarely a good
reason to watch a grimy thriller about a psychopath who menaces women, because these pictures are usually
dull, hateful, and repetitive. All of which is true about Poor Albert & Little Annie, better known by its deceptive but outrageous
reissue title, I Dismember Mama. (The
titular matriarch is neither sliced nor diced.) That said, Poor Albert & Little Annie has a distinct vibe that nearly
makes the picture worthwhile as an extreme viewing experience. First off, the
plot is so thin that very little happens, so each time director Paul Leder reaches
a nasty sequence, he lingers for uncomfortable durations of time. The vignette
of unhinged Albert (Zooey Hall) forcing a woman to strip and dance goes on forever, which gives the scene a queasy
sort of verisimilitude. Similarly, the way the movie goes all the way down the
rabbit hole of Albert’s perversion is disquieting—while the film isn’t particularly gory, it’s
deeply unpleasant from start to finish. The storyline begins with Albert
bolting from a nuthouse. Then he shows up at his mother’s house with bad
intentions. The unlucky occupants of the house are a housekeeper, Alice
(Marlene Tracy), and her preteen daughter, Annie (Geri Reischi). Things don’t
go well for Alice. Thereafter, Albert kidnaps Annie and becomes sexually
preoccupied with her during a long day of frolicking in parks. The introduction
of a hooker and a hotel room does not improve poor Annie’s situation. Suffering
from bad acting, inappropriate music, and sluggish pacing, Poor Albert & Little Annie fails as a movie, but works, after a
fashion, as a kinky mood piece. This is just the picture for folks who enjoy
feeling rotten about humanity.
Poor Albert & Little Annie: LAME
3 comments:
Four Star regular Herschel Burke Gilbert isn't the kind of name you associate with something like this.
And a few years later, Geri Reischl would play the role of Jan Brady, replacing Eve Plumb for "The Brady Bunch Hour."
In the 80's movie FX, mentions "I dismember mama" movie probably not in direct reference, but just a humorous play on horror movie titles.
Post a Comment