Often cited as the worst
movie John Huston ever made, Phobia
isn’t one of those failed pictures that viewers can enjoy ironically, marveling
at logic bumps and technical errors. Instead, it’s excruciatingly boring. The concept
for this would-be shocker is simple. When his patients start dying in horrible
ways that are related to their phobias, police identify Dr. Peter Ross (Paul
Michael Glaser) as a suspect, then discover he’s involved with a daring
experiment in immersion therapy. Using images and sounds projected on
theater-style equipment, as well as props and real-life situations, Dr. Ross
forces patients to face their fears. As in, he makes a woman who’s afraid of
being molested watch gang-rape scenes, he makes a dude who’s fearful of snakes
handle a giant snake, and so on. Phobia
is so lazy and stupid in its conception that it’s as if the filmmakers either
forgot or simply neglected to create any mystery or suspense, because the truth
of what’s happening is evident from the very first scenes. Every creative
decision compounds the problem. Huston’s camerawork, often a hallmark of his
skillful approach, fails the project completely, because he clearly elected to
shoot the minimum amount of coverage for every scene, the better to wrap
production days early and move on to more interesting activities. The picture
cuts together, but there’s no life in the editing, suggesting there weren’t any
options for generating vitality. And speaking of vitality, that’s exactly what
Glaser, best known as the costar of TV’s Starsky
& Hutch, lacks here. He’s so lethargic it seems like Huston never
bothered to tell Glaser when the camera started running.
Phobia:
LAME
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