On a story level, Date with a Kidnapper—also
known as Kidnapped Coed, among other
titles—is the usual woman-hating sludge, a perverse male-power fantasy filled
with sexual violence. Indeed, most viewers would do well to ignore the movie’s
existence for just that reason. Yet for those who enjoy exploring the
fringes of American cinema, there’s something here worth examining.
Writer-director Frederick R. Friedel displays considerable visual imagination,
often using small details to give scenes atmosphere and tension. Regarding the
former, look at the way Friedel slides his camera past a spiderweb while
rolling into a shot establishing the vibe of a decrepit barn. Regarding the
latter, consider the movie’s inevitable rape scene, during which Friedel
repeatedly cuts to closeups of a male character’s bloody wrists while he
struggles against bonds, dramatizing the man’s hopeless efforts to rescue his
female companion.
The dynamic of that particular scene is even more
complicated than the preceding remarks suggest, because—as the film’s title suggests—Date with a Kidnapper is all about the
peculiar relationship between a small-time crook and the college girl he
abducts. In some scenes, he’s her tormentor, and in other scenes, he’s her
protector. He is also, at regular intervals, emasculated by circumstance. He’s the guy tied to
the chair during the rape, which is committed by other criminals. Even a
first-year student in gender studies could spend hours unpacking the
contradictory and demeaning images in this picture, such as the scene of the
coed begging her kidnapper for sex. In most movies of this type, that archetypal
moment is maddening and vile; here, it’s both of those things but also slightly
unnerving, because Friedel does a fairly good job of giving the kidnapper
emotional dimensions. (Example: We see him calling a nursing home to check in on his
infirm mother.) To no
one’s surprise, the coed isn’t nearly as well developed as a character, so she comes across as
a device for expressing Friedel’s troublesome ideas about feminine sexuality.
Parsing an exploitation flick for deeper meanings may seem absurd, but Date with a Kidnapper is made with sufficient
skill to invite closer inspection. If it’s not quite a real movie, in terms of
exceeding its grindhouse mandate, it comes close. And
if Leslie Rivera’s turn as the coed is frustrating—lots of naked desire without
real grounding in character—at least Jack Canon’s performance as the kidnapper is
consistently surprising.
Date
with a Kidnapper: FUNKY
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