To appreciate Hitchcock’s
mastery, one need only watch a few movies that try and fail to emulate his
Swiss-watch style. W is a silly
mystery/thriller about Katie (Twiggy), a young woman tormented by someone who
may or may not be her first husband, who may or may not actually be in jail,
and who may or may not have committed a murder, because Katie may or may not
have framed him as a means of escaping a troubled marriage. Not only does the
plot hinge on so many red herrings that it’s tiresome to sort out which things
are cinematic misdirection, but the affronts to logic are countless. Even worse,
W is boring, despite a few
serviceable suspense scenes and solid production values. (Bing Crosby
Productions, the folks behind W,
fared better with 1971’s killer-rat epic Ben
and 1973’s redneck-vigilante opus Walking
Tall.) Penned by a cabal of writers including Ronald Shusett, who later
co-created the Alien franchise, W follows Katie and her second husband,
Ben (Michael Witney), through several episodes of bedevilment—cars rigged to
crash, pets brutally murdered, and so on. Eventually, the couple hires a shifty
PI, Charles (Eugene Roche), only to discover he’s more of a problem than a
solution. As the movie reaches its dippy climax, Katie’s twisted ex shows up in
the form of William (Dirk Benedict), a bug-eyed psychopath personifying every
cliché associated with bug-eyed psychopaths. It’s all quite leaden, despite sly
supporting turns by Roche, Michael Conrad, and John Vernon. Oh, and if you’ve
ever wondered why British model-turned-actress Twiggy never did more with the
goodwill she earned by starring in Ken Russell’s The Boy Friend (1971), look no further than this flick for an
explanation.
W:
LAME
Hey, Twiggy's a treasure - she's buried under a big 'W'.
ReplyDeleteTwiggy did have that cameo in THE BLUES BROTHERS.
ReplyDelete