Frenzy
Genre: crime
drama
With: Jon
Finch (Richard Blaney), Barry Foster (Robert Rusk), Barbara Leigh-Hunt (Brenda
Blaney), Anna Massey (Babs Milligan), Alec McCowen (Chief Inspector Oxford), Vivien
Merchant (Mrs. Oxford), Billie Whitelaw (Hetty Porter), Clive Swift (Johnny
Porter), Bernard Cribbins (Felix Forsythe), Jean Marsh (Monica Barling)
Director: Alfred
Hitchcock
Screenplay:
Anthony Shaffer (from a novel by Arthur La Bern)
Release: 1972
Studio:
Universal Pictures
Rating: PA
MBiS score: 8.5/10
A Friend in Need Is
a Useful Friend Indeed
QuickView
Story-line:
when London women are stalked by a serial killer who uses neckties to strangle them,
an irascible, unemployed bartender emerges as the suspect.
Pluses: excellent
acting all around, a suspenseful and detailed screenplay that pushes all the right
buttons and plays with the viewer until the very end, outstanding
cinematography, economical direction, complicit editing by John Jympson and music
by Ron Goodwin.
Minuses: you
may find the film’s humour too morbid at times but trust Mrs. Oxford to serve
up priceless reparteees along with her improbable gourmet dishes.
Comments:
FRENZY, a serial killer movie with a British feel, makes a valiant effort to
develop its characters instead of insisting on mayhem and grisly details. Yes, a
couple of scenes are terrifying and even lurid but I’ll never forget one chilling,
understated sequence in which the camera goes down a staircase to a busy street
rather than show the nefarious deed being committed upstairs. If murder in real
life is the most horrendous of crimes, I have to admit that fictional works
like this one can turn it into riveting entertainment.
MBiS
© 2018 – All rights reserved