Füge eine Handlung in deiner Sprache hinzuSisters inherit assets from divorced parents. One receives evidence exposing corrupt judge father, the other seeks monetary gain. Escalating battle over desired possessions leads to deadly c... Alles lesenSisters inherit assets from divorced parents. One receives evidence exposing corrupt judge father, the other seeks monetary gain. Escalating battle over desired possessions leads to deadly consequences.Sisters inherit assets from divorced parents. One receives evidence exposing corrupt judge father, the other seeks monetary gain. Escalating battle over desired possessions leads to deadly consequences.
- British Police Detective - Dark Hair
- (as John Laurimore)
- Man in street
- (Nicht genannt)
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Not just *a* Judge, but 'The Judge' - Leo Genn's character who is continually accorded the definite article by sundry friends and enemies - who are largely interchangeable. This melodrama, with a heavy accent on the corrupt authority figures, bears some resemblance to Pete Walker's later baroque horrors. But the formula isn't developed as of yet - and he had yet to work with the waggish scriptwriter David McGillivray. Walker followed this film with the relatively interesting curio, "The Flesh and Blood Show" - collaborating with the talented veteran Alfred Shaughnessy of "Upstairs, Downstairs" fame - and then his fecund period began with "The House of Whipcord" in 1974.
Susan George and Judy Huxtable are done a great disservice by Walker and scriptwriter Murray Smith here with their reductive portrayal of female characters. Such as shame for George in particular, subject of much brutality in Peckinpah's "Straw Dogs" the following year, but also Huxtable, who was the evocative beauty at the heart of the whimsical "Les Bicylettes de Belsize" two years earlier.
There is always some degree of objectification of women in Walker's films, but what is lacking here is the suspenseful, charged context of his later films. "Frightmare" and "House of Mortal Sin" have something of the Hitchcockian about them: Hitchcock-meets-the Grimm Brothers-meets-British exploitation cinema of the 70s. This is a rather more humdrum affair, with even the exotic locations eliciting no more than a Gallic shrug in this viewer.
Though far from exciting, this movie does have some semi-interesting plot twists, a handful of colorful characters, and a smattering of tension. An alleged "thriller", it suffers from a lack of any real thrills. The long-winded story and sporadic "action" sequences do little to hold our attention. A chore to watch, it's almost saved by its "big pay off" ending. Almost...
Unfortunately, this early attempt by the director to break free from his sexploitation roots sees him struggling to find his feet, the plot meandering all over the place, the pacing dreadfully slow, with very little of the bolder elements that would make his later films so much fun; in fact, if it wasn't for George, who looks absolutely stunning throughout, go-go dancing in a bikini during the opening credits, modelling some very short dresses, relaxing in a bubble bath (curse those bubbles!), cavorting in her underwear, and wearing just a towel while trapped in a sauna (Die Steaming, Marianne?), 'Die Screaming, Marianne' would qualify as a total snoozeathon.
3.5 out of 10, generously rounded up to 4 for IMDb.
Wusstest du schon
- WissenswertesThe nightclub sign, translated from Spanish, reads: "This month's special attraction, from England, Marianne [The Hips] McDonald. See her dance go go every night. Admission 50 pesetas," Spanish money, although credits claim the movie was shot "entirely on location in England and the Algarve, Portugal," and the sailors drive up to a poster for a bullfight in Mallorca, toward the Spanish border with France.
- PatzerThe nightclub sign, translated from Spanish, reads: "This month's special attraction, from England, Marianne [The Hips] McDonald. See her dance go go every night. Admission 50 pesetas," Spanish money, although credits claim the movie was shot "entirely on location in England and the Algarve, Portugal," and the sailors drive up to a poster for a bullfight in Mallorca, toward the Spanish border with France.
- Zitate
Nightclub Sign: [translated from Spanish] This month's special attraction, from England, Marianne
["THE HIPS"]
Nightclub Sign: McDonald. See her dance go go every night. Admission 50 pesetas
- Alternative VersionenThere have been many discrepancies involving the recent DVD release of this title by Image Entertainment:
- The DVD represents the full-length 99-minute version of the film that has not been seen since the 1970s. There have been many versions of the film with various running times. The original U.S. version ran 84 minutes, omitting 15 minutes of crucial scenes. The DVD is the uncut version and has been digitally remastered.
- The version of the film on the DVD is presented in 1.33:1 full frame. Many people claim the film was shot widescreen. Director Pete Walker shot the film in a 1.33:1 open matte aspect ratio with the intention of matting the film at 1.85:1. As the 1.85:1 matting would have eliminated the excess picture info at the top and bottom of the frame, the film is presented as shot.
- VerbindungenFeatured in Courting Controversy: Die Filme des Pete Walker (2005)
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- Erscheinungsdatum
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- Auch bekannt als
- Die Screaming Marianne
- Drehorte
- Brighton Railway Station, Queens Rd., Brighton, England, Vereinigtes Königreich(actress Susan George is seen walking toward this location after exiting Sloopy's)
- Produktionsfirma
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