Ajouter une intrigue dans votre langueHorror and suspense in the story of a psychotic maniac who literally "loves" women to death.Horror and suspense in the story of a psychotic maniac who literally "loves" women to death.Horror and suspense in the story of a psychotic maniac who literally "loves" women to death.
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A handsome and lonely gym teacher Eddie Collins can't perform sexually due to his constant watching of his mother undress while he hid in her closet as a child.His only recourse is to kill the women he tries to sleep with and stash them in a pigeon hutch on his roof.He hires a prostitute to dress as his dead mother,the only way he is able to achieve sexual gratification..."The Arousers" is the first film of director Curtis Hanson.Originally shot in 1971 under the title "Sweet Kill",this film lingered on the shelf until 1973 when executive producer Roger Corman had Hanson shoot two days of nudity inserts to spice-up the film.Angus Scrimm of "Phanatsm" fame has a small cameo here.Overall,this is a good piece of sleaze from the early 70's that should satisfy the exploitation fans out there looking for plenty of nudity,sex and violence.7 out of 10.
Current A-list director Curtis Hanson's first 1970 film portrayal of a sexually-deviant gym teacher and serial killer features an incredibly creepy performance by Tab Hunter which is so good, it raises the quality of the whole movie. Unfortunately, the production values are rather inferior: the film has the flat lighting of a TV-movie, mixed sound quality, an underdeveloped script, and a few embarrassingly awkward scenes - one with Hunter giving a male student advice about girls that reminded me of a cheap educational filmstrip, and another with police finding marijuana in a character's bathtub. With all of the realistic serial killer films which have come out since this film, it probably had greater originality when first released, as an early attempt to portray a serial killer's actions squarely in the middle of mundane everyday reality. However, part of the creepy quality here is that Hunter portrays a character who seems exceedingly normal on the outside but is obviously incredibly disturbed. The whole sexual impotence aspect of his compulsions thankfully remains low-key, as simply slipping this guy some Viagra would probably not solve his difficulties.
All in all, definitely not a bad time-filler or debut for Hanson; there are a couple of memorable shock scenes. However, for a much more substantial treatment of similar subject matter, I suggest Robert Altman's very obscure 1964 film "Nightmare in Chicago."
All in all, definitely not a bad time-filler or debut for Hanson; there are a couple of memorable shock scenes. However, for a much more substantial treatment of similar subject matter, I suggest Robert Altman's very obscure 1964 film "Nightmare in Chicago."
It's hard to imagine that Curtis Hanson, the man who directed the exceptional films 'L.A. Confidential' and 'The Bedroom Window' could make such an unmemorable film. Too bad, because it had potential to be a real cult classic. Tab Hunter's performance is terrific as the man who is unable to make love to women, so in order to compensate he murders them. Everything is in place for a great movie and the first third of the film is really quite intense.
To show everything from Hunter's point of a view is voyeuristic treat at first, and it all seems quite real. Sadly, director Hanson loses sight of this edge early on and uses the same gimmick throughout, making it quite monotonous and ultimately boring. Not only that, but he shows us other unimportant characters just to fill the already short running time (84 min), because there really isn't enough of a movie here.
I managed to find this film under it's alias name 'The Arousers.' Despite my negative remarks, the movie is worth a look, if anything to see one of Curtis Hanson's firsts and Tab Hunter's creepy performance. Maybe some viewers will get into it, but I lost it after a half hour.
To show everything from Hunter's point of a view is voyeuristic treat at first, and it all seems quite real. Sadly, director Hanson loses sight of this edge early on and uses the same gimmick throughout, making it quite monotonous and ultimately boring. Not only that, but he shows us other unimportant characters just to fill the already short running time (84 min), because there really isn't enough of a movie here.
I managed to find this film under it's alias name 'The Arousers.' Despite my negative remarks, the movie is worth a look, if anything to see one of Curtis Hanson's firsts and Tab Hunter's creepy performance. Maybe some viewers will get into it, but I lost it after a half hour.
Random encounters with young adoring women pushes frigid Hunter beyond his sexually repressed limit, and there seems to be no end to the procession of prospective victims to test his weakened threshold.
Only local girl Barbara (Turney) appears off-limits as the killing spree becomes more brazen. The frequency of the crimes isn't completely out of the realms of possibility when you consider how prolific serial killers were in the 60s-80s, but there's still of lot of plot latitude enabling this perp, his risky business in obvious proximity to potential witnesses yet his crimes are bold and practically uninhibited.
Hunter is chilling playing against type, trusted, timid school sports coach by day, twisted peeping Tom and serial killer by night, whilst Turney gains sympathy as the lonely-heart neighbour whose affections for the unstable bachelor never seem to gain his attention no matter how persistent her efforts. Turney seemed like a capable actress whose career was flourishing when she died prematurely in 1978.
Exploitation film fans should also relish the sight of fresh-faced Roberta Collins playing the sassy call girl with whom Hunter's character role plays his perverted desires in a couple of scenes.
Violent and rudderless, just a procession of frenzied murders in a loose plot structure, it's perhaps easy to understand why the film could be loathed for its apparent indifference, given there's little effort paid to solving the crimes, Hunter's character able to plunder with impunity then hide virtually in plain sight. Despite the grim treatment, 'The Arousers' (aka 'Sweet Kill') is a fairly salacious grindhouse classic that shouldn't disappoint those who appreciate this type of gritty, gloomy thriller.
Only local girl Barbara (Turney) appears off-limits as the killing spree becomes more brazen. The frequency of the crimes isn't completely out of the realms of possibility when you consider how prolific serial killers were in the 60s-80s, but there's still of lot of plot latitude enabling this perp, his risky business in obvious proximity to potential witnesses yet his crimes are bold and practically uninhibited.
Hunter is chilling playing against type, trusted, timid school sports coach by day, twisted peeping Tom and serial killer by night, whilst Turney gains sympathy as the lonely-heart neighbour whose affections for the unstable bachelor never seem to gain his attention no matter how persistent her efforts. Turney seemed like a capable actress whose career was flourishing when she died prematurely in 1978.
Exploitation film fans should also relish the sight of fresh-faced Roberta Collins playing the sassy call girl with whom Hunter's character role plays his perverted desires in a couple of scenes.
Violent and rudderless, just a procession of frenzied murders in a loose plot structure, it's perhaps easy to understand why the film could be loathed for its apparent indifference, given there's little effort paid to solving the crimes, Hunter's character able to plunder with impunity then hide virtually in plain sight. Despite the grim treatment, 'The Arousers' (aka 'Sweet Kill') is a fairly salacious grindhouse classic that shouldn't disappoint those who appreciate this type of gritty, gloomy thriller.
I would have never expected Curtis Hanson directing such a film; I hardly realize that LA CONFIDENTIAL maker gave us this more than twenty years earlier. And besides, I also hardly believe that former Hollywood actor in the fifties Tab Hunter could perform in such a film. Not a bad one though, so typical from from late sixties, early seventies. A period where anything was possible, ANYTHING. I was not bored with this film, not disappointed, not deceived, unlike many other stuff of this kind. Good, solid script and a convincing acting performance from Tab Hunter. I think Matt - forever young - Dillon could have played such a role.
Le saviez-vous
- AnecdotesDisappointed by the box-office generated under its original release title "Sweet Kill", Roger Corman had Curtis Hanson shoot additional sex scenes over a period of two days, to spice-up the film, and retitled it and re-released it as The Arousers. It didn't help the film's box-office much.
- GaffesWhen the cop seizes the marijuana he says it was sitting on the tub and asserts that finding it constituted an illegal search and seizure. At the time the film was released the law recognized a plain view exception to search and seizure protection and the search and seizure were legal.
- ConnexionsFeatured in Tab Hunter Confidential (2015)
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- How long is Sweet Kill?Alimenté par Alexa
Détails
Box-office
- Budget
- 110 000 $US (estimé)
- Durée
- 1h 25min(85 min)
- Mixage
- Rapport de forme
- 1.85 : 1
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