Condominium residents are terrified when they learn that two of their neighbors have been brutally raped and that the culprit may be living in their midst. A police manhunt ensues. One offic... Read allCondominium residents are terrified when they learn that two of their neighbors have been brutally raped and that the culprit may be living in their midst. A police manhunt ensues. One officer, who actually lives in the complex, is particularly troubled, for not only do the incid... Read allCondominium residents are terrified when they learn that two of their neighbors have been brutally raped and that the culprit may be living in their midst. A police manhunt ensues. One officer, who actually lives in the complex, is particularly troubled, for not only do the incidents cause his wife to admit that she was a victim of date rape, he is also the one who ha... Read all
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- Jim
- (as Robert Treveiler)
- Emergency Room Doctor
- (uncredited)
- Apartment Tenant
- (uncredited)
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Hart Bocher, a very handsome guy, plays a cop who lives in the same building searching out the rapist with a vengeance as his wife was at one time a victim of rape before she married the cop. Bocher has some wonderful moments as to how he accepts the news of his wife's early rape, not knowing about it before they were married. How he takes the news and proceeds to live with it is wonderful work by this good looking young actor. I remember him in DIE HARD as the guy who thought he was cool and tried to get the hero to give up ending up being killed in the attempt.
Joe Don Baker plays another cop and gives his usual tough guy humor in the role but really nothing else. Although I thought the role he played was well written. Unfortunately I can't say the same for the leading lady played by Chelsea Field. First I thought she looked years older than Bocher. Secondly, her make up made her look hard and almost like a woman of the streets. Then wearing that tight revealing dress to a party knowing there's a rapist in the area. That was just stupid. And after telling us the time she was raped she did the same thing, wore a tight dress to attract attention. Not a good idea. Her acting was a bit over the top. I certainly feel in all the Hollywood beauties, there could have been a better choice to play opposite such a handsome leading man. Sorry, just this observers opinion.
It should hold your interest, but somehow, though, it doesn't really click. After the first couple of rapes, the handsome Hart Bochner's wife (Chelsea Field, a conventionally beautiful knockout) confesses to him that she was raped before they were married. Instead of being sympathetic, he comes up with, "Why didn't you tell me before we were married?" And mutters, "Makes me wonder what else I don't know about you." He also stops being, well, physically affectionate for more than three weeks. The issue of the hypermoral cop who can't forgive what he perceives as his wife's misbehavior is lifted out of "Detective Story" and the issue is left unresolved after it's been brought up.
The suspicion grows that the rapist not only preys upon wives in this complex but lives there himself. The possible suspects are examined but no one seems more culpable than anybody else until, in the last few minutes, the rapist's identity is revealed and he turns out to be just one of the several guys who could have done it. Thanks to the writers, though, the rapist's only explanation is that he did it because he could do it -- because the challenge was there. (That's why they climb mountains too, isn't it?) He was never beaten or abused as a child, nor does he suffer from waxy yellow buildup.
This guy, though, must be one of the dumbest serial rapists in existence. He prowls around in his ski mask in the dark while a half dozen cops armed with rifles are stationed about the compound. If the cops are searching the surrounding woods, he shows up there too, leaving a pile of cigarette butts behind him. Oh, yes. He's a smoker. One victim describes his breath as "horrible." Warning: smoking can be hazardous to your exculpability.
How can a man rape a woman anyway? They must be a special breed, combining anger and the use of force with sexuality -- usually two antagonistic responses. And their victims, frightened and arid, can't be much help. Many rapists claim to have been drunk at the time, but that strikes a normal person as an even more preposterous statement. Fortunately there are effective behavioral treatments available, called aversion therapy. The technique itself is simple. The rapist is shown a movie depicting a simulated rape. He wears a ring around his penis that detects an erection. He is shown movies of simulated rapes. When an erection of sufficient intensity takes place the rapist is given a slight but unpleasant shock through electrodes on his thighs. Good-bye erection. After repeated sessions the erections pretty much go away entirely, although booster shots may be necessary from time to time.
Anyway, good use is made of that rather high-end apartment complex. The movies is claustrophobic, everything seems closed in and potentially threatening. We get to see virtually nothing of the wider community.
It's worth watching but not worth expending effort on.