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Greetings, and welcome to VIEWING THE CLASSICS. Here you'll find capsule reviews of vintage movies from the early days of cinema through the 1970s, with a special emphasis on sci-fi, horror, and mystery movies. Be sure to check out the Pages links, where you can find a Film Index of all my reviews, links to the reviews organized by cast members, directors, and other contributors, and links to my reviews of the films of talented young director Joshua Kennedy.

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Saturday, March 2, 2019

Stanley (1972)

Starring Chris Robinson, Alex Rocco, Steve Alaimo, Susan Carroll, Mark Harris
Directed by William Grefe
(actor & director credits courtesy IMDB.com)

After returning from a tour of duty and finding his father dead, a young man isolates himself from people and collects snakes to be his friends, which will become his instruments of vengeance.

Florida filmmaker William Grefe creates a lot of trauma for his main character played by Robinson, a half-white/half Native American, tormented by racism and his role in Vietnam and the cruelties of his former employer (Rocco), a man whose clothing factory is built on harvesting snakeskins.  This is all meant to simmer and build until he's pushed too far, as in a number of post-Vietnam character studies, but the film moves very very slowly and has a rather bizarre postscript in which Robinson kidnaps Rocco's daughter and plans to make her his Eve in a new garden of Eden, populated by snakes.  I can't say I enjoyed the film, but it is technically proficient and the behind-the-scenes snake wrangling is excellent, although we never really see the snakes attack and there's a number of jarring cuts to a snake suddenly in mid-bite or completely after one.  Grefe virtually remade the same story, albeit with sharks instead of snakes, in his later film Mako: Jaws Of Death.

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