This is an exceptional movie. The budget was clearly less than monumental and there were no bankable stars. It belongs to no genre so there is no base to appeal to. The sex is subdued and there is little violence. No computer-generated images. I wonder who had the huevos to greenlight this. Somehow I doubt it would ever be made today.
Anthony Perkins is a young man who has just been released from a psychiatric facility, having accidentally burned his aunt to death when he set fire to the house years earlier. John Randolph is his sympathetic but skeptical parole officer. Perkins sets up residence in the town of Winslow, Massachusetts, evocatively photographed by David Quaid in a flat, TV style. You get to know Winslow -- the chemical factory, the river that purls through the town, the modest working-class home that Tuesday Weld lives in with her mother.
Weld is the champion member of the high-school band, and what a succulent piece she is, with her lustrous blond hair, her voracious and toothy grin, her unimpeachable figure. She bumps into Perkins at a hot dog stand. Perkins is a fabulist, maybe a trait he picked up in the funny farm, and he sweeps Weld up in his narrative.
Perkins pretends to be a secret agent from the CIA, keeping an eye on the chemical plant where he now has a job. They may be polluting the river. It's his job to find out if they're poisoning the water. "In a few years there may be nothing but monster fish between here and New York." One should not believe that the pollution is a symptom of Perkins' derangement. In 1968, there were virtually no laws governing the process. The film illustrates this lack of concern when the owner of the hot dog stand dumps his garbage in the river, then stops to wipe some mud spatters from his motorcycle. Two kids in New York caught cholera, of all things, from eating a watermelon they'd found floating in the Hudson. In any case, Weld is thrilled. She's eager to help him and wants to be a deputy secret agent.
The plot gets complicated and twirled around but not to the extent that we can't follow it. If, at first, Perkins is the fake and Weld is the naif, it gradually becomes clear that it's the other way round. I don't want to give away too much of the plot.
I attribute the success of the movie mostly to Lorenzo Semple's screenplay, which is full of oddments and stylishness. Noel Black's direction is functional -- not more than that -- but the story becomes so gripping that one's attention never drifts. Semple was also responsible for the outré and equally paranoid "The Parallax View." After "Psycho," poor Anthony Perkins seemed consigned to the role of not just maniac, but maniac being taken by thyrotoxic storm. Jerky and twitching and stuttering. Here he's merely given to excess fantasizing but is otherwise intelligent and, well, normal. Smart, maybe, but he doesn't know much about women, and he's abrasive towards his dumb superiors.
Perkins' and Weld's roles are pretty complex. They both handle the complexity well. Perkins must change from being slyly but playfully conspiratorial to being aghast. Weld has to morph from a gullible teen ager into a calculating young woman thoroughly committed to pursuit of hypothetical imperatives.
It all comes together quite well and I applaud everyone involved. Wish there were more like it today instead of all those trumpeting mastodons and monsters thumping their way across the megascreens.
Pretty Poison
1968
Action / Comedy / Crime / Romance / Thriller
Pretty Poison
1968
Action / Comedy / Crime / Romance / Thriller
Plot summary
Dennis Pitt, now in young adulthood, has been conditionally released from a psychiatric hospital, where he had been institutionalized for an incident that occurred when he was fifteen. Despite the doctors believing he to be rehabilitated in not suffering from the fantasies which dominated his life, Dennis is still required to check in with his case officer, Morton Azenauer, once a week. Azenauer will do whatever he can to help Dennis survive in the outside world. A year following his release, Dennis violates the conditions of his release by moving without telling Azenauer, thus missing his weekly check-ins. He moves to Winslow, Massachusetts where he has gotten a job at Sausenfeld Chemical Co., his boss, Bud Munsch, the company, and his acquaintances in town not aware of his history. In not being truly rehabilitated, Dennis believes the company is part of an alien conspiracy to poison the water supply, including openly discharging chemical waste into the local lake next to the plant. Dennis spends much of his time gathering photographic evidence to support his belief. He also becomes infatuated with seventeen year old high school senior Sue Ann Stepanek upon first sight. In his "investigative" work, Dennis is able to convince Sue Ann that he is a secret agent, she who he co-opts into those investigations as they begin a romantic relationship. However, as Sue Ann deals with what she considers her repressed life, she, in her own slightly off kilter mental state and using her relationship with Dennis, works toward her own agenda, leading to tragic consequences.
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Jeune Femme Fatale
A tamed version of "Psycho"
Anthony Perkins(1932-92),who is well known as Norman Bates in "Psycho", gets to play something close to him in "Pretty Poison". Perkins plays Dennis Pitts, a paroled mental patient who was sent there for arson. Now that he's released, he gets to start over life. He acts like a "Secret Agent" when he starts taking pictures. While he works at a factory, he meets a blonde teenager name Sue Ann(Tuesday Weld),she would tag along on his missions. However, he doesn't know that her agenda is a far cry from his own. When they started dating, her mother starts to have her negative views of Dennis. Appalled by her behavior, Dennis is made uneasy. On his "mission", he wants to create espionage at the factory he works at, Sue Ann takes out the guard on duty, and kills him. She would take his gun, and use it to kill her mother. Knowing that he won't condone to murder, he would go to prison, because he will feel safer there than on the outside. Unlike Norman Bates, Dennis Pitts is a little more out there. With such an imagination, this man is fun to be around. Not as questionable as Bates. Just a little tamer. A fun movie to watch. 2 out of 5 stars.
power dynamics switch
Dennis Pitt (Anthony Perkins) gets released from a mental institution. He has a tendency to tell fantastical lies. He is taken with teen Sue Ann Stepanek (Tuesday Weld) and pretends to be a CIA agent. She is wildly eager to believe him. He gets fired and engineers a mission to sabotage the factory. She joins him on his mission, kills a security guard, and steals his gun. Her mother threatens Dennis over Sue Ann.
Perkins is never forceful but always has that creepy off-centered presence. Sue Ann's quick acceptance of his lies is a little odd. There is an interesting switch in the power dynamics as her strange naivety turns into disturbed manipulative Lolita. It would be great to have more sexuality in the manipulations. This is plenty dark but I want the tone to be even darker. This is a fascinating little movie.