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IN SAYING EVERYTHING ABOUT A MOVIE? |
| LAST OF SHEILA, THE (director: Herbert Ross; screenwriters: Anthony Perkins/Stephen Sondheim; cinematographer: Gerry Turpin; editor: Edward Warschilka; music: Billy Goldenberg; cast: Richard Benjamin (Tom), Dyan Cannon (Christine), James Coburn (Clinton Green), Raquel Welch (Alice), James Mason (Philip), Joan Hackett (Lee), Ian McShane (Anthony), Yvonne Romaine (Sheila Green), Serge Citon (Guido), Pierre Rosso (Vittorio), Roberto Rossi (Captain); Runtime: 119; MPAA Rating: PG; producer: Herbert Ross; Warner Home Video; 1973) |
| "Campy gamer thriller that
wasn't as much fun
as it pretended to be."
Reviewed by Dennis Schwartz Eccentric movie kingpin Clinton Green (James
Coburn), who
has a puckish nasty streak, is still steaming over the
unsolved murder
of his gossip columnist trophy wife Sheila,
who a year before
was the victim of a hit-and-run driver after leaving a
party in
Bel-Air. Clinton suspects that one of the six party
guests, all
friends, is the killer and plans an elaborate trap for
the culprit by
inviting the six of them for a week cruise on his
yacht along the
Mediterranean and having them indulge him by playing
his game of
secrets. They all attend because they want work or
don't want to get on
the bad side of the vindictive influential producer.
Each guest
receives a card with a secret that one of the other
guests has. The
secrets are shoplifter, homosexual, ex-convict,
informer, little child
molester, and alcoholic (think Sheila!). The six
guests are hack
screenwriter Tom (Richard
Benjamin)
and his wealthy socialite wife Lee (Joan Hackett);
sexpot actress Alice
(Raquel Welch) and her has-been
director husband (James Mason); the ambitious
wannabe
associate producer boy toy Anthony (Ian McShane) and his bitchy
hottie talent
agent companion Christine
(Dyan Cannon). All
the guests
obligingly go along with such unusual entertainment
that is designed
to reveal their darkest secrets and to Clinton who is
the killer, but
someone changes the rules of the game at an old
monastery leading to
deadly results. The slick but flat pic
was
shot in
the south of
France. It revels in how those in Hollywood are so
ambitious and that
being amoral comes as easy to them as stabbing someone
in the back with
an ice pick. REVIEWED ON 6/13/2010 GRADE: C+ Dennis Schwartz: "Ozus' World Movie Reviews" © ALL RIGHTS RESERVED DENNIS SCHWARTZ |