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Pretty Poison

Pretty Poison (1968)

July. 19,1968
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7
|
R
| Drama Thriller Crime Romance

A young man gets in over his head when he convinces a small-town girl he's a secret agent.

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Claysaba
1968/07/19

Excellent, Without a doubt!!

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BallWubba
1968/07/20

Wow! What a bizarre film! Unfortunately the few funny moments there were were quite overshadowed by it's completely weird and random vibe throughout.

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Mathilde the Guild
1968/07/21

Although I seem to have had higher expectations than I thought, the movie is super entertaining.

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Dana
1968/07/22

An old-fashioned movie made with new-fashioned finesse.

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Mark Turner
1968/07/23

PRETTY POISON is one of those movies that I'd heard of but never had the opportunity to see. For some reason it never appears on various movie channels or if it does it's on at such a late hour that I've missed it. And I check for movies that I've missed to DVR on these channels! So I was glad to finally get the chance to see this film.The movie stars Anthony Perkins as Dennis Pitt, a young man who's spent most of his life in an institution because while a youngster he was responsible for a fire that killed his aunt. Having gone through rehabilitation and psychiatric care he is about to finally be released. His probation officer Morton Azenauer (John Randolph) tells him it is best to avoid the creative fantasies that Dennis tends to place himself in and stick with reality, working the job he's found for him and getting on with his life.Dennis begins work at a lumber yard where he does his job well enough but still has moments where he is distracted. Dennis' boss Bud (Dick O'Neill) is a jerk of a boss who looks for reasons to give Dennis a hard time. Of course this will lead to Dennis resentment of both Bud and the job he now works at.On lunch break one day Dennis sees a beautiful young girl (Tuesday Weld), a cheerleader he spies marching with the band. He bumps into her, passing her a small vial and tells her to be quiet, they're watching and he'll meet her at a theater that night. Once there he takes the vial and thanks her, leaving. She follows and he concocts a story that he's a secret agent on a mission. Her name is Sue Ann Stepanek and she's not intrigued by this supposed spy.The two begin to spend time with one another going so far as Dennis meeting her mother and taking her out on a date. The make a stop by a local make out area where the cops harass them and take them back to Sue Ann's house. It is there that we get our first glimpse of what Sue Ann is capable off as we see her slap her mother when they argue after the police leave. Dennis is shocked and leaves the house.Sue Ann contacts Dennis again and at just the right time. It seems that his Azenauer has let Bud know about Dennis' past and Bud then fires Dennis. When Dennis lets him know Azenauer is upset since Bud promised not to fire Dennis. Once more Dennis makes up a story about a new job and has Sue Ann play the part of a secretary confirming the job.Angry at Bud, Dennis convinces Sue Ann that they have to perform an act of sabotage on the lumber mill, weakening the supports of a run off. In the middle of doing so the night watchman catches Dennis but Sue Ann knocks him unconscious with the wrench she's carrying. She takes his gun and shoots him, then pushes him into the river. Dennis is shocked but Sue Ann convinces him that when the run off falls it will look like it collapsed on the watchman and killed him.The two love birds move forward from here into more potential threatening incidents before deciding to run off together. All the while we watch as Dennis, the man who is supposed to be the one with mental issues, is matched with this young all American girl who seems to be much more disturbed than he ever was. Where they will end up is anyone's guess.The film moves along at a slow pace, at times distracting because of this, but never quite enough to make it boring. It has a made for TV look from that time rather than a feature feel and I'm not sure if that helps or hinders. This is not to say it looks bad, just mediocre. The performances by both leads are well done, more so for Weld than Perkins. Watching you can't help but recall all of the other times he's played mentally unstable characters, especially Norman Bates in PSYCHO. Perkins would go on to play other characters with questionable mental issues in several more films. While he hoped to put Bates behind him he somehow always found himself in these roles.What makes this movie so interesting is the role that Weld plays here. Far too often you can tell just who the bad guy, who the person is most likely to commit a crime is in film. Here we're presented with a wholesome young girl who's held in high regard but who underneath is the pretty poison the film's title speaks of. It makes for an interesting character and performance.The movie is being released by Twilight Time so you know up front that the image on screen will be the best possible to be found for this release. Extras include the isolated music and effects track, audio commentary with executive producer Lawrence Turman and film historians Lem Dobbs and Nick Redman, audio commentary with director Noel Black and film historian Robert Fischer, deleted scene script and commentary and the original factory trailer. I say this all the time but once more, Twilight Time has released this with only 3,000 copies available so if you want one make sure you order before they sell out.

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dougdoepke
1968/07/24

Plot-- An outpatient uses his fantasy skills to entice a blonde cutie into his dream world, but gets more than he bargained for, to say the least.One of the squirrliest pairings in movie history. Weld and Perkins are darn near perfect as the young couple from heck. And to think that the sweet-faced little Sue Ann (Weld) turned up at random out of a highschool drill team. No wonder Pitt (Perkins) wants back into the safety of an asylum. If she's the outside world, we'd all better hide. He may be a James Bond fantasist, but at least he doesn't straddle corpses in ecstatic delight. In fact, he's got a social conscience when it comes to what his employer is doing. And that's the problem. He's got a sense of limits, but she doesn't.So why does he go along with her betrayal of him. I can understand why he wants back into confinement, but why turn seductive Sue Ann back loose on society. After all, he's trying to keep mill gunk out of the stream. Maybe it's because, unlike the ugly river poison, she's a pretty poison.Really original premise, expertly played out. No doubt the screenplay couldn't have been produced ten years earlier. The sixties lifted the lid on the exotic, and this one goes about as far as any. I like the working class locations that lend both realism and flavor. And get a load of the stream that's used as everyone's dumping ground. No wonder the two kids are weird. Stodgy old Hollywood would never give awards to a movie like this. But in my little book, I'd give one-eyed Oscars to both Perkins and Weld, and a real one to screenwriter Semple. Meanwhile, I'll never look at a girls drill team the same way again, and you may not, either.

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Cathy Sargent
1968/07/25

Am not sure who is enabling whom in this 1968 sociopathic thriller?Is it Anthony Perkins who plays a disturbed man named Dennis or Tuesday Weld who plays Sue Ann as his pretty sidekick?All I know is that I never felt any desensitized violence in the killing. No agent orange here. There were too many pregnant pauses evoking images of the rippling effects of actions and their effects upon others. How does a sociopathic thriller evoke empathy? Visionary director Noel Black made it happen by planting Hollywood in New England and drawing on styles of the past.He brought neat touches, flashbacks, naive and knowing together in a magical way."There is an extraordinary patience and calculation to Anthony Perkins elaborate ruse" writes one reviewer. I couldn't agree more as in spite of the hectic pace of the plot, Dennis seemed to be in the slow time as his earlier film "Psycho"Pretty Poison was reel therapy for the Vietnam Era and casting Anthony Perkins for the disturbed young man was brilliant. There was no slow time or cinematic moments on Vietnam's Hamburger Hill. Instead there was only cold beer, hamburger and the Follies Bergere after seeing your buddies get blown away.It has been over 30 years since Vietnam and the war is still not over because of the herbicide agent orange sprayed into the de militarized zone. Dennis was right after all about the poisoning in the water.

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BaronBl00d
1968/07/26

Rather strange, psychological "thriller" about two societal/psychological misfits getting together and ultimately being coupled in murderous crimes. Anthony Perkins plays Dennis Pitt, a young man let out of a psych hospital for a juvenile record of arson and killing his aunt in the fire. Perkins is to go to a new town and work on a new job and forget all of his highly imaginative theories of conspiracies(that must have been behind his actions as an adolescent). Pitt is given this new lease of life by John Randolph's character as his parole officer. Well, Pitt moves to a city other than the one he was to take, takes a different job, and never checks in with Randolph. Oh, and by the way, he still has this highly imaginative mindset that everyone and everything is working against him or society. His job at a factory is producing a toxic that soon they will unleash on the drinking supply of the world. Perkins, playing the fragile yet innocuous disturbed, meets a young senior in high school who he enlists in one of his conspiracies. Tuesday Weld plays Sue Ann. She is adorable, beautiful, and turns out very deadly. Without going into the particulars of the plot, Perkins is the relatively normal one in this bizarre relationship. While the film does indeed drag at times, Perkins and Weld are both very good and ably assisted by Beverly Garland as Weld's mother, Dick O'Neill as a boss, and Randolph as Perkin's parole officer and friend. Pretty Poison is an interesting look into minds - what constitutes a really disturbed person juxtaposed against someone who is homicidal. What is normal - ostensibly or otherwise? The twists come plentifully in the end and the building of Weld's and Perkin's relationship is interestingly done.

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