Ad Sense

Thursday, September 26, 2019

JENNIFER

Lisa Pelican
JENNIFER (1978). Director: Brice Mack. 

Jennifer Baylor (Lisa Pelikan) lives with her father, Luke (Jeff Corey), who runs a pet shop and is a borderline religious fanatic. Years ago Jennifer had the "gift," a power over snakes, which she seems to have lost. Jennifer attends an exclusive girls school on a scholarship, and innocently provokes the enmity of some of her classmates, especially a blond sociopath named Sandra (Amy Johnstone), whose camp follower is a chubby gal named Jane (Louise Hoven). When Sandra and her friends go too far with Jennifer, she unleashes her powers against them to exact revenge. 

Amy Johnstone and Louise Hoven
Jennifer is clearly modeled on the far superior Carrie, with many of the same elements from that more successful and original picture. However, this movie still retains a bit of power in its depiction of the sheer loathsomeness of some of the antagonists, the evils of peer pressure, and the reckless and entitled, even criminal attitude, of teenagers with too much money and little common sense or compassion. In fact, there's so much nastiness on hand that at times it seems like overkill. One effective sequence shows a trembling Jane on the phone with her tired, uncaring mother after the former has been sexually assaulted. (She and Jennifer eventually become allies.) Sequences like this have a certain power, and Jennifer might have worked as a dramatic film if it had stuck to that. 

Nina Foch, Amy Johnstone, John Gavin
Unfortunately, Jennifer is a horror film, and when it comes time to deliver the vengeance a la Carrie, the movie becomes laughably bad. Poor Lisa Pelikan is forced to adopt an attitude like a super-villainess casting spells, and the whole sequence is shot so poorly that you can hardly make out what's happening in any case. This insured that even if audiences liked the rest of the film, they went home sorely disappointed, although there is some catharsis in watching a few of the participants get their comeuppance. This includes the horrible, money-hungry headmistress, Mrs. Calley (Nina Foch), whose death isn't nearly miserable enough to suit most viewers. 

Nina Foch in outsized glasses
As for the acting, Lisa Pelikan -- while no Sissy Spacek in terms of presence -- gives a good enough performance, although in her uncompromising portrait of the unsavory Mrs. Calley Nina Foch walks off with the acting honors. Next is Amy Johnstone, who is blond viciousness personified, and Louise Hoven as the chubby girl who wants acceptance but finds she has made a deal with the devil. Jeff Corey is okay as the father, and John Gavin has a couple of scenes as Sandra's clueless and essentially uncaring father, Senator Tremayne. Burt Convy is amiable as the pleasant teacher, Mr. Reed, who tries to befriend Jennifer, and Ray Underwood is effective as Dayton, the venomous Sandra's equally psychopathic boyfriend. A small role is played by Cher's younger sister, Georganne LaPiere. The film holds the attention but its deliberate pacing may have some viewers hitting the stop button long before it's over.

Verdict: Another Carrie clone which has good scenes and acting but doesn't deliver in the long run. **1/4. 

2 comments:

  1. Carrie is one of my favorites, but this looks like fun as well. I remember Lisa Pelikan from many a movie of the week back in the day. Add John Gavin and the wonderful Nina Foch, and this becomes one I will seek out and probably enjoy!
    - C

    ReplyDelete
  2. It may still be on youtube, where I found it. Strange, the movie works quite well for about three quarters but the horror stuff at the end is another story. Still, Foch is great and Gavin still looked great.

    ReplyDelete