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Thursday, September 12, 2019

TENDER FLESH / WELCOME TO ARROW BEACH

TENDER FLESH /WELCOME TO ARROW BEACH (1974). Director: Laurence Harvey. 

Hitchhiker Robbin Stanley (Meg Foster) runs into Korean war veteran Jason Henry (Laurence Harvey, who also directed the film) on the beach in front of his large California home. Jason invites Robbin in for a meal and she is introduced to his sister, Grace (Joanna Pettet), who is jealous of the women he brings home due to her incestuous relationship with her brother. Although this is not spelled out in any detail, apparently Jason developed a taste for human flesh when he was lost and isolated during the war. Nearly becoming his next supper before escaping, Robbin tries to tell the authorities -- Deputy Rakes (Stuart Whitman) and Sheriff Bingham (John Ireland) -- how crazy and dangerous Jason is, but they think she's on drugs and don't believe her. With the help of a medical technician named Alex (David Macklin), Robbin re-enters the house of horrors to get more evidence. But both of them may have bitten off more than they can chew (pun intended). 

Laurence Harvey
Welcome to Arrow Beach was originally entitled Yellow-Headed Summer and Walter Pidgeon and Donna Reed were supposed to have been in the cast. The film was re-released under the more exploitative title Tender Flesh and had a major and more explicit advertising campaign: "You won't believe what's behind the meat locker door" and so on. In truth the movie definitely has its gruesome moments (in the uncut version) and there's actually more gore than in Texas Chainsaw Massacre, which came out the same year. The horror highlight of the film is a basement murder where the killer takes photographs of the victim, and then literally butchers the woman with an ax, the whole slaughter tableau presented as brutal still pictures with flashing strobes, something that doesn't diminish the disturbing aspects of the sequence one bit.  

Gloria LeRoy
This was Laurence Harvey's last picture, and only one of two that he directed. His performance is excellent. He gets solid performances from Meg Foster and Joanna Pettet, and veterans Ireland and Whitman are typically professional. David Macklin makes a nice impression as Alex, as does Gloria LeRoy as an ill-fated middle-aged model that Jason also encounters on the beach after her paramour has robbed her. Altovise Gore Davis, the wife of Sammy Davis Jr., plays a deputy named Molly. By any name Welcome to Arrow Beach is an interesting if imperfect picture, with both pacing and structural problems, and a score that does very little to create needed suspense or terror, but it's worth a look if for no other reason than the presence of Laurence Harvey both behind and in front of the camera. 

Verdict: You will believe what's behind the meat locker door after that rather savage murder sequence. **1/2. 

2 comments:

  1. Oh, I MUST see this one--love this early 70s era where horror got a bit schlocky but was peopled by great actors and offered some original storytelling. I will see this to gaze into Meg Foster's mesmerizing weird eyes (love her in They Live!) and the great Laurence Harvey, who was superb in the horror genre opposite Elizabeth Taylor and Billie Whitelaw in the Brit chiller Night Watch.

    Looking forward to this one!
    -Chris

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  2. I actually bought this DVD on ebay for a goodly sum because I'd always wanted to see it and I'm glad I finally got around to it. Not sorry I made the purchase even if it's not a masterpiece. Harvey is great in his last film.

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