Its biggest selling point is unquestionably its star, Sybil Danning.
Jay Richard (Eric Brown) is a typical college student who has a major crush on his sexy English professor, Mrs Stevens (Sybil Danning). He is thrilled when she wants to hire him to do some work on her boat (a huge pleasure cruiser). She’s very friendly and tells him to call her Diane). He polishes the woodwork but she wants more than her woodwork polished. Before he knows what’s happening she’s got his trousers off and they’re having wild passionate sex.
She wants him to do another little job for her. And for her husband Michael (Andrew Prine). It’s a harmless prank they want him to play on Michael’s mother and grandmother. All he has to do is break into their mansion and scare them.
What Jay doesn’t know is that Diane and Michael don’t have a penny of their own. Michael’s mother and grandmother are fabulously rich. Diane and Michael want that money and they want it now and they have a plan to get it.
Unfortunately Jay doesn’t know that he is part of that plan.
The plot does rely on Jay being incredibly gullible but it’s perfectly plausible - he’s young and I don’t think any male would be thinking straight after a steamy bedroom romp with Sybil Danning, especially if he figures there’s a chance she might want her woodwork waxed again in the future.
There’s murder and Jay is uncomfortably aware that he’s likely to be a suspect. He’s left footprints and fingerprints behind at the murder scene.
We, the audience, do not know exactly what happened. We have our suspicions but we can’t be sure. All we know for certain is that Jay didn’t do it. Jay also doesn’t know exactly what happened. He has his suspicions as well but no evidence.
Jay would like to trust Diane, because he’s obsessed by her. But he’s far from sure that he really can trust her. He also has at least some awareness that his lust for Diane might be clouding his judgment.
The plot has fairly decent twists and some good misdirection. It keeps us guessing.
The action finale is OK but probably needed just a bit more energy and imagination.
This was obviously a low-budget movie but the mansion and the yacht give it reasonably high production values.
The acting is pretty good. Andrew Prine is low-key menacing but with a touch of ambiguity. Eric Brown is very good as Jay - it’s a convincing picture of a young guy who cannot believe his luck that this amazingly hot babe wants his body. But he doesn’t make Jay too pathetic or stupid. Or annoying.
But the movie’s biggest asset is of course Sybil Danning and she also effectively keeps us guessing about Diane. Is she the unscrupulous schemer she appears to be? Has she actually fallen for Jay? She admits that she’s not getting any bedroom action from her husband - maybe the hot sex with Jay is including her judgment as well. It’s a very fine performance. And Miss Danning takes her clothes off frequently and there are moderately steamy sex scenes.
There’s not a huge amount violence but what there is is quite graphic. Despite what some people claim this is not really a slasher film but the rising popularity of that genre made it commercially advisable to add some moderately graphic stuff to other genres.
This is an erotic thriller, and an erotic thriller that is actually erotic.
Iraq-born Howard Avedis is usually dismissed as a director of cheap drive-in trash. Which is quite unfair. He did make mostly drive-in movies but they were often extremely interesting and rather offbeat. The Stepmother (1972) is an erotic thriller with an inverted mystery structure and it’s not bad. The Teacher (1974) is also an erotic thriller and it’s deliciously crazy and weird. The Fifth Floor (1978) is a One Flew Over the Cuckoo’s Nest rip-off and it’s top-tier psychiatric horror.
They're Playing with Fire is solid entertainment and Sybil Danning is reason enough to make this one highly recommended. And it looks great on Blu-Ray.





No comments:
Post a Comment