The Name of the Game Is Kill

5.8
1968 1 hr 24 min Thriller

A desert family offers a traveling stranger its hospitality, but the stranger doesn't realize exactly what they have in store for him.

  • Cast:
    Jack Lord , Susan Strasberg , Collin Wilcox Paxton , Tisha Sterling , Mort Mills

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Reviews

BlazeLime
1968/05/01

Strong and Moving!

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Noutions
1968/05/02

Good movie, but best of all time? Hardly . . .

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Tedfoldol
1968/05/03

everything you have heard about this movie is true.

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Jonah Abbott
1968/05/04

There's no way I can possibly love it entirely but I just think its ridiculously bad, but enjoyable at the same time.

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qormi
1968/05/05

Yeah I guessed the ending right from the start. It was so obviious. I guess it was a huge shocker back then but not so much now. Jack Lord with the Hungarian accent was pretty cool. He was a great actor. Susan Strasberg was so incredibly beautiful in this and such a powerful actress. I can't understand why her career was relegated to guest spots on various TV shows. She should have been an A lister in the movies. The actresses who played her sisters were gorgeous too. All in all, this film was low budget and ultimately weak.

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lor_
1968/05/06

Younger film buffs (i.e., too young to have seen the movies they adore in theaters) and so-called film historians have coalesced around the love of the outre, or "Something Weird" to use the late Mike Vraney's video title per H.G. Lewis. The problem is that the exalting of the unusual over the good, great or merely well-made has distorted their viewing habits.So when I approached this drive-in movie from the '60s recently I had to somehow dismiss the hype about its quality, which the film could never be expected to live up to. This is a modern paradox: obscure films of the past have to be over-praised in order to get revived at all (in some DVD or maybe streaming capacity), and then the reality sets in.Failed screenwriter Gary Crutcher (check his credits) seems to have become obsessive about this juvenile screenplay, which has as many misses and mistakes as it has points of interest along the way to its series of anticlimaxes posing as endings and false endings. I have always hated the final phony twist (DePalma's "Carrie" had me booing at a pre-release screening 40 years ago) so director Gunnar Hellstrom and writer Crutcher's final reel was torture and groanorama for me.I come to this having seen most of its brethren: the feature-length compilation of Joe Solomon trailers from 1963 to 1976 included on the DVD had about 80% of the titles for films I had actually seen. I missed "Kill!", probably because it did not achieve the number of bookings of some of Solomon's better-known biker and horror films like "Simon King of the Witches" or "Werewolves on Wheels". Had I watched it at my local Cleveland, Akron or Canton drive-in circa 1970, I would have enjoyed it at the level of say J.R. Larraz's X-rated "Whirlpool" or even the Jill Haworth film among the trailers "Horror on Snape Island". On to the film: though written when Crutcher was a teenager, the film fits into the once-very-popular '60s genre of aging women in sinister situations, kicked off by Aldrich's "Whatever Happened to Baby Jane" and generating interesting if quirky vehicles for veteran stars. Noting that Gloria Swanson was once proposed as the mother character, instead of the transvestite actor actually chosen, supports this. Such films are tricky because they often became mere Camp, and to subsequent generations "Baby Jane" is pure camp, still shown at my local Chelsea cinema, introduced by drag queen Hedda Lettuce for a predominantly gay audience to hoot & holler at.A more interesting variation is a favorite of mine, Clint Eastwood & Don Siegel's biggest flop "The Beloved" in which poor Clint during the Civil War falls victim to a house full of horny ladies headed by Geraldine Page (!), with fatal results. In this case an equally macho contemporary of Clint's, Jack Lord, is at the mercy of four strange ladies that writer Crutcher uses as nearly equally weighted suspects and red herrings in the mystery that unfolds. Ultimately he resolves his plot with a nearly Agatha Christie gimmick -they all turn out to be guilty one way or the other (or presumed to be, as not all gimmicks were resolved).The atmosphere of a remote location, which works wonders for a B movie's success, perhaps the best example being Herk Harvey's one-shot classic "Carnival of Souls", only goes so far this time. The quirky relationship of Lord and heroine Susan Strasberg creates many longueurs where the patient viewer is waiting for something more tangible to chew on. The authentic '30s and '40s B movies ran as brief as an hour long, what was needed here.As the audience's surrogate in the story, Lord's character is very poorly written -from his much-criticized foreign accent to his more objectionable sexist pig behavior when he ultimately demands sex (even to the point of unstated rape) from Susan for leading him on, while I, for one, could sympathize with her stated need for just companionship.Once again, the gimmickry endemic to drive-in and exploitation movies (so beloved by the backers of this film's reissue, even naming their company Ballyhoo) means that sex must be the driving force behind the action, even while distributor Solomon rarely actually delivered the soft-core porn we drive-in aficionados craved and were promised in his ballyhoo.I spotted the chief gimmick of the transvestite mother figure immediately, not only recognizing the actor T.C. Jones whose career was based on such roles but also the fact that the mother was obviously "off" visually. Casting a beautiful transvestite of a certain age would have worked, rather than a character actor.To contrast, the all-time king of gimmickry, William Castle, cast a beauty Jean Arless as the he/she protagonist in his classic "Homicidal", which still keeps us guessing 55 years after. It should be noted that Hellstrom's film rips off Castle (and others) with its "sign the pledge not to reveal the ending" gimmick.Unfortunately, once the big "reveal" occurs, the film falls apart completely with that dreaded final reel complete balderdash that even five dozen rewrites wouldn't save. Though I was rooting for Hellstrom & company for over an hour, by the time his concoction unraveled I was as disappointed as I feel when sitting through one of many "it was only a dream" cop-out crap movies.Stu Phillips and his guest stars The Electric Prunes emerge on the soundtrack as the film's best element. (Vilmos Zsigmond's cinematography is not as effective as his best early effort, the classic Arch Hall Jr. chamber thriller "The Sadist".) The short subject plugging the Prunes was fun to watch but I was shocked at no mention of their LP "Mass in F Minor", a major achievement in rock fusion and a testament to the musician/producer David Axelrod's artistry. That is an achievement that needs no gimmicks or cults to support and revive for a new generation.

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Woodyanders
1968/05/07

Wayward Hungarian drifter and refugee Symcha Lipa (an excellent performance by Jack Lord) finds himself stranded on a deserted highway in rural Arizona. Lipa accepts a lift from the lovely and helpful Mickey Terry (a winningly perky and bewitching portrayal by the gorgeous Susan Strasberg), who takes him to an old gas station run by Mickey, her brusque sister Diz (Collin Wilcox Paxton, nicely abrasive), more flirty and flighty younger sibling Nan (Tisha Sterling, deliciously naughty), and their flaky mother Mrs. Terry (well played to the loopy hilt by T.C. Jones). Lipa soon finds himself under the dangerously seductive spell of these four odd and unbalanced women.Director Gunnar Hellstrom, working from an unusual and involving script by Gary Crutcher, relates the absorbing idiosyncratic narrative at a steady pace, expertly crafts a supremely spooky and sinister atmosphere, and adroitly conveys a strong sense of isolation, loneliness, and vulnerability from the desolate desert locations (the evocative and occasionally quite striking cinematography by Vilmos Zsigmond works wonders with the modest budget). Moreover, Hellstrom delivers oodles of simmering sexual tension from the gripping scenario, with Sterling's sultry and unabashed dance to the groovy tune "Shadows" by The Electric Prunes providing a definite sizzling highlight. The shuddery score by Stu Phillips further enhances the overall eerie and unsettling mood. The surprise-ridden twist ending packs a startling wallop. Quirky and compelling, it's worthy of rediscovery.

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EyeAskance
1968/05/08

Jack Lord provides a commendable performance here as a Hungarian drifter roaming the desolate American southwest. Offered lodging by three odd sisters and their equally odd mother(who are operating a last-chance gas station in a nearly abandoned town), all initially seems well enough...but little by little, bizarre secrets are revealed, and a mystery unfolds which puts our hero in mortal danger. Deceit and seduction play him like a fiddle from hell, and all parties are suspect.Effectively eerie in a strange, evanescent way, THE NAME OF THE GAME IS KILL draws great benefit from a creditable music score and some surprisingly creative location filming by pre-famed Vilmos Zsigmond.A pretty elusive second-string flick which has all but disappeared since its initial theatrical run, grey-market copies circulating online tend to be terribly washed-out. Sadly, that will just have to suffice ad interim until a much-anticipated legit release is brought forward. Give it a whirl, especially if you enjoy delirious 60s relics the likes of SPIDER BABY, LADY IN A CAGE, WHO KILLED TEDDY BEAR, and ANGEL, ANGEL, DOWN WE GO.6.5/10

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