Old school action!Friday, March 25, 2005
This is quite an entertaining 70's action movie. The acting, as in most action movies, is a bit superficial, but the overall movie is solid. Jim Brown, given his impressive size, is perfect as a tough action hero. The majority of the movie is set in Mexico, thus giving it an exotic feel. The racial epithets by the villains also give the movie an appropriate sense of the palpable racism of the 70's. Rip Torn gives an over-the-top performance as the main bad-guy Hoffo. As noted in the other reviews, Stella Stevens is perfect eye-candy in her supporting role.
Somewhere between Superfly and DolemiteWednesday, March 23, 2005
As a white boy from Ohio, I've always had a fondness for Blaxploitation flicks from the 1970's. They were loud and bold, action-packed and takin'-no-sass. They felt like renegade productions, and I dug everything about them. The funky soundtracks, the outrageous fashions, the over-the-top acting and action. Watching them now just takes me back to the 70's like an old song.
I'd never seen SLAUGHTER but caught it recently on a movie channel.
To be honest, I watched it for only one reason: Stella Stevens.
She's absolutely stunning. She's so incredibly sexy in Jerry Lewis's THE NUTTY PROFESSOR and Dean Martin's THE SILENCERS that I discovered lust at a very early age. Like 7 years old. Not that I understood it, but I just knew she was hot in an other-worldly sense. By the time THE BALLAD OF CABLE HOGUE and THE POSEIDON ADVENTURE rolled around, Stella was cemented as one of my all-time favorite Hollywood babes.
I didn't think SLAUGHTER looked that interesting but I did watch it for her. Wow. The other reviews I've read here also admit that they're giving this film a good review based on her. I'm definitely in that category.
Otherwise, SLAUGHTER doesn't have the energy of other Blaxploitation pics. The fish-eye lens during fights gave those scenes style but no punch. Rip Torn is fun to watch as the villian.
Great classic movieSaturday, November 06, 2004
I enjoyed watching this old classic and wasn't unhappy to have purchased it for my dvd collection.
It was great to see an old 70's action movie with Jim Brown and the gorgeous Stella Stevens (the ladies today don't even compare)...
Highly recommended.
Derek Hutton
Johannesburg
South Africa
3 out of 4 people found the following review helpful:
Solid 70's Action FlickTuesday, February 04, 2003
Big, brawny Jim Brown makes a convincing hero in this two-fisted, jive-talking blaxploitation thriller. The story moves with great speed and plenty of tough action as Brown hunts for the slayers of his parents and encounters a nest of racist gangsters.
Everything about this flick is a notch above the average blaxploitation flick of its era. The direction is tight, the cinematography inventive and slick, and the performances are hammy without going too far. A very young and very weaselly Rip Torn does a fine job as the pinched, hateful villain who really gets what he deserves. Indeed, all the villains go down hard in this movie, which builds to a climactic conflict with a body count like a Spaghetti Western's.
Mention must be made of Stella Stevens, who has a number of short, but memorable, nude scenes. Not to mince words- she's so fine that virtually any man watching will likely gape at the screen in awe.
Superior entertainment for blaxploitation fans and anyone who likes a rip-snorting action movie.
2 out of 2 people found the following review helpful:
Fairly Good Action & Answer to Shaft; Jim Brown Is SlaughterFriday, March 01, 2002
So, MGM hit the goldmine with Richard Roundtree's "Shaft," so why not other companies? Samuel Arkoff's AIP (American Internationa Picture), known for many exploitation films (a kind of films you might have seen at local drive-in theaters back in the 50s and 60s), gave an answer to John Shaft. Yes, it's Slaughter, ex-Green Beret who takes the law in his hand for revenge. And Jim Brown, former American football player, and previously seen in films like "The Dirty Dozen" was chosen. Very Good casting, as it turns out.
Plus Brown (later seen in Tim Burton's "Mars Attack!"), we have a good supporting cast, namely Rip Torn and Stella Stevens. It was too good, I guess. Anyway, with the presence of them, "Slaughter" is barely raised above from other average blaxploitation films, some people say...
Interesting thing is, the film's supporting cast almost all consists of white actors. As a result, the atomosphere of the film is different from that of other blaxploitation films like "Coffy" and "Shaft," and you may be disappointed because of that. However, the good pace of the film (thanks to the director Jack Starret's deft hand) will keep you interested. In my book, "Slaughter" is a better-than-average action film. Oh, and there are nudity, which is No. 1 rule of this genre, including that of Stella Stevens (original "The Nutty Professor" and others). Is this misjudge on her side when choosing projects? Probably. (She again shows up in blaxploitation film, the sequel of Warner Brother's "Cleopatra Jones.") But I am happy with her appearance, I confess.
On top of her participation, there is a rousing title song by Billy Preston, whose electoric keyboard with his trademark howling sound can be heard. Probably "Slaughter" should be rated as an average three-star movie. Well, his song, however, is another virtue of the film, and with this and Ms. Stevens, one notch up. Yeah, I like this film.