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The Fan
Directed By Edward Bianichi
Released: 1981
Starring Lauren Bacall, Michael Biehn, James Garner, and Hector Elizondo
Running Time: 94 minutes
DVD Released By Paramount
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Renowned film and stage actress, Sally Ross (played
by Lauren Bacall), is making her Broadway debut and is also still settling
in after her divorce from Jake (James Garner). So she has very little time
to notice the letters of an obsessive fan named Douglas Breen (Michael
Biehn) which are growing increasingly frightening. Breen quits his record
store job in order to focus entirely on his growing “relationship” with Ross.
He begins violently assaulting anyone close to her in order to make her
take notice of him. Against the wishes of Inspector Andrews (Hector
Elizondo), Sally flees to her beach home until word of Breen’s apparent
suicide and a chance at a new start with Jake brings her back to the city
and to her Broadway show. Unfortunately for Sally, stage-fright isn’t the
only thing she has to worry about on opening night.
This 1981 thriller isn’t to be confused with the Snipes/De Niro disaster
of the same name. No, The Fan
starring Lauren Bacall is a disaster all its own. Edward Bianichi’s
directorial debut is a clunky one (he didn’t direct another feature film
for a decade) with several inspired moments. Cinematography by Dick Bush (Laughter
In The Dark,
Twins Of Evil)
is technically astounding and the film’s final shot is breathtaking. The
incredible Pino Donaggio composes another excellent score for The
Fan. Even the cast is top notch and the writing is decent enough
to hold the film together. All the right pieces for a classic film are in
place but something went wrong here. Let’s investigate, shall we?
Michael Biehn (Aliens,
The Abyss)
is quite convincing as Douglas, the obsessed fan. He nails the psycho part
perfectly. Lauren Bacall is excellent as the sheltered and naïve Sally
Ross who thinks that she has seen it all. As Sally’s situation becomes
more and more dire and her friends turn up either dead or horribly
injured, Bacall convincingly transforms her character into a dynamic
person with more on her mind than bumping into her ex-husband at a party.
James Garner and Lauren Bacall’s chemistry as a divorced couple works
quite well but when their relationship starts to blossom again, it just
doesn’t float. Hector Elizondo is perfectly cast as Inspector Andrews. A
standard cop character in anyone else’s hands, Elizondo easily breathes
life into his minor role, often stealing scenes from the rest of the cast.
What is with the late 70s/early 80s obsession with Broadway? The scenes
where Sally Ross is preparing for her musical debut are just fine because
they are rehearsals and meant to be rough around the edges. But once her
act hits the stage near the end of the film, take cover. Lauren Bacall
cannot sing and her wonderful screen presence does not translate to a
Broadway musical performance. Its’ just plain bad and I can only assume
that the musical scenes are meant to be completely serious.
Another problem with the movie is the absence of gore and the inability of
the director to stage a decent death scene. Now don’t get me wrong, there
is quite a bit of blood shed and even a pierced jugular thrown in for good
measure but the film is lacking that hard edge that a trashy ’81 thriller
desperately needs. The most stilted and awkward moments in the film (other
than the Broadway bits) come during the violent scenes. The attacks on
Sally’s friends feel overly cautious. It may have been a studio imposed
censorship (nice going, Paramount!) or the director holding back but they
just aren’t very shocking at all. Bianichi can easily build tension but
when it all comes to a head, I feel cheated.
The Fan
is definitely an interesting watch but the filmmakers’ and the studio’s
lack of confidence in the film really shows. Some of the film is shocking
and sleazy while some of it is very tame where it shouldn’t be. The
stalker phenomenon may be completely played out nowadays but if one
watches this with 1981 eyes (don’t ask me what those are) then
The Fan
still manages to be quite frightening and tense through much of its
running time. If nothing else, watch it for that final shot.
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