One Man Jury
(1978)
Director: Charles
Martin
Cast: Jack Palance, Christopher Mitchum, Pamela Shoop
Jack Palance in a movie? You've got my attention. How
about Jack Palance
playing a Dirty Harry-like cop. Keep talking! How about Jack Palance
playing
a Dirty Harry-like cop that kills criminal scum in cold blood? Now
you're
really talking! How about this being made by a low budget studio?
Great,
for there's a good chance there would be a lot of violence, sex, and
nudity!
Wow, you would think there is no way a movie with all these attributes
would miss - that's why I have been searching for this movie for some
time
now. All this anticipation for so long is why I found One Man
Jury
more
disappointing than I possibly would have otherwise. It's incredible how
much they fail to deliver the goods here. Oh well, the studio died not
so long afterwards, so I feel some satisfaction from that.
Palance plays Jim Wade (Wade? What kind of a
tough cop name is
Wade?), a tough cop in California. We hear about how tough he is in the
first sequence he's in, which takes place in - where else? a courthouse
where - what else? a suspect is testifying how Wade (snicker) gave him
an "improper arrest", and I am sure you can guess in what way it was
improper.
This scene is unfortunately typical of how Wade's toughness is
illustrated
to us - namely, we keep hearing how tough Wade is, but we
seldom
see
him
doing this stuff. Most of the time, the most Wade gets worked up is
when
he spouts out some (not too harsh) venom to some scum, or talking in
that
manner about scum. In one scene, he actually gets beaten up pretty
easily
by some scum! There's also a really dumb and sluggish car chase he's
involved
in at one point. Except for the ending of the rooftop chase sequence,
and
the climatic shoot-out, Dirty Harry could easily look down on this guy
and sneer in contempt.
There is something likable about Palance in any role,
despite his ghoulish
look and his frequent playing of villains. His presence alone brings
some
strength to a pretty wimpy character, and the screen beams with energy
when he smiles. There is a problem concerning those smiles, however,
because
frequently Wade becomes nice! Well, not really nice, but take
for
example when Wade lectures police cadets at a college. When he stars
spouting
off crime statistics, you would imagine his tone of voice to get
angrier
and angrier. But for some reason, Wade sounds too "nice" when he's
lecturing
all of this. As a result, believing him as a tough cop becomes harder
to
accept. It's even worse during some parts when a calm Wade all of a
sudden
becomes angry, and vice versa. It seems like Palance didn't have his
heart
in this particular performance, almost as if he was distracted by some
personal issue or something.
It's hard to exactly pinpoint what the plot of One
Man Jury is
about. It starts off with the women in the city being stalked and
killed
by some scum imaginatively named "The Slasher" by the press, with Wade
determined to track down the guy. Halfway through the movie, Wade
tracks
down the guy, and having had enough of the courts, puts a bullet
through
the guy's head. So it then looks like the movie has moved into a look
at
a cop over the edge who starts killing scum in cold blood. However,
while
the movie looks at that angle (not very closely, I might add), the
movie
has also moved into two dumb subplots about a local mobster, and a bank
robber/murderer who was freed because of Wade's improper arrest. Even
in
the first half of the movie, there is a definite lack of focus here, so
I quickly didn't care about Wade, the other characters, or just what
happened.
However, I couldn't help but notice that the subplot about Wade killing
scum - which his girlfriend eventually discovers and is horrified by -
is never resolved in any fashion at the end, not even between
Wade
and his girlfriend. There's also an issue about a loose cannon
character
introduced near the end that Wade doesn't manage to resolve. After the
last bullet is fired, the movie's end credits quickly pop up so viewers
are less likely to think about these issues. (To add one more
unresolved
issue, there's also one murder in this movie that goes unsolved, though
this movie is not another The Big Sleep.)
This movie was rated R when it was released, though I
can't figure out
why. There are a few mild cuss words, and some people get shot with a
few
drops of blood shown, but this stuff and the previously mentioned
"action"
is at a PG level. Plus, there's no (onscreen) sex, and the closest
thing
to nudity is when a woman in the beginning of the movie is shown in her
underwear. Speaking of letters, I would give a D to the movie's
production
values, which are - what else? - scummy. Some night sequences are so
dark,
you can't tell what's happening. Even in the daytime, everything looks
dirty and unfocused. There is also some bad editing, putting together
different
angled shots of the actors, but never seeming to match the position
they
were in the last frame of the last shot. The whole production feels
exactly
like a made-for-tv movie of the era, right from the opening credits
that
list the cast and crew in a very dull looking font, with a score that
sounds
like the music played during a helicopter shot in any Aaron Spelling
production.
In my review of The Takeover
I
had my own one man jury judge that movie to be a crime against movie
watchers
anywhere. My verdict on this movie? Absolutely 100% guilty of wasting a
great premise and viewers' time! I sentence you, director Charles
Martin,
to attend an Albert Pyun festival, a festival of producer Damian Lee's
movies, and to finish off by watching every movie made by Le Monde
Pictures.
See, that's how tough Jim Wade should have been!
UPDATE: William Norton filled me in as to why
Wade's vigilante
actions were never resolved:
"They were going to film footage of Chris Mitchum
arresting Jack
Palance in the end. Palance didn't like the ending and tried a
power
play, but failed. When they finished shooting the scene where Pamela
Shoop
came up to him in at the boat after killing Joe Spinell, Palance said,
"That's it! Great ending!" and threw his coat in the water. No
one
wanted to jump off the boat to get the coat, so they couldn't have him
get arrested in the end, for the scene would have had bad continuity.
Mitchum
complained that his character had to die, for we never saw him in the
end
to arrest Jack.
"Also, the filmmaker and the producer thought they
were making a
big film and it was going to be BIG! They even put out a 2 page ad in
Variety,
proclaiming this film being bigger than DEATH WISH! It was advertised,
and filmed under the title GOD WHO PLAYED GOD! Played here in Seattle
in
the drive-ins for a week, and had a small release in Los Angeles."
Check for availability on Amazon (VHS)
See also: Deadly Force, Sword Of Honor, Taking
The Heat
|