3.0 out of 5 stars
1970s exploitation, Death Wish-esq flick, July 13, 2011
This review is from: AVENGED - (1976 rape exploitation film) - aka "DEADBEAT" (VHS Tape)
'Avenged', aka: 'Tomcats' (theatrical title), 'Getting Even' (UK title), 'Deadbeat' (alternate title) is a tough, gritty, mean-spirited, but suprisingly well-made, low budget, rape-and-revenge thriller. It was directed by the same man who directed goofy 1960s soft core skinflicks such as 'Strange Rampage' and 'My Third Wife George'; Harry E. Kerwin. Before his sad and untimely death from lung cancer in 1979 at age 48, he had produced wrote and directed many sexploitation gems as well as ran the gamut from doing makeup effects for low-budget Florida-made trash pictures such as 'Love Goddess on Blood Island' and 'Sting of Death', as well as directing nudist camp flicks such as 'Girls Come a Too' and 'Sweet Bird of Aquarius'. With the sexploitation cinema dead by the 1970s as independent filmmakers were making profitable, but very illegal X-rated hardcore sex films, Kerwin moved into the more drive-in friendly brand of exploitation flicks. In 1975, Kerwin teamed up with actor-producer-writer Wayne Crawford where they co-wrote and produced the neat little Florida hillbilly killfest 'God's Bloody Acre' which starred Crawford under the pssudo 'Scott Lawrence'. Happy with the box office profits from that film, they decided to make another exploiation flick the following year in 1976, a rape-and-revenge thriller modeled after the 1974 Charles Bronson flick 'Death Wish'.
'Avenged' opens up in a small seedy suburban Miami diner where a 17-year-old, innocent and virginal waitress named Wendy Garrett is closing up the diner alone after her boss leaves for the night. A van with a Colorado license plate pulls up and the driver is this rugged cowboy named M.J. (Crawford, acting under 'Scott Lawrence' again) and his three goonish !@#$-for-brains pals who walk into the diner to rob it, but just for kicks, the four goons gang-rape and murder Wendy, with M.J. pulling the trigger of his shotgun to kill her. A few nights later, after drinking, smoking dope, and beating their girlfriends for their own enjoyment, they do the same thing again when they break into another diner after hours, gang rape, and kill another waitress. Another day later, they are pulled over for a routine traffic violation where the drunken idiots confess to both killings. But suprise, suprise.... the four cretens get away with it on a legal technicality, and a witness to the first killing is a derelict who was drunk at the time, is found unreliable. So, the four of them walk free. This of course outrages Wendy's older brother Cullen (Chris Mulkey). Despite being a law student and against the advice of his girlfriend (Polly King) and his police detective uncle (played by Kerwin's brother William Kerwin, star of Herschell Gordon Lewis' 'Blood Feast', and acting under the pesudo 'Thomas Dowling'), Cullen decides to abandon the legal system and get justice the old fashion way: by producing his .44 Magnium revolver, going out, stalking, and killing the four bastards one by one.
In one of his few starring roles, Chris Mulkey (who would also later appear in the 1990-91 surreal TV series 'Twin Peaks' playing Hank Jennings) is good as the troubled law student Cullen. Wayne Crawford ('Scott Lawrence'), who would go on to appear in a small role in Harry Kerwin's 1977 sex comedy 'Cheering Section' and star as the doomed protagonist in Kerwin's last film 'Barracuda', before going on to appear in more mainstream films like 'Valley Girl', 'Night of the Comet', and 'Jake Speed', is marvelously repulsive as the central antagonist. The utterly amoral and sadistic M.J. is so evil that like most "revenge" films, the odds are stacked against him that there isn't any moral dilemma in Cullen's murder spree to kill the four guys who raped and murdered his innocent sister. One is so anxious to see Cullen hurry up and kill M.J. and his goons is that watching this movie is like being part of a cellouid lynch mob. Another ignore-the-law revenge thriller for those who like the genue.
Despite it's low budget and faded-with-time color quality, and some plot holes with sometimes redicilous twists, two hard-to-watch rape scenes, and cheap violence, it is recommended for those who rellish with exploitation flicks.
Help other customers find the most helpful reviews
Was this review helpful to you? Yes
No