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Title: SHARK'S TREASURE Year: 1975 Rating: **** |
Cornel Wilde's SHARKS' TREASURE, a Neo Noir in the
Ernest Hemingway tradition of the TO HAVE AND HAVE NOT style, centers on
machismo verses elements of the sea...
The title
killer fish seems to be intentionally guarding a treasure of golden
coins at a location that takes over half the film led by Wilde's
semi-famous fortune hunter boatsman, Jim Carnahan, along with the map's
bearer, a young man played by TERROR HOUSE actor John Neilson...
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From SHARK'S TREASURE |
Although
Wilde had been a very good actor since playing the talky inside-man to
Humphrey Bogart's in HIGH SIERRA followed by the likes of LEAVE HER TO
HEAVEN, ROAD HOUSE and THE DEVIL'S HAIRPIN, it takes a talented Yaphet Kotto, as Ben, along with his Vietnam vet buddy Larry, played
by sporadic BONANZA guest star David Canary, to make the picture more
believable and intense....
Well that's the ship's party, and before TREASURE
hits the three-fourths mark, the villains arrive: a band of escaped
convicts, five of them, though herein only two need naming: Cliff Osmond
is a tall, mustached, balding Spanish Alpha Male, cursed within a
creepy, bullying love affair with a young blond man you just know was
his bitch in a Texas prison where they'd escaped...
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From SHARK'S TREASURE |
As
an actor, Osmond's turned up as a goofball heavy in Disney movies, which this is
anything but... And taking two to tango, Ray Milland's passive,
sheepish FROGS grandson David Gilliam plays the put-upon blond punk
involving the most bizarre and sadistic homosexual anti-romance occurs
(a hybrid of DELIVERANCE and SHORT EYES)...
Meanwhile, the main four
players, who, minutes earlier, were so full of life having just
succeeded in finally funneling-up the treasure, are busy dodging sharks by either outsmarting or
killing them with spears (in scenes so callus and calculated, it would not allowed on film today), and a good deal of suspense relies on how quick those creatures are...
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From SHARK'S TREASURE |
So Al Giddings, the underwater photographer, must be
given credit as this particular shark picture, while feeling like a
pulpy fortune hunting programmer, looks as good as any documentary on
the legendary menace of the deep: A horde of Tiger Sharks as opposed to
one menacing Great White. Never have so many sharks looked so pointed,
feisty and mean, and all in their natural habitat as opposed to cheating
with stock images...
With a slash of their tails, they guard their territory in rapid numbers while the men, harder to discern
underwater where plot means little compared to the sport of "sharking,"
turn into intrepid harpoon wielding hunters, doing what some viewers may find
cruel and pointless when it's really just plain necessary...
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Cornel Wilde and John Neilson in SHARK'S TREASURE |
Especially
dark, violent and downright morbid is a gothic row of dead sharks hooked from ropes, hanging
in a sort of underwater gallows from the floaty balloons above...
So,
overall, this forgotten lost TREASURE is a decent yarn despite
suffering through many overlong scenes to get to the proverbial gold.
Unlike Steven Spielberg's request to never show land, during this Third
Act, while the boys are hand-tied and threatened, stretches of land are
visible so we don't really feel completely out there like in JAWS...
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Cornel Wilde in SHARK'S TREASURE |
Once a
bizarre sadistic fight occurs between the head baddie and his abused
boytoy, things get so bizarre it's up to the film's writer/director,
Wilde himself, to make things watchable again, bringing back the lean
energy from his Film Noir days, remaining cool and calm while playing
the long game, getting inside the head of the only vulnerable convict.
The man's acting peaks during these 11th hour moments...
A
few scenes, using literal inserted photographs of the treasure hunt
after the initial discovery has been established (to the cool yet campy
song titled "Money, Money"), seems like a cop-out shortct but looks
creative and moves the story smoothly forward despite hitting a dead
calm once the antagonists board...
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Cornel Wilde in SHARK'S TREASURE with Yaphet Kotto |
There's some
adventure during the climax but the most fun for the viewer take place
during the first half where SHARK'S TREASURE is a bonafide oceanic
treasure hunting flick that, like TREASURE OF THE SIERRA MADRE, has the
men getting more greedy... particularly
Wilde and his bitter employee Kotto, forced not to smoke on deck...
The
tension is more palpable between the four cohorts than the nine or so
captives and captors. And while it's the epitome of an uneven picture,
after a few viewings the jigsaw pieces together, and you may just find
it a fulfilling experience at sea, deeply rooted even while in shallow
regions.
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Cornel Wilde aims tough in Sharks' Treasure |
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Caesar Cordova and Gene Borkan in Sharks' Treasure with Dale Ishimoto |
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Cornel Wilde writes, stars and directs Sharks' Treasure |
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Yaphet Kotto and David Canary in Sharks' Treasure |
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Cornel Wilde andYaphet Kotto in Sharks' Treasure |
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Cornel Wilde andYaphet Kotto in Sharks' Treasure |
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Cornel Wilde and John Neilson in Sharks' Treasure |
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Cornel Wilde and David Gilliam in Sharks' Treasure |
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Cornel Wilde, Yaphet Kotto, John Neilson and David Canary in Sharks' Treasure |
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Cliff Osmond and Gene Borkan in Sharks' Treasure |
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David Gilliam and Roxanna Bonilla-Giannini in Sharks' Treasure |
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The sharks of Cornel Wilde's SHARKS' TREASURE |
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The sharks of Cornel Wilde's SHARKS' TREASURE |
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The sharks of Cornel Wilde's SHARKS' TREASURE |
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The sharks of Cornel Wilde's SHARKS' TREASURE |
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The sharks of Cornel Wilde's SHARKS' TREASURE |
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The sharks of Cornel Wilde's SHARKS' TREASURE |
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The sharks of Cornel Wilde's SHARKS' TREASURE |
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The sharks of Cornel Wilde's SHARKS' TREASURE |
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Cornel Wilde, Yaphet Kotto, John Neilson and David Canary in Sharks' Treasure |
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Cornel Wilde and John Neilson in Wilde's treasure thriller SHARKS' TREASURE |
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Cornel Wilde a real end-of-the-world nut gives product placement in Shark's Treasure |
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The sharks of Cornel Wilde's SHARKS' TREASURE |
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The sharks of Cornel Wilde's SHARKS' TREASURE |
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Cornel Wilde and John Neilson in Wilde's treasure thriller SHARKS' TREASURE |
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From SHARKS' TREASURE |
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From SHARKS' TREASURE |
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David Gilliam and Cliff Osmond in Sharks' Treasure |
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Sharks' Treasure Lobby Cards
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