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Sidney Poitier in PRESSURE POINT Year: 1962 Rating: *** |
Produced by Stanley Kramer and directed by Hubert Cornfield, the recently-departed acting legend Sidney Poitier starred in this psychological drama about a prison shrink batting heads with a full-blown Nazi sympathizer...
An unapologetic self-proclaimed Anti-Semitic/White Supremacist who right off the bat considers President Roosevelt (neither Jewish or black) a no-good cripple during a flashback taking up most of the screen-time, so he's... well, opposite of a registered democrat... but made in 1961 what comes across as preachy-bias now was fairly new then, and part of Kramer's usual progressive teachable-moment forte...
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Bobby Darin as Patient didn't vote democrat in PRESSURE POINT |
While the best scenes have the intellectual black doctor and white racist prisoner at odds discussing why Bobby Darin as Patient has so much hatred, director Cornfield — influenced by the abstract French New Wave — spends too much time with creatively-shot yet overall-distracting surreal flashbacks involving Darin as a badly parented kid (they're actually flashbacks of a flashback since Poitier tells/narrates his story to troubled present-time shrink Peter Falk)...
And while real-life crooner Darin does a good-enough job, seeming natural in a role that might have been overacted by a more logically-suited method man, child actor Barry Gordon... who looks as if Adolf Hitler and Danny Thomas morphed into a single Mr. Potato Head... is horribly miscast, taking away from those heated office scenes where Poitier displays his usual levelheaded-despite-a-rigged-game aura, which PRESSURE POINT needed more of, since, after so many visual detours, it feels like the doctor's observing the movie instead of the patient.
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Sidney Poitier in PRESSURE POINT
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Hideous-looking miscast Barry Gordon as Child Victim in PRESSURE POINT |
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Sidney Poitier in PRESSURE POINT with Peter Falk in the framing story |
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