Rent Targets (1968)

3.6 of 5 from 116 ratings
1h 26min
Rent Targets Online DVD & Blu-ray Rental
  • General info
  • Available formats
Synopsis:
Byron Orlok (Boris Karloff) is a retiring horror-star bidding farewell to the limelight. Bobby Thompson (Tim O'Kelly) is an unassuming but disturbed Vietnam veteran who suddenly embarks on a murderous shooting rampage. As Byron makes one final public appearance, their worlds collide as Bobby brings carnage to a suburban Los Angeles drive-in cinema.
Actors:
, , , , , , , , , , , , Warren White, , , , , , , Byron Betz
Directors:
Producers:
Peter Bogdanovich
Voiced By:
Don Steele
Writers:
Peter Bogdanovich, Polly Platt, Samuel Fuller
Studio:
Paramount
Genres:
Classics, Drama, Thrillers
Collections:
A History of Cinemas in Films, Award Winners, The Biggest Oscar Snubs: Part 1, A Brief History of Film..., The Instant Expert's Guide, The Instant Expert's Guide to Wes Anderson, Top 10 Films By Year, Top Films of 1968
BBFC:
Release Date:
05/04/2004
Run Time:
86 minutes
Languages:
English Dolby Digital 1.0 Mono, French Dolby Digital 1.0 Mono, German Dolby Digital 1.0 Mono, Italian Dolby Digital 1.0 Mono, Spanish Dolby Digital 1.0 Mono
Subtitles:
Arabic, Bulgarian, Croatian, Czech, Danish, Dutch, English, English Hard of Hearing, Finnish, French, German, Greek, Hebrew, Hungarian, Icelandic, Italian, Norwegian, Polish, Portuguese, Romanian, Serbian, Slovenian, Spanish, Swedish, Turkish
DVD Regions:
Region 2
Formats:
Pal
Aspect Ratio:
Widescreen 1.78:1 / 16:9
Colour:
Colour
Bonus:
  • Commentary by Director Peter Bogdanovich
  • Targets: An Introduction by Peter Bogdanovich
BBFC:
Release Date:
25/09/2023
Run Time:
90 minutes
Languages:
English LPCM Mono
Subtitles:
English Hard of Hearing
Formats:
Pal
Aspect Ratio:
Widescreen 1.85:1
Colour:
Colour
BLU-RAY Regions:
B
Bonus:
  • Audio commentary by Peter Bogdanovich (2003)
  • New audio commentary by author and film critic Peter Tonguette
  • Targets: An Introduction by Peter Bogdanovich (2003, 14 mins)
  • Hitting Targets: Sara Karloff on Her Father, Boris (2022, 40 mins): Boris Karloff's daughter looks back on the life, career and legend of her famous father
  • On Target: Boris Karloff in the 1960s (2023, 17 mins): Stephen Jacobs, author of 'Boris Karloff: More Than a Monster', considers the great man's final decade
  • Gentleman of Horror (2023, 8 mins): a video essay on Boris Karloff by the BFI's Vic Pratt
  • The Guardian Interview: Peter Bogdanovich (1972, 42 mins): the director of Targets recounts tales of films and filmmaking at the National Film Theatre
  • The Guardian Interview: Roger Corman (1970, 64 mins): the filmmaking legend who gave Peter Bogdanovich the opportunity to make 'Targets' discusses his work
  • Trailers from Hell: Joe Dante on Targets (2013, 3 mins): filmmaker Joe Dante provides his personal take on 'Targets'
  • Image gallery

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Reviews (3) of Targets

Frankenstein Versus Reality - Targets review by Count Otto Black

Spoiler Alert
07/07/2017

This film, with its theme of disaffected Americans suddenly killing complete strangers for no apparent reason, is even more topical now than it was half a century ago, as well as being the only thing inspired by a mass shooting that isn't another mass shooting or "I Don't Like Mondays". It makes a very strong case for America's obsession with guns being a bad thing because weak, troubled people who have been told all their lives that guns make you strong and have easy access to them may try to solve their problems with guns, and there's only one thing you can do with a gun. And although it's not quite Boris Karloff's last film, it should have been because it's the last movie he was in that was any good. So why isn't it better than it is?

One problem is its self-indulgence. It's fair enough for somebody like Karloff, at the tail-end of an extraordinary career, to indulge himself a bit, because he's earned it. But for Peter Bogdanovich, a first-time director, to cast himself as a character who is basically himself, whose big scene involves getting drunk with Boris Karloff, also basically playing himself, while trying to talk him into putting off his retirement long enough to star in a movie which is heavily implied to be the one we're watching, is just plain odd. It feels as though the real purpose of the scene is to allow Bogdanovich to say: "Hey guys, Boris Karloff is my buddy and we get drunk together and everything, and I can prove it because I've got it on film!" And he really is in love with Boris (they even end up in the same bed!), meaning that Karloff is allowed to spend a little too much time just being himself, in a way which is delightful if you're a big fan of his, but which doesn't exactly ratchet up the dramatic tension.

The other plot thread goes a little too far in the opposite direction. The killer is such a stereotype of the All-American Boy of 50 years ago that himself and his family are almost parodies. He says very little, expresses few emotions, and seems rather stupid, a bovine oaf whose response to some vague discontent he never bothers to explain is to vacantly munch comfort food, and if that doesn't work, shoot people. Why? That's not the point of the film, so we're never told. The trouble is, I'm not quite sure what the actual point of the film is supposed to be. Scarier things happen in reality than in horror films, especially quaint old gothic chillers starring people like Boris Karloff? I think we knew that already. Americans have too many guns? Not news either. The American Dream looked increasingly hollow in the era of the Vietnam War? Not very profound, and I'm not even sure the film's trying to say that.

There's a lot to enjoy here, especially for Karloff fans, but there really should be more. And Bogdanovich seems to have problems directing action, because everything seems just a little bit flat and far too slow. In particular, the climactic scenes really ought to involve much more chaos and panic. Obviously the budget was a factor, but some directors could have pulled it off anyway. Overall, it's good in a lot of places, but it's a bit too satisfied with itself. Karloff's great, but in a way he probably would have been without any direction at all.

By the way, "The Terror", the apparently fictitious film-within-the-film at whose premiere the climax takes place, actually exists. It's a very obscure and completely barking mad Roger Corman movie which is available on DVD, so maybe it would make an interesting double bill with this film.

4 out of 4 members found this review helpful.

Provocative and relevant 60s flick - Targets review by JO

Spoiler Alert
02/09/2018

Debut feature of Peter Bogdanovich is an example of postmodernist film-making. The plot has 2 parallel narratives: an aspiring young director tries to coax an ageing actor, Byron Orlok (Karloff) into one last performance; meanwhile, a young, all-American boy next door murders his wife and mother before embarking on a random killing spree from a watchtower overlooking a highway. The dual narratives converge in a drive-in cinema where Orlok is making a guest appearance at a screening of one of his films (in fact, the not very scary 'The Terror' featuring an early performance by Jack Nicholson).

For its time, Targets is a bold, daring movie. It has a strong anti-Hollywood sensibility eschewing conventional film-making techniques in favour of the avant garde approach of European cinema. The camerawork by Laslo Kovacs is impressively sophisticated. The film features many shots taking the point of view of the gunman, putting the camera behind his sight lines making the audience question their attitude to violence (onscreen and off). The theme of the relationship between violence on and off-screen extends to the narrative. In one memorable scene Orlok describes himself as an "anachronism. My kind of horror isn't horror anymore". Daring film-making techniques must have been particularly unnerving for American audiences just 5 years after the Kennedy assassination. Like other films of the period, Targets does have a strong social message: here it's about the proliferation of guns in the private sector. Bogdanovich seems to be making a rallying call for greater constraints on guns.

Targets is an intelligently crafted film - albeit a bit too self-indulgent in places - which, like it's much better successor, 'The Conversation' depicts a snapshot of America at the time.

1 out of 1 members found this review helpful.

Fascinating - Targets review by sb

Spoiler Alert
18/10/2023

FILM & REVIEW AKA Targets Bogdanavich’s debut that was made because Roger Corman told him Boris Karloff owed him two days shooting and from that he could anything he wanted. Karloff(in his final role) plays Bryon Orlok a horror movie legend who has had enough and wants to sail back to England. Bogdanaich plays the rising director who has written a script with him in mind but realises it’s no use trying to persuade him. Meanwhile a gun obsessed young man kills his wife, mother and the delivery boy and leaves a note saying the killing has just begun. He starts in a cooling tower overlooking a free way and picks off the cars one by one. As the free way is wide open no one at first is aware of what’s going on so he packs up and make his escape ending up in a drive in movie theatre showing Orlok’s last picture (in fact The Terror that Karloff has made for Corman.) He then resumes the killing spree at which Orloc is booked to make his final apprearence. It’s very well done seamlessly matching the two days footage with Karloff with the rest of the picture. Karloff is just wonderful giving a dignified self deprecating turn and the finale in the drive in where in the darkness with the sound up again at first no one is quite aware of that is happening. It operates as a social commentary as well - at one point Karloff points to an article on a paper about kid who killed 6 people in a store and says the world doesn’t need my kind of horror any more. It’s based on the real life case of Charles Whitman and between filming it and it coming out both MLK and Bobby Kennedy were gunned down so the film got a very limited release. It’s very good indeed - 4/5

0 out of 0 members found this review helpful.

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