Jud (1971) Poster

(1971)

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Downcast bummer with a knavish handling of difficult subject matter.
EyeAskance6 December 2004
Mentally/emotionally damaged 'Nam soldier returns to the states to find that his fiancée is no longer his fiancée. He takes residence in a Los Angeles rooming house full of various maladroits and flashes back periodically to the horrors of war, has coffee in a diner, makes love on a beach, gets into a fight, and drives around the greater L. A. area in his convertible to avoid the needy(and implied homosexual)fawning of one of his housemates.

Unquestionably a film of its time, JUD is one of those "naturalist" indies from the early 70s which circumvents entertainment value to explore the psyche of a central character by way of reverie, extracted memories , and scenes of mundane, disregardable "slice of life" randomness.

The film's infrastructural issues of post-Vietnam isolation are serious and very sensitive, but are approached in such an insincere, offhand manner that they feel provisional, if not roundly exploitative. JUD is eighty minutes of ceaseless blue funk which feigns concern for its own enterprise, lazily ruminating on a character who is poorly developed, one-dimensional, and potentially offensive to some viewers. It is, however, always nice to get an eyeful of the late Claudia Jennings, who was among the loveliest screen visions of her time. Her presence is to this picture as the rose is to the cesspool.

3/10.
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2/10
Good argument for re-enlistment.
yumatom29 September 2002
I saw this in 1971 Los Angeles. It was supposed to be a look at the problems of a returning Marine Corps Viet Nam veteran. Jud doesn't seem to dream or to have benefitted from his military tour as he improbably stays in a depressing environment, symbolized by a barrack-like apartment building and dead end people. Does he have to stay there? A panning reviewer in the Los Angeles Times mused: `If there was ever a city you could get lost in, it's Los Angeles.' Clinical depression might have been going on here, perhaps in the people who made this movie. Truthfully, I would have hurried to the re-enlistment office.
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