Victims (1982) Poster

(1982)

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7/10
Ugly and effective
Corpus_Vile9 October 2011
Victims, directed by Tony Vorno, who also stars as the protagonist, opens with Paul, a deeply disturbed serial rapist, receiving therapy. From here, the viewer sees via flashbacks of Paul's abusive mother and her sadistic pimp, why Paul is the addled misogynist he is today. Of course, the therapy is too little, too late for Paul, who then embarks upon a hate fueled rape rampage. So far, so exploitative horror.

However, Victims transcends its grindhouse (and grimy) status somewhat by attempting to be a serious study in regards to its theme, and to its credit it achieves this and emerges as serious a study as Henry or Maniac (which the film has the closest parallels to) was anyway. Shot in 1977, it was delayed for various reasons and didn't get its release until 1982. Anyone watching it and thinking it's a Maniac rip off, should note that it actually predates Lustig's film by three years.

Victims won't be to everyone's taste. As a serious study of a serial rapist, it's less exploitative than one would expect, (and actually comes across as semi documentary in parts) so may have some fans feeling short changed in this regard, yet it's starkly effective overall. It's an ugly film with ugly characters. Even the nudity is unerotic and ugly. It also makes the brave decision to tackle child sexual abuse, albeit briefly. The rape scenes are shot in this stark, nasty tone, with certainly no interest in titillating the grindhouse 42nd St. crowd.

Overall, it's certainly its own stand alone film and an obscure one to boot. Victims didn't receive a theater release and only a handful of VHS copies were released in Holland. It got its one and only world premier theater release in the UK in 2007, courtesy of Fabfest press.

A true "lost" film, it's nonetheless worth seeking out for fans looking for something just a little different, and I'd personally really like to see Code Red or Synapse giving this one some well deserved love.

7/10, an ambitious and effective little flick.
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9/10
Paulie the Sexual Predator.
HumanoidOfFlesh21 March 2011
I first read about Tony Vorno's "Victims" in brilliant book by Stephen Thrower "Nightmare USA: The Untold Story of Exploitation Independents". After reading Chapter 13 I wanted to see this utterly obscure and very bleak serial killer movie. Finding a copy wasn't simple, but certainly worth looking for.

Paulie occasionally murders women. He was abused by his prostitute mother Paula, her friend - an alcoholic hooker Sheila and her perverted pimp. A childhood trauma prompts Paulie to become violent and unpredictable. He slowly lurches into madness and the murders of women begin. Murders full of fear, fury and anger.

The central performance of Tony Vorno/ Daniel DiSomma is excellent. His portrayal of frustrated killer is on par with Joe Spinell's haunting role in William Lustig's "Maniac". The character of Paulie is both sad and comical. Unfortunately Paul becomes very dangerous during his encounters with women. The rape attempt of Marianne, the psychiatrist's secretary is quite harrowing and disturbing without relying on sexual violence. "Victims" is loaded with extensive flashbacks which show the origins of Paulie's madness. Paulie is like the child trapped in man's body. Traumatized child with the penchant for rape and violence.

"Victims" was never released in the United States, Canada, Mexico and South America. If you liked downbeat serial killer movies like "Deranged", "Nightmare", "Angst", "Maniac", "Henry: Portrait of a Serial Killer", "Don't Go in the House" or "Don't Answer the Phone" you can't miss this neglected cult classic. 9 serial killers out of 10.
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