Targets: Difference between revisions

Everything About Fiction You Never Wanted to Know.
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''[[Targets]]'' is a 1968 horror thriller (produced by [[Roger Corman]], directed by Peter Bogdanovich) that focuses on two men in [[Los Angeles]]. One is Byron Orlock ([[Boris Karloff]]), an aging and beloved horror film actor who has announced his decision to retire from film-making, feeling that [[Real Life]] is churning out more and far worse horrors than anything he can hope to put on screen. The other is young Vietnam vet [http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Charles_Whitman Bobby Thompson] (Tim O'Kelly) who unknowingly sets out to prove Orlock's point when he finally snaps under the [[Stepford Suburbia|soulless banality]] of his existence, gathers up [[More Dakka|an arsenal]], and goes on a [[Ax Crazy|shooting spree]]. Inevitably, the paths of the two men cross...
''[[Targets]]'' is a 1968 horror thriller (produced by [[Roger Corman]], directed by Peter Bogdanovich) that focuses on two men in [[Los Angeles]]. One is Byron Orlock ([[Boris Karloff]]), an aging and beloved horror film actor who has announced his decision to retire from film-making, feeling that [[Real Life]] is churning out more and far worse horrors than anything he can hope to put on screen. The other is young Vietnam vet [[wikipedia:Charles Whitman|Bobby Thompson]] (Tim O'Kelly) who unknowingly sets out to prove Orlock's point when he finally snaps under the [[Stepford Suburbia|soulless banality]] of his existence, gathers up [[More Dakka|an arsenal]], and goes on a [[Ax Crazy|shooting spree]]. Inevitably, the paths of the two men cross...


A worthy coda for Karloff's career, and a symbolic passing of the torch from one generation of filmmakers to the next.
A worthy coda for Karloff's career, and a symbolic passing of the torch from one generation of filmmakers to the next.
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* [[Executive Meddling]]: A positive example, in that the film wouldn't have been made in the first place, except Karloff owed the ever-frugal Corman two days of filming; as already noted, Karloff was so impressed with the resulting script, he [[Doing It for The Art|volunteered]] the needed extra shooting time for free.
* [[Executive Meddling]]: A positive example, in that the film wouldn't have been made in the first place, except Karloff owed the ever-frugal Corman two days of filming; as already noted, Karloff was so impressed with the resulting script, he [[Doing It for The Art|volunteered]] the needed extra shooting time for free.
* [[Good Colors, Evil Colors]]: All of Orlock's scenes are shot in mellow autumnal shades, while Thompson's are cold sterile blues.
* [[Good Colors, Evil Colors]]: All of Orlock's scenes are shot in mellow autumnal shades, while Thompson's are cold sterile blues.
* [[Hey It's That Guy]]: The screenwriter Sammy Michaels is played by Bogdanovich himself.
* [[Hey, It's That Guy!]]: The screenwriter Sammy Michaels is played by Bogdanovich himself.
** Mike Farrell, the guy caught in the [[Phone Booth]], went on to play B.J. Hunnicutt in ''[[MASH]]''.
** Mike Farrell, the guy caught in the [[Phone Booth]], went on to play B.J. Hunnicutt in ''[[MASH]]''.
* [[I Am Not Spock]]: Orlock is Karloff with the serial numbers lightly sanded off. Almost counts as an [[As Himself]] trope.
* [[I Am Not Spock]]: Orlock is Karloff with the serial numbers lightly sanded off. Almost counts as an [[As Himself]] trope.
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** During the final shooting spree, Thompson {{spoiler|is unable to determine which Orlock to shoot at - the one onscreen at the drive-in theater or the one [[Paranoia Fuel|coming right at him]].}}
** During the final shooting spree, Thompson {{spoiler|is unable to determine which Orlock to shoot at - the one onscreen at the drive-in theater or the one [[Paranoia Fuel|coming right at him]].}}
* [[Nothing Is Scarier]]: The film has no music soundtrack, except for a tune heard on a car radio.
* [[Nothing Is Scarier]]: The film has no music soundtrack, except for a tune heard on a car radio.
* [[Shout Out]]: Karloff's earlier films are referenced in this film as being part of Orlock's career; using the footage was part of the deal with Corman.
* [[Shout-Out]]: Karloff's earlier films are referenced in this film as being part of Orlock's career; using the footage was part of the deal with Corman.
** The screenwriter's name Sammy Michaels was named for [[Samuel Fuller]], who helped write the film's screenplay.
** The screenwriter's name Sammy Michaels was named for [[Samuel Fuller]], who helped write the film's screenplay.
* [[The Sixties]]
* [[The Sixties]]

Revision as of 18:54, 25 January 2014

Targets is a 1968 horror thriller (produced by Roger Corman, directed by Peter Bogdanovich) that focuses on two men in Los Angeles. One is Byron Orlock (Boris Karloff), an aging and beloved horror film actor who has announced his decision to retire from film-making, feeling that Real Life is churning out more and far worse horrors than anything he can hope to put on screen. The other is young Vietnam vet Bobby Thompson (Tim O'Kelly) who unknowingly sets out to prove Orlock's point when he finally snaps under the soulless banality of his existence, gathers up an arsenal, and goes on a shooting spree. Inevitably, the paths of the two men cross...

A worthy coda for Karloff's career, and a symbolic passing of the torch from one generation of filmmakers to the next.

Targets contains examples of:

  • Affably Evil: After killing his wife and mother, Thompson, while buying numerous rounds (that wouldn't be a big deal back in the 1960s, or in Texas today), casually carries on a conversation with the gun store owner.
  • Bedmate Reveal: Orlock and Sammy get drunk and end up falling asleep in Sammy's bedroom. Sammy has a bad dream and startles himself awake:

 Orlock: (suffering from Hangover Sensitivity) Why did you yell?!

Sammy: I was having a nightmare and I woke up next to Byron Orlock!

Orlock: (sourly) Very funny.

 Kip Larkin: Mr. O, I must have dug your flicks like four zillion times! You blew my mind!

Orlock: Obviously.