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Alice, Sweet Alice By Sean Axmaker
Paula Sheppard is Alice, a pouty, petulant problem child at that
awkward age living with her precocious little sister Karen (Brooke
Shields) and single mom. When Karen is murdered during her first communion
and Alice takes her place in line, suspicion immediately falls on her.
Then a diminutive killer in a yellow slicker and opaque mask continues the
reign of terror, and Alice's estranged father takes up the investigation
to prove her innocence. Director Alfred Sole has acknowledged a debt to
Nicolas Roeg's Don't Look Now, but Alice, Sweet Alice is
really in the Hitchcock mold, a stylish, smartly executed psychological
suspense thriller. The violence is rarely graphic but often grueling and
always harrowing, and the deaths reverberate through the film in genuine
and sometimes hysterical outpourings of grief. Even when Sole reveals the
killer's identity in a startling moment halfway through (à la Vertigo),
the tension never lets up. The original title of the film, Communion,
better captures the Catholic elements of guilt, sacrifice, and redemption
that become central to the film (another tip to Hitchcock). Only a couple
of grotesque caricatures (notably an obese pedophile landlord) and a few
rough moments (largely special effects scenes, likely due to budgetary
constraints) mar this otherwise intelligent and well executed thriller.
The DVD also features an insightful commentary track by director Alfred
Sole and editor Edward Salier and an alternate credits sequence (identical
but for the film's title), as well as brief biographies and filmographies
and a stills gallery.
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