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Rampage Movie Review
Rampage Review
"Rampage" Overview

Rating: R
1988
Cast and Crew
Director : William FriedkinProducer : William Friedkin,David Salven
Screenwiter : William Friedkin
Starring : Michael Biehn,Alex McArthur,Nicholas Campbell,Deborah Van Valkenburgh,Art LaFleur
Very loosely based on a true story, Rampage follows the trial of one Charlie Reece who went on a murder spree in central California and pled insanity. Writer/director is clearly disgusted with the idea that an insanity defense can get a cold-blooded killer off, but the shortcuts and inaccuracies he takes in portraying the legal system injure his cause critically. Not a bad flick, and McArthur's Reece is quite chilling, but overall it's only so-so.
Reviewer: Christopher Null
Rampage
ALEX MCARTHUR IN RAMPAGE MOVIE: PRETTY BLOODY CHARLES REECE
The reportage of a serial killer becomes the subject for a novel by William P.
Wood and for the movie "Rampage" by William Friedkin. The film "Rampage" opens
with the scene in the suburbs of a town where Charles Reece, Alex McArthur,
he's a nice free and easy guy, looking a little enigmatic behind a pair of
sunglasses, wearing a red coat, he walks towards a house.
Then he shoots to the persons inside, using a gun brought at a shop, starting
in a series of homicides. Charles Reece carries out these crimes because he's
convicted that he must to feed himself with other people's blood to remedy his
own blood. In psychiatric criminology, perhaps he could be considered a
visionary serial killer. His obsessions lead him to continue in these murders.
Visiting the Tippetts' house, he makes another massacre, but some of them are
not at home, so they're on safe, Tippetts, Royce D. Applegate, can give a
description of this psychopatic. Policemen start to effect an inspection at
Reece's house, talking with his mother performed by Grace Zabriskie, to
understand something about Charles Reece's personality. For the police when
suspects become certainty, dtectives go to a fuel station where Charles Reece
works. This is one of the most charming scenes to see how Reece shows himself
sly, polite, lying to detectives' questions. Trying to swindle them, he searchs
to escape. When detectives incriminate him going to prison Reece makes some
examinations, also he must to be at various court's hearings. In the movie it's
interesting the psychological dialogue in the prison cell when Charles Reece
wearing a detention suit, he's interrogated by policemen, giving them an
hallucinated statement of the reasons who have pushed him to do all those
murders. The procurator Anthony Fraser, Michael Biehn, must to meet to a hard
trial which it also becomes a subject of coscience. Public prosecutors want to
accuse Reece of voluntary homicide fo all the murders, while psychiatric
authorities charged by the defence lawyers work about his insanity. So they ask
themselves what to do: the execution or the internment at a criminal asylum.
During the law court's hearings, Charles Reece seems normal. Alex McArthur
performs him with the look of a good guy. Reece wearing a stylish suit, he
looks with blue eyes at the public, it seems like to search for comprehension
while people look at him, asking themselves how he could have done those
actions. And still Charles Reece is unforeseeable. In fact when he's escorted
by warders from the prison, Reece smiles with them to socialize. It's when he
attacks them, trying to escape. In the structure of the movie characterized by
symbolic sequences, one of the most remarkable scenes it's when Reece puts
blood on his skin with a tiger on the background. It seems to express an
explosive primeval ferocity in the abyss of his madness. Tracked he comes back
to prison and when the sentence of guilty is pronounced, a series of analysis
demonstrate his mental sickness. In the new version of "Rampage" when the
Tippetts go to a fair among lights and entertainments, Charles Reece writes a
letter behind the prison bars. The american version of "Rampage" on screening
at Torino film festival, in italian version it's titled "Assassino senza colpa"
on video, "Ritratto di un serial killer" for television.
ANNA SCIACCA c/o Il Giornale di Boves Italy
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