Persecution (1974)
3/10
"My wife is a dirty whore." Laughable psychological horror.
20 March 2007
Warning: Spoilers
Persecution starts as a young David Masters (Mark Weavers) drowns his deranged mother's (Lana Turner) cat Sheba in it's own milk claiming she loved it more than him, as a Christms present his bitter mum Carrie gives him a small coffin with Sheba's body inside which she makes him go outside & bury in her cat graveyard all of whom seem to have had the same name. Jump forward several years & David (Ralph Bates) is now a young man married to Janie (Suzan Farmer) & together they have a baby son called Paul who on David's birthday is suffocated by his mother's latest cat who she has again called Sheba, distraught Janie becomes a nervous wreck while David sinks deeper & deeper into some sort of depression until all the tension in the house finally comes to a shocking conclusion...

This British production was directed by Don Chaffey for the short lived Tyburn Films, this was the first of only three films they ever produced which was followed by their best effort Legend of the Werewolf (1975) & then came the alright The Ghoul (1975) although both of which are far superior to Persecution which is a pretty bad psychological horror. The script by Robert Hutton, Frederick Warner & Rosemary Wootten has some absolutely hilarious melodramatics between Carrie & David, the relationships between the character's in Persecution are badly written & thought out, I mean no one behaves like this, no one. Some of the dialogue is just as embarrassing, it has be to heard to be believed. Then of course there's the supposed shock twist ending which is obviously meant to mirror & parallel the events that have happened previously in a 'wasn't that neat, ironic & clever' sort of way but again it's just so overblown, unintentionally funny & downright silly that I couldn't take it seriously & I actually started to laugh when David made Carrie drink milk out of the bowl on the floor. The whole film is played totally straight & is utterly serious in tone which just kills the whole thing because it's so bad & stupid you can't take it seriously. This could have been an effective little Anglo horror but instead it tries to be clever & in the end it doesn't really know what it wants to be & I'm not sure who Persecution will appeal too as it's not a horror, it's not a thriller & it's too silly to be a proper attempt at drama, the pace is slow, not that much really happens & there's nothing to retain ones interest.

Director Chaffey does OK, there' one or two nice moments here but they're few & far between. When he does go for out-and-horror it just doesn't work, fat ugly cats aren't scary & the scene when Carrie gets lost in the maze is terrible. Forget about any gore as there isn't any.

It's quite well made with the usual high production standards you would expect from a British film from this period although the film has badly dated with the fashions & in particular Ralph Bates hairdo. The acting is pretty awful & together with the material they have to work with they come across as plank's.

Persecution is a pretty bad film, it's so bad some parts are hilariously watchable but overall this is definitely one to give a miss.
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