Strawberries Need Rain (1971) Poster

User Reviews

Review this title
4 Reviews
Sort by:
Filter by Rating:
Haunting and dream-like
lazarillo11 July 2009
This is basically female "coming-of-age" movie but with a little twist: a teenage girl meets the Grim Reaper who gives her another 24 hours to live. She decides to make the most of it by losing her virginity. The girl (first seen swimming naked in a pond) is played by pretty exploitation actress Monica Gayle. In real life a girl who looks like this probably wouldn't need 24 hours to lose her virginity (more like 24 seconds), but she has a lot of trouble in this movie. She first approaches and shy, young virgin who spies on her when she skinny-dips, but he shrinks away from her. She then goes off with a local motorcycle riding stud, but she is turned off when his idea of foreplay is whipping her with a belt. Finally, she decides to seduce her handsome former teacher(!) who once caught her stealing strawberries (hence the title). This scene really makes illicit student-teacher hook-ups and statutory rape look dangerously enticing, not only because of some more generous nudity by Gayle, but also because of an incredible scene where he feeds her champagne-soaked strawberries. (Wow!) There's another twist at the end that is actually pretty predictable, but I won't give it away.

I've heard stories that this movie actually played the Southern drive-ins as an Ingemar Bergman film and no one knew the difference. I don't believe it though. First off, if you wanted to make money in the Southern drive-ins, would you really market your film as an Ingemar Bergman? Besides, I think the small town setting of Luchenbach, Texas would have tipped most people off (this was also the setting of director Larry Buchanon's "The Naked Witch" but clearly not the setting of ANY Bergman movie). Although Buchanon was obviously inspired here by films like "Wild Strawberries" and "The Seventh Seal", the Bergman comparison is a little facile I think. While Bergman films are arty and mythic, this film is more personal and idiosyncratic, like much of Buchanon's work, and it still has one foot firmly planted in Southern-fried exploitation. But while Buchanon was no Ingemar Bergman, he's not Ed Wood either (to whom some people have compared him). Like Wood his reach did tend to exceed his grasp at times, but he was clearly a competent filmmaker, and his reach, especially in this movie, was pretty impressive.

This movie is well complemented by its soundtrack which features haunting and mournful early Janis Ian-type folk rock melodies. It often resembles a memorable, haunting interlude in "The Virgin Suicides" (a later film set in this same time era) with ripe and pretty young girls frolicking in nature to a haunting nostalgic early 70's soundtrack, or perhaps an American version of the contemporary Australian film "Picnic at Hanging Rock".

This is not a great film perhaps, but like those movies it has a haunting, dream-like quality to it that will really stay with you.
16 out of 17 found this helpful. Was this review helpful? Sign in to vote.
Permalink
9/10
An interesting view of Death
Rob Roy-227 January 1999
Wonderful opening and sudden twists to the plot. The ending is the final twist.
5 out of 10 found this helpful. Was this review helpful? Sign in to vote.
Permalink
Disturbing rip-off of Bergman.
weinerm27 April 2000
A very disturbing movie, fashioned after Ingemar Bergman's "Seventh Seal". Monica Gayle is earmarked for death and gets permission to live one more day to "experience life". Not an erotic movie in any sense (unlike most of Monica's roles), but she showed signs of being a good actress, which bore fruit in later movies. This movie has little appeal except to those who worship at the alter of Monica Gayle. A few nude scenes, but the lighting and photography angles are decidedly non-erotic.
6 out of 8 found this helpful. Was this review helpful? Sign in to vote.
Permalink
Ponderous soft erotica from the acclaimed director of MARS NEEDS WOMEN
EyeAskance14 September 2003
A very tired and embarrassed looking Les Tremayne portrays Death himself in this misfired shot at a Bergman homage, courtesy of legendary schlock-slinger Larry Buchanan(ZONTAR, THE THING FROM VENUS, et al).

Death has come for a lovely, small town virgin(Monica Gayle) who has barely had a chance to experience life, but he grants her one more day to live. What she wants to do over the course of that day is hardly a big surprise...

Mannered, though no-less lowbrow sexploitation outing is fodder for a few fortuitous laughs at its bootless attempt to transcend the meretricious nature of its foundations. The decidedly unsubtle material is pitched with a gauzy pisselegance which begs to be ennobled by poetic Left Bank sensitivities. The results are decidedly more grindhouse than art-house(which is just fine, as I see it), though production qualities are, quite surprisingly, fairly solid.

Pretty rare, and pretty likely to stay that way. 4/10
6 out of 12 found this helpful. Was this review helpful? Sign in to vote.
Permalink

See also

Awards | FAQ | User Ratings | External Reviews | Metacritic Reviews


Recently Viewed