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The Honeymoon Killers

 
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The Honeymoon Killers

  • Director: Leonard Kastle
  • AMG Rating: starstarstar
  • Genre: Crime
  • Movie Type: Crime Drama, Docudrama
  • Themes: Dangerous Attraction, Serial Killers
  • Main Cast: Shirley Stoler, Tony Lo Bianco, Dortha Duckworth, Doris Roberts, Marilyn Chris, Mary Jane Higbee
  • Release Year: 1969
  • Country: US
  • Run Time: 103 minutes
  • MPAA Rating: R

Plot

Martha Beck (Shirley Stoler) is a lonely nurse who takes care of her invalid mother in Mobile, Alabama. Starved for affection, she places an ad in a lonely hearts column and soon receives a letter from Ray Fernandez (Tony LoBianco). He meets her and runs off with her dowry to New York City. Martha puts her mother in a nursing home and follows the handsome con artist. She agrees to pose as his sister as the two fleece lonely, unsuspecting women out of their money. Martha's jealousies of Ray's victims leads to murder. In Grand Rapids, Michigan, an elderly matron is killed and her child is drowned in a washing machine. Martha considers confessing to the police when she finally realizes Ray will never be true to her or any other woman. The story was taken from actual events, and the real-life couple were eventually executed in Sing Sing prison in 1951. The black-and-white photography adds an aura of authenticity to the documentary-style production. ~ Dan Pavlides, All Movie Guide

Review

Leonard Kastle's sole directorial credit, The Honeymoon Killers, is a stark but compelling thriller that aims a good bit higher than most horror films of its day (not many filmmakers would use Gustav Mahler to score a true-life crime story, let alone make it work), and generates a cold and darkly disturbing tone that's all its own. While The Honeymoon Killers is (purposefully) rough around the edges, Kastle uses the deep shadows of his high-contrast black-and-white camerawork and ratty low-budget art direction to conjure up a strange and troubling world where the surroundings are as flat and empty as the consciences of its protagonists. (Part of the film's look and feel might be attributed to a young Martin Scorsese, who was the film's original director, but was fired after a few days for taking too long with his set-ups.) The underappreciated Tony Lo Bianco is a fascinating mixture of greasy charm, bravado, and cowardice as serial bigamist Raymond Fernandez; Shirley Stoler is superb as Martha Beck, who seems to have been waiting all her life for Ray to come along and unleash her appetite for both sex and bloodshed; and the parade of sadly ordinary women who portray their victims look just real enough to give this a semi-documentary feel that makes the proceedings all the more uncomfortable. While far from perfect (the pacing is a bit uncertain and the dialogue sometimes clunky), The Honeymoon Killers' virtues far outweigh its flaws, and one has to wonder what else Kastle may have had to say if he'd ever had the chance to make another film. ~ Mark Deming, All Movie Guide

Cast

Kip McArdle - Delphine Downing; Mary Breen - Rainelle Downing; Barbara Cason - Evelyn Long; Elsa Raven - Matron; Guy Sorel - Mr. Dranoff; Michael Haley - Jackson; William Adams - Justice of the Peace; Ann Harris - Doris Acker

Credit

Leonard Kastle - Director, Richard Brophy - Editor, Oliver Wood - Cinematographer, Warren Steibel - Producer, Fred Kamiel - Sound/Sound Designer, Leonard Kastle - Screenwriter, Gustav Mahler - Featured Music

Similar Movies

Bonnie and Clyde; Breathless; Gun Crazy; Guncrazy
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The Honeymoon Killers

theatrical poster
Directed by Leonard Kastle
Produced by Warren Steibel
Written by Leonard Kastle
Starring Shirley Stoler
Tony Lo Bianco
Mary Jane Higby
Doris Roberts
Music by Gustav Mahler
Cinematography Oliver Wood
Editing by Richard Brophy
Stanley Warnow
Distributed by American International Pictures
Release date(s) 1970
Running time 115 minutes
Country United States
Language English
Budget $150,000[1]

The Honeymoon Killers is a 1970 American film written and directed by Leonard Kastle, and starring Shirley Stoler and Tony Lo Bianco. It tells the story of Martha Beck and Raymond Fernandez, the notorious "Lonely Hearts Killers" who murdered at least 12 women in the 1940s. The soundtrack is a selection from the works of Gustav Mahler.

Contents

Plot

Martha Beck is a sullen, overweight nurse who lives in a southern town with her elderly mother. To help her find a man, Martha's friend Bunny writes to a "lonely hearts" service, which results in a letter from Ray Fernandez of New York City. Overcoming her initial resistance, Martha corresponds with Ray. He visits Martha and seduces her. Later, Ray sends Martha a letter ending their "relationship" and Martha calls him, threatening to kill herself because she cannot live without him.

Moved by her devotion, Ray asks Martha to visit him in New York. There, Ray reveals that he is a con man who corresponds with lonely women with the intent to seduce and swindle them. Martha still proclaims her love for Ray, however, and she accompanies him as he moves from woman to woman. Posing as his sister, Martha can barely contain her jealousy as she watches Ray romance other women, though Ray promises her that he will never sleep with them. Ray marries a pregnant woman, Myrtle Young, and Martha gives her a fatal dose of pills after Myrtle aggressively attempts to sleep with Ray.

Martha and Ray move onto their next target, and Martha attempts to drown herself after catching Ray in a compromising position. To placate her, Ray buys Martha a house in the suburbs; however, their attempt at living as a "normal" couple fails, and they resume their criminal activities. Ray, under the alias "Charles Martin," becomes engaged to the elderly Janet Fay and takes her to the house he shares with Martha. Janet entrusts Ray with a check for $10,000, but she becomes suspicious of the couple. When Janet tries to contact her family, Ray and Martha hit her in the head with a hammer and strangle her to death. Her body is buried in the cellar.

Martha and Ray then spend several weeks living with the widowed Delphine Downing and her young daughter. Delphine confides in Martha, hoping that she will help convince Ray to marry her as soon as possible because she is pregnant with Ray's child. Furious, Martha attempts to kill Delphine when her daughter enters the room with Ray. Ray shoots Delphine in the head and Martha drowns her daughter in the cellar. Ray tells Martha that they'll move onto another woman, reaffirming his promise never to betray Martha with one of his marks. Realizing that Ray will never stop lying to her, Martha calls the police and calmly waits for them to arrive.

The epilogue takes place four months later, with Martha and Ray in jail and awaiting trial. Martha receives a letter from Ray in which he tells her that, despite everything, she is the only woman he ever loved. Titles on the screen then conclude the story, saying that Martha Beck and Raymond Fernandez were executed on March 8, 1951.

Production

The film was the first for producer Warren Steibel (known as the producer of television's Firing Line), writer/director Leonard Kastle (known as a composer), cinematographer Oliver Wood, and Shirley Stoler and Tony Lo Bianco (both stage actors).[1]. A wealthy friend of Steibel, Leon Levy, suggested to Steibel that he make a film, and gave Steibel $150,000, the amount that Steibel suggested it would cost.[1] After deciding the film would be about the "The Lonely Hearts Killers", Steibel asked Kastle, his roommate, to do some research on the subject; financial limitations led Steibel to ask his friend to write the screenplay.[1]

Steibel hired Martin Scorsese to direct, but Scorsese was fired for working too slowly; a few scenes he did were included in the final film. Industrial film-maker Donald Volkman took over, but lasted only two weeks. Kastle then steped in as director for the last four weeks of principal photography.[1]

Budgetary constraints meant that actors did their own hair and makeup, and special effects were not fancy. In a scene in which Martha bludgeons an old woman with a hammer, "condoms containing glycerine and red dye were affixed to the head of the victim with plaster of Paris. The hammer, a balsa-wood prop, had a pin at the end. When the pin pricked the condoms, the blood began to flow."[1]

Reception

The film was initially marketed as an exploitation film; it "performed weakly" at the U.S. box office in spite of critical praise.[1] For example, Variety magazine said it was "made with care, authenticity and attention to detail."[2] Its "modest financial success" in Britain and France probably meant that its financial backer recouped his investment.[1]

Francois Truffaut called it his "favorite American film."[1]

When Criterion Collection released a restored DVD edition of the film, The A.V. Club review ends by noting the film's "nauseous mixture of laughs and shocks, and the fact that real passion drives Kastle's characters even when they plot against each other, is what makes The Honeymoon Killers such an enduring one-off. It works, as Gary Giddins argues in the liner notes[3] to this beautifully restored DVD edition, as the perfect product of the same anxious, permissive age that produced Waters, Night Of The Living Dead, and blaxploitation. But it holds up just as well as a weirdly timeless love story with a body count."[4]

Historical accuracy

Although inspired by true events and uses the real names of the "The Lonely Hearts Killers", contrary to what the opening credits states, the film takes substantial liberties with the historical record, including how Fernandez and Beck actually met. The film does not disclose that Beck was divorced with two children whom she sent back to Florida on Fernandez's orders. Nor does it mention Fernandez's wives and children. In addition, the assertion that Beck called the police contradicts accounts of the case.

See also

Notes

External links


 
 
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