Arrow Video: Fear is the Key (1972) - Reviewed

Images courtesy of Arrow Video

In the last few months or so, Arrow Video has been unearthing and re-releasing some highly underrated action thriller films from the 1970s in deluxe limited edition blu-ray sets that have long been overlooked if not forgotten to time.  Among them have been John Frankenheimer’s Black Sunday, Peter Yates’ Murphy’s War and Michael Tuchner’s 1972 adaptation of Alistair MacLean’s Fear is the Key.  Coming off of the heels of Vanishing Point also prominently starring Barry Newman and featuring elegantly staged car chases from Carey Loftin of The French Connection, the film starts out right away as a stunning actioner before shifting gears into a number of unexpected thriller subgenres. 

 
While sporting the screen debut of Ben Kingsley and unlikely turns from Suzy Kendall and John Vernon, it proved to be a box office failure domestically but nevertheless became a hit overseas.  Thanks to Arrow Video’s ongoing efforts to bring these hard to see Paramount Pictures titles to filmgoers in digitally remastered collector’s sets, modern audiences have a chance to experience one of the most underrated and technically brilliant twisty-turning action-adventure thrillers of the early 1970s long overdue for cult reappraisal. 
 
In small-town Louisiana an enigmatic drifter named John Talbot (Barry Newman) is passing through town when he holds up a cheap restaurant and gets himself arrested.  On trial where it is revealed there’s a longstanding warrant for a series of crimes committed by Talbot, the feisty drifter springs to action by shooting a cop in the courtroom and taking bystander Sarah Ruthven (Suzy Kendall) hostage in an explosive extended car chase sequence.  However, not all is what it seems as further intrigue leads to sleazy mercurial characters including but not limited to an oil tycoon, a murky private detective and ruthless thugs all loosely tied to a downed plane in the ocean deep with a grave secret.

 
Initially bursting onscreen as a kind of First Blood action thriller where a seeming madman is triggered into violent escape before shifting gears into a labyrinthine James Bond kind of thriller full of double crossings, elaborate set pieces and wild villainy, Fear is the Key is a taut, revelatory actioner shot beautifully by renowned Excalibur cinematographer Alex Thomson and scored with jazzy cool by Get Carter composer Roy Budd.  The film is cut with a whip by legendary 2001: A Space Odyssey and Aliens editor Ray Lovejoy with the tense car chases opening the film fueled by the razor-sharp editing. 
 
It goes without saying much of the film rests on the debonair cool of Barry Newman in a role that more or less gives him as much driving to do as Vanishing Point.  Suzy Kendall from Thunderball and Torso initially comes onscreen as an unassuming bystander but soon herself gets caught up in the action.  Fans of National Lampoon’s Animal House will spot John Vernon playing an adversarial bigwig again though the one that’ll really get filmgoers’ eyes lit is the early appearance of a young Ben Kingsley as a bloodthirsty mad criminal enforcer with shades of what would or wouldn’t become his psychotic gangster in Sexy Beast.

 
Though it flew under the radar of American filmgoers when it first appeared in 1972 and its director Michael Tuchner only made a total of six feature films after making a foray into television, the highly underrated, criminally underseen Fear is the Key presented by Arrow Video is an important piece of overlooked action-adventure thriller cinema with arresting 2.35:1 panoramic cinematography, incredible car chases and a tense yet cool performance from Barry Newman.  


While the poster suggests a giallo thriller with a gloved hand going over a random woman’s mouth followed by a skull underneath, the actual film is anything but gialli influenced or related.  It is however a terrific little number just as deserving of a strong cult following as its predecessor Vanishing Point as well as being one of the most surprising and innovative action-adventure films since Runaway Train!

--Andrew Kotwicki