Two unsuspecting actresses are hired for what they believe to be a Murder Mystery Weekend on a secluded island, only to learn that the murders are all too real.Two unsuspecting actresses are hired for what they believe to be a Murder Mystery Weekend on a secluded island, only to learn that the murders are all too real.Two unsuspecting actresses are hired for what they believe to be a Murder Mystery Weekend on a secluded island, only to learn that the murders are all too real.
Shelly Deuber
- Karen
- (as Shelley Deuber)
Joe Cedatol
- Joe
- (as Joseph A. Cedatol Jr)
- Director
- Writer
- All cast & crew
- Production, box office & more at IMDbPro
Storyline
Did you know
- TriviaWhen asked if she ever had difficulty being nude onscreen in this and other films, Tina Krause said, "It's nerve wrecking at first heck for anyone. Think about it: 'Hey, can you drop your clothes so the whole world can see your goods and of course make comments about ya. No sweat right? We are all gonna stare at you for a couple hours just so you feel that much more uneasy while everyone is dressed." I think that sums up what it feels like at first, but after a while you basically don't really give a shit.
Featured review
Unusually good for a W. A. V. E. feature, HUNG JURY still does plenty to prove that's a sliding scale. Nevertheless, for a company whose "films" are most frequently identifiable by long scenes of characters wandering around doing nothing, it's surprisingly engaging and moves at an impressive clip, featuring several moments of shocking carnage.
Starting out in a 1974 that looks very much like then-present '94, JURY begins with a local creep accidentally drowning his neighbor while trying to steal her purse. Quickly arrested, he vows revenge while awaiting his execution by hanging (in 1974?!).
In its first baffling misstep, the film completely omits the trial to whose participants the subsequent 90 minutes will refer. Following the execution, we're next subjected to a disorienting barrage of almost non-stop murders for the next half hour, with a seemingly inexhaustible array of characters wandering on-camera and getting offed by some unseen assailant. The film is actually rolling along just fine like this (it's the best part by a mile), but, in baffling misstep number two, it then introduces a TEN LITTLE INDIANS-style murder mystery an hour in and whisks a group of new participants off for a murderous island getaway.
The subsequent hour drags, though is still far less stultifying than the inscrutable DEAD NORTH from a few years earlier. We've already gotten the sense, given a straight-to-camera dialogue scene with the killer's mother following his demise, that the perpetrator in '94 is an offspring of his, but the film nevertheless strings out the mystery of the culprit to little effect, before vexingly revealing the perpetrator an hour in and re-centering the mystery around his or her motivation. Similarly robbing the plot of immediacy, the people being killed aren't actually the judge, jury, and bailiffs from the trail, but *their* progeny, meaning this is a film about a character with no personal injury getting someone else's revenge on a bunch of people who didn't actually do anything to either of them. This revenge-by-proxy element robs the story of impact (what little there could have been given the dire lack of filmmaking skill on display) - though complaining about that is much like complaining an extra minute on the grill ruined the your McDonald's cheeseburger: end result was never going to be that good anyway.
What the film does have going for it is the unique, peevish energy that W. A. V. E. brings to most of its productions. Not an out-and-out fetish tape like the majority of their films, HUNG JURY is nevertheless more than happy to indulge its predilections from time to time, featuring several extended hogtie-strangulation (a company signature) and bathtub electrocution murders that go on *way* longer than the rest of the killings and are clearly the product of someone's beautiful dark twisted fantasy. The movie's total willingness to stop its narrative cold for these moments of excess are the main contributor to whatever shock value it has, and several other scenes emerge as similarly, startlingly sadistic - a late-film barn crucifixion becomes almost unwatchably grotesque, saved only by the fact its effects are so bad they're almost laughable.
Like all W. A. V. E. films, this is no great shakes, but it *is* the company at its best if you're looking for something you can throw on and have a few laughs at in mixed company, rather than PSYCHO CANNIBAL DANCE QUEEN or some other weirdo "specialty" tape that would surely send any even halfway-normal human running for the hills. HUNG JURY is absolutely turbo-charged in its opening 45 minutes, a non-stop bargain-basement slash-a-thon that eventually curdles into a somnolent riff on Agatha Christie thrillers as conceived by a perverted 13-year-old. That's not exactly high praise, but for a specific type of cracked cinema aficionado, it's the kind of weird vibe that inevitably pulls us back.
Starting out in a 1974 that looks very much like then-present '94, JURY begins with a local creep accidentally drowning his neighbor while trying to steal her purse. Quickly arrested, he vows revenge while awaiting his execution by hanging (in 1974?!).
In its first baffling misstep, the film completely omits the trial to whose participants the subsequent 90 minutes will refer. Following the execution, we're next subjected to a disorienting barrage of almost non-stop murders for the next half hour, with a seemingly inexhaustible array of characters wandering on-camera and getting offed by some unseen assailant. The film is actually rolling along just fine like this (it's the best part by a mile), but, in baffling misstep number two, it then introduces a TEN LITTLE INDIANS-style murder mystery an hour in and whisks a group of new participants off for a murderous island getaway.
The subsequent hour drags, though is still far less stultifying than the inscrutable DEAD NORTH from a few years earlier. We've already gotten the sense, given a straight-to-camera dialogue scene with the killer's mother following his demise, that the perpetrator in '94 is an offspring of his, but the film nevertheless strings out the mystery of the culprit to little effect, before vexingly revealing the perpetrator an hour in and re-centering the mystery around his or her motivation. Similarly robbing the plot of immediacy, the people being killed aren't actually the judge, jury, and bailiffs from the trail, but *their* progeny, meaning this is a film about a character with no personal injury getting someone else's revenge on a bunch of people who didn't actually do anything to either of them. This revenge-by-proxy element robs the story of impact (what little there could have been given the dire lack of filmmaking skill on display) - though complaining about that is much like complaining an extra minute on the grill ruined the your McDonald's cheeseburger: end result was never going to be that good anyway.
What the film does have going for it is the unique, peevish energy that W. A. V. E. brings to most of its productions. Not an out-and-out fetish tape like the majority of their films, HUNG JURY is nevertheless more than happy to indulge its predilections from time to time, featuring several extended hogtie-strangulation (a company signature) and bathtub electrocution murders that go on *way* longer than the rest of the killings and are clearly the product of someone's beautiful dark twisted fantasy. The movie's total willingness to stop its narrative cold for these moments of excess are the main contributor to whatever shock value it has, and several other scenes emerge as similarly, startlingly sadistic - a late-film barn crucifixion becomes almost unwatchably grotesque, saved only by the fact its effects are so bad they're almost laughable.
Like all W. A. V. E. films, this is no great shakes, but it *is* the company at its best if you're looking for something you can throw on and have a few laughs at in mixed company, rather than PSYCHO CANNIBAL DANCE QUEEN or some other weirdo "specialty" tape that would surely send any even halfway-normal human running for the hills. HUNG JURY is absolutely turbo-charged in its opening 45 minutes, a non-stop bargain-basement slash-a-thon that eventually curdles into a somnolent riff on Agatha Christie thrillers as conceived by a perverted 13-year-old. That's not exactly high praise, but for a specific type of cracked cinema aficionado, it's the kind of weird vibe that inevitably pulls us back.
Details
- Runtime1 hour 50 minutes
- Color
- Aspect ratio
- 1.37 : 1
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