Yet the other half may be even more revealing, suggestive as it is of what might have happened if Bogdanovich hadn't had the breaks he'd got. Like a West Coast premonition of whatever Scorsese and Schrader would get up to in the later Taxi Driver, this half introduces us to a sociopath - inspired by Texas Tower sniper Charles Whitman - who lives at home with his mum and ever-tired wife, and only finds release from sexual frustration whenever he puts his finger on the trigger. (The movie feels like an extended play on the multiple meanings of the word "shooting".) What Bogdanovich saw through his viewfinder - as clearly as the sniper does through his sight - isn't just a clash between old and new worlds, one generation of horrors and the next, but something even closer to home: a clash between two sides, creative and destructive, of the same obsessive personality. Certain limitations remain visible: a TV production budget, which leave the interiors looking no better or worse than the average episode of Columbo, and artless overdubbing, only more conspicuous on the version currently circulating on streaming platforms. Yet they're comprehensively transcended by the time of the superbly marshalled, still ultra-tense finale, a hall-of-fame setpiece where the editing, shot selection and spatial continuity put the bulk of this century's major American releases to shame. A B-picture that develops into a vision of something more complex and troubling besides: Larry McMurtry, Cybill Shepherd and several wilder swings yet were only a few years around the corner.
Targets is available to rent via Prime Video and YouTube.
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