7/10
William Conrad's Noirish Melodrama
18 November 2023
Along with a throwaway horror flick in an extremely busy three-picture year of 1965, the best-known-for-television actor William Conrad directed an unintentional neo-noir double-feature, BRAINSTORM and MY BLOOD RUNS COLD, both highly memorable, unique, creative and eclectic: the latter providing limited-rage Troy Donahue a surprisingly intense performance... with layers...

Albeit most of them intentionally hidden since his character is deeply enigmatic from the start, and desperately vulnerable -- literally when he's almost killed by spoiled, fitfully gorgeous rich girl Joey Heatherton...

Caustic and careless, stubborn and carefree, Heatherton's Julie Merriday drives her convertible towards the rural seaside Monterey-based locale so dangerously, pseudo-boyfriend Nicolas Coster fears for his life before she almost genuinely ends ten-speed-riding Donahue's - here as stranger-in-town Ben Gunther: despite the bizarre assertion to have been around forever...

Or at least a hundred years, claiming he's been reincarnated as Julie's distant ancestor and spending most of the film strategically romancing the full-lipped blonde bombshell by convincing her she's his former doomed love, who was her own great-grandmother: providing Donahue an offbeat and eccentric, borderline psychopathic role channeled through an otherwise straight/subdued persona...

And where a more animated actor might've seemed part of a charming con-man ruse, Donahue's wooden/stilted underacting works for both story and character... his only challenge is Heatherton's "I own this town" tycoon father Barry Sullivan, fretting for his adored only-child while sporadically curbed by his artistic, open-minded sister (and Julie's mentoring aunt) Jeanette Nolan...

And as the most intriguing sequences occur early on... when the mysterious, noir-inspired investigating-the-past slowly unveils... Heatherton can take her time, balancing sheer disbelief with lovestruck confusion without rushing into the inevitable wispy Harlequin melodrama, thankfully enveloped by a slowburn boat chase before a quick foot-chase finale, ultimately making MY BLOOD RUNS COLD an entirely different kind of romantic thriller, and beyond.
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