The Love Merchant (1966) Poster

User Reviews

Review this title
7 Reviews
Sort by:
Filter by Rating:
Decent Film About Lust
Michael_Elliott28 November 2016
The Love Merchant (1966)

** (out of 4)

Millionaire Kendall Harvey III (Judson Todd) pretty much enjoys women's company for a night and then pays them to help out whatever they might be suffering through. He offers this to Peggy (Patricia McNair) but she refuses his offer because she very much loves her husband. However, when the husband's business fails the wife thinks about offering herself to Kendall.

THE LOVE MERCHANT has gained some popularity over the last couple decades because of the similar plot it has with the Robert Redford-Demi Moore film INDECENT PROPOSAL. I might get kicked out of the sexploitation club for saying this but I preferred the glossier more sexual Hollywood film. I know, I know. With that said, I honestly don't believe the filmmakers of that film saw this one but either way, lets talk about this movie.

For the most part Joseph W. Sarno does a good job in his directing duties as he once again makes a very good looking picture and I think he also manages to get some fine performances from his cast. I thought the film did a good job at taking a look at lust and what it could cause from two different view points. The millionaire's lust leads to loneliness. The wife's lust leads to more drama. Both Todd and McNair are good in their roles.

Where the film goes wrong is the fact that it's extremely slow at times and this leaves the 79-minute running time to drag. I also thought the story could have been played up a little bit more as it's a bit too laid back for it own good. Fans of Sarno will certainly want to check it out but others will probably prefer his later work.
3 out of 3 found this helpful. Was this review helpful? Sign in to vote.
Permalink
4/10
More Sarno melodrama for nostalgic swingers
Eegah Guy1 December 2000
Joe Sarno was the Douglas Sirk of sexploitation. Through the 60s Sarno made a string of sexy melodramas dealing with the new sexual liberation. These films are not for everyone because they are usually about 80% dialogue with only a minimum of spice to sell the film to exhibitors. The plot of this film is closely related to the more recent INDECENT PROPOSAL about a rich guy paying for the company of his object of lust. But the best parts of this flick are the go-go girls dancing in what looks like a birdcage made out of string and a small gang of leather-jacketed chain-wielding bikers straight out of Brando's THE WILD ONE.
5 out of 8 found this helpful. Was this review helpful? Sign in to vote.
Permalink
4/10
Not one of Sarno's best
ofumalow15 June 2012
Warning: Spoilers
Sarno churned out so many of these B&W sexploiters in the 60s; some are great considering their obvious budgetary and other limitations, while others mostly demonstrate those limitations. This is one of the latter. Rather than thinking "Wow, and to think they shot it in just three days!" (or whatever), you think "Well...they probably only had three days to shoot it."

The action is almost entirely confined to three drab rooms, and too much of the content is talky and stilted. Nor is it a particularly interesting plot idea: A rich playboy who needs new women to pay for sex all the time (he doesn't seem to want actual prostitutes) is attracted to a "nice" girl who reluctantly betrays her husband in exchange for the rich guy giving him a big career break. Meanwhile, a motorcycle-riding (well, it's more like a scooter), moderately "Wild" One appoints himself the rich man's procurer; the actor who plays this role gives the liveliest performance.

As he sometimes does, Sarno surprises by giving some characters a little more depth than you expect--in fact the two least sympathetic ones (rich guy and his sour, cynical secretary) turn out to be vulnerable and apologetic. But what should be an explosive ending is compromised by being poorly explained (SPOILERS: is the secretary mad because "Dixie" is her lesbian lover? the rich man's daughter? what?). I did like it that the biker guy got the last laugh.

Some will be amused by the"club" sequences and their two go-go dancers (one of whom is laughably bad). Plus, of course, there are topless women. But "Love Merchant" was all too clearly written and shot in too much haste to escape being just another low-end time-filler. If you like this sort of thing, it's worth a look, but hardly memorable.
2 out of 3 found this helpful. Was this review helpful? Sign in to vote.
Permalink
3/10
Amusingly cheesy 60s B film
sonya9002829 July 2009
This is just another lurid, 60s exploitation B film. Bad acting, a cheesy plot, and seedy locales, are what this film is all about. Virtually all of the characters are sex and money obsessed, with the morals of jackals.

Society was in the embryonic stages of the sexual revolution, when this film was made. The sex scenes are so raw and explicit though, that it seems more like a mid-70s, than mid-60s film. It must've been quite jarring, for audiences to see the graphic sexuality presented in this movie. Barely watchable, the only thing this movie has going for it, is cool jazz background music. Otherwise, this film is a hoot, if you like absurdly amusing, sleazy 60s B films.
2 out of 4 found this helpful. Was this review helpful? Sign in to vote.
Permalink
8/10
Rainer Werner Sarno
goblinhairedguy20 November 2003
Sarno is sometimes considered the skin-flick counterpart to Bergman (or, during his occult period, to Lewton), but if you dub this one into German, you'll swear it's an early Fassbinder melodrama. Set in the Greenwich Village art and go-go dance club milieu, it concerns a pretty, staid middle class woman who sleeps with a wealthy philanderer to save her alcoholic husband's business. The catalyst for the liaison is an ambitious, chain-wielding biker, whose oleaginous hanger-on character is reminiscent of Sydney Falco in "Sweet Smell of Success". As in the oeuvre of Fassbinder (and his mentor Sirk), the emphasis is on power-plays between the classes, personal exploitation and betrayal, and crossing one's own and society's barriers. As usual, the acting carries conviction and the plotting is riveting, but unfortunately, the quality is betrayed by the technical limitations -- sub-minimal sets, static dialogue scenes, and disastrous sound (re-)recording. There's some benign nudity and necking, but nothing graphic in the least; still the atmosphere is sleazy, cynical and at times stylized. And there's one stunning moment of pure cinema in the pivotal scene, which could have come from Pabst. Worth a look for aficionados of the subterranean strain of psychological truth in 60s exploitation.
9 out of 12 found this helpful. Was this review helpful? Sign in to vote.
Permalink
8/10
Well acted and interesting, like much of Sarnos' work.
Hey_Sweden12 November 2016
Writer & director Joseph W. Sarno, a specialist in soft core melodramas, comes up with a pretty good one this time. It gives us the requisite sex and flesh while also offering a meditation on the whole idea of loneliness, and how people try to cope with it. One such lonely person is filthy rich Kendall Harvey III (Judson Todd), who is always hooking up with a new hot young thing. Scummy biker "Click" (Louis Waldon) is able to find employment working for Harvey, procuring babes for his boss' enjoyment. Trouble arises when Harvey fixates on one woman he can't have, the married Peggy Johns (Patricia McNair). But he finds a way to be with her: when her husband Roger (George Wolfe), an advertising man, loses an important account, he promises to help Roger land a big new account IF Peggy will spend 48 hours with him.

If that sounds familiar, it's because this plot device prefigures "Indecent Proposal" by over a quarter century. It may be done in a much less lavish, non-Hollywood fashion, but it's still compelling in its own right. The acting from most cast members concerned really is pretty good, especially from McNair and Todd. Waldon amuses as the "love merchant" of the title, as does Patti Paget as Harvey's loyal secretary, a budding lesbian. Also making appearances are sexploitation film favorites Peggy Steffans (a.k.a. Cleo Nova) and June Roberts. The filmmaking and photography are pretty slick for this sort of fare, and it does help that we can sympathize with some of the characters - even Harvey, to a degree.

There's a fair bit of go-go dancing / padding to add to the entertainment, as well as a good and funky jazz score by Richard Cove.

If you like low budget sleaze, but appreciate it even more if it has an actual story and a theme to it, this is definitely one to check out.

Eight out of 10.
2 out of 2 found this helpful. Was this review helpful? Sign in to vote.
Permalink
8/10
Excellent soft-core melodrama from a master of the form
Woodyanders31 March 2014
Warning: Spoilers
Biker Click Boyd (a pleasingly cocky and energetic performance by Louis Walden) procures willing young women for decadent millionaire playboy Kendall Harvey III (well played to the slimy hilt by Judson Todd). Kendall wants married and straight-laced Peggy Johns (a solid and appealing portrayal by the lovely Patricia McNair) as his next conquest, but she turns him down. However, after her alcoholic husband's advertising business hits a slump, Kendall offers to help out but only if Peggy agrees to be his intimate companion for two days. Writer/director Joe Sarno handles the potentially lurid story with his customary taste, intelligence, and assurance: The characters are drawn with a surprising amount of depth and complexity, the absorbing narrative offers a few unexpected twists and turns, and several of the more blithely amoral and debauched characters receive their just harsh desserts at the nifty conclusion. Moreover, this film offers a neat time capsule of the Swingin' 60's Greenwich Village scene, with a handful of scenes set at a groovy club that has go-go dancers performing in a cage on stage. The sound acting by the capable cast keeps this picture on track: Walden, McNair, and Todd all do sterling work in their roles, with sturdy support from George Wolfe as Peggy's booze-sodden husband Robert, Joanna Mills as struggling artist Bobbi, Patti Paget as Kendall's tart no-nonsense personal secretary Polly Fields, Penni Payton as tantalizing blonde Dixie, and Peggy Steffans as ditsy ballet student Valery. Tasty brunette 60's nudie regular June Roberts has a small part as a go-go dancer. Both the sharp black and white cinematography by Bruce Sparks and Richard Cove's snazzy jazz score are up to par. Essential viewing for Sarno fans.
0 out of 0 found this helpful. Was this review helpful? Sign in to vote.
Permalink

See also

Awards | FAQ | User Ratings | External Reviews | Metacritic Reviews


Recently Viewed