The British film Prey opens much as you’d expect a typical 1970s slasher film would start with a young couple having a romantic tryst in their car when they have a close encounter of the most violent kind, in this movie that doesn’t mean a chainsaw-wielding maniac but instead this terror comes in the form of a shape-shifting alien named Kator (Barry Stokes), who brutally murders the couple and then takes on the form and appearance of the male victim. As cinematic villains go one will have to admit that Kator is a rare specimen, a blunt metaphor for violent masculinity of the male species – despite being an alien Kator is decidedly male – and when his scouting mission to Earth results in an encounter with a couple of lesbians the metaphor moves from subtext to just plain ole text.
We get it, all men are dogs.
Our cast of characters is rounded out by Jessica-Ann (Glory Annen) and Josephine (Sally Faulkner), a lesbian couple who live in a nearby manor house, it was Jessica who witnessed strange lights in the sky but her lover Jo has no time for fanciful notions of space visitors. Jessica is a flighty and meek young woman who wants to see more the world or at least more than what can be found in the woods surrounding this house, but her paramour Jo is a domineering partner who has no interest in risking her lover encountering rivals. The character of Jo is your typical psycho-lesbian that has popped up in countless thrillers over the years but this cliché is turned on its head when the next rival turns out to be a carnivorous creature from outer space. In films of this type Jo would normally be the straight-up villain of the piece – pun not intended – and it would be up to the arriving hero to rescue Jessica from her evil clutches, but in Prey, the would-be saviour turns out to be even more dangerous than the jealously crazed lesbian lover.Note: This film received an “X” rating on its original release and does include some fairly graphic sex scenes.
It’s when Kator, now going under the assumed name of Anders, arrives at the manor house that things go from being simply horrific to the bloody bizarre. At first, Jo considers Anders to be a trespasser, which he is, but Jessica notices his limp and forces Jo to offer him aid. This was a mistake. It turns out that Kantor is an advance scout for an alien invasion force and he’s been sent here to see if Earth is worth the effort. The film’s eighty-five-minute runtime consists of “Anders” acting all creepy, Jessica ranging from being terrified to full-on excited, while Jo covers the ground between suspicion and jealousy. The story’s location is mostly within the manor house and despite its size, it still manages to give us a rather nasty claustrophobic feel, mostly due to Jessica appearing to be a trapped rabbit in her own home, with a few excursions into the surrounding woods that only adds to one's feeling of isolation.
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