
Lee Philips’ Sweet Hostage is a well made TV movie. Based on Nathaniel Benchley’s novel, Welcome to Xanadu, and nominated for a Golden Globe for Best Television Movie, it boasts strong performances from Blair and Sheen, both having garnered recent acclaim with, respectively, William Friedkin’s The Exorcist and Terrence Malick’s Badlands (both 1973). The movie is slow but engaging, with a satisfactory conclusion. It is, however, a little uncomfortable watching intimate moments between the actors, as Blair -- though she would have been approximately 17 years of age at the time, the same age as Doris Mae -- still looks like a very young 14-year-old Regan of The Exorcist. Philips handles the more tender scenes appropriately, with the majority of it implied.

The Phantom of Hollywood, another made-for-TV movie, is an entertaining thriller that retains a steady pace for the duration of its 73-minute running time. It’s aided by director Gene Levitt’s choice of filming with crane and low-angle shots, as well as long shots, taking advantage of the expansive and largely empty sets. The movie was filmed at MGM when the studio was tearing down its backlots. Clips of older movies are interspersed throughout the first half of the film, sometimes the abandoned sets cut with films in which they’re featured (e.g., 1940’s Young Tom Edison with Mickey Rooney), or a screening room running a montage of scenes from films including Mutiny on the Bounty (1935) and The Philadelphia Story (1940). The nostalgic element overshadows the movie’s other merits, as it is neither suspenseful nor surprising. But nostalgia is more than enough, a film saved by the historical backlots that are being destroyed.

Robert Gordon’s Black Zoo is bookmarked by a rainy scene at the zoo and a person lying on the ground, an apt method of retaining suspense until the end. The story is simple and sufficient, but is diluted by plot points that are interjected and don’t go anywhere: a girl who flirts with Carl at the zoo never returns, and Michael’s apparent membership in a society that evidently worships animals (they transfer the soul of a deceased animal into a cub) is not fully explored. However, Gough and Cooper make the most of their scenes (a lengthy sequence at the dinner table with only the two of them is particularly effective), and the animals, mostly of the cat family, are alluring and endearingly photographed.
Black Zoo star Jeanne Cooper also had a small but significant role in Sweet Hostage as Doris Mae’s mother. The actress has starred on the CBS soap opera, The Young and the Restless, for nearly 30 years and is the mother of actor Corbin Bernsen, best known for his TV work on L.A. Law and more recently as a regular on USA network’s Psych (with one episode, in which a rest home is infiltrated, titled “The Old and the Restless”).
Each movie on DVD looks good with some noticeable scratches and imperfections but nothing distracting, with The Phantom of Hollywood the best of the trio in terms of visual quality. None of them have extras, subtitles or additional audio options. With crisp and stable images and clean audio, each film has the appearance of a solid VHS copy that’s been digitally transferred and improved. Any one of these movies would make a great addition to a collection. Readers can view details of each film at the Warner Bros. site (Sweet Hostage, The Phantom of Hollywood, Black Zoo), or click here to view other movies that are part of the Warner Archive Collection. (The listed movies are “Made to Order,” in which they are burned to DVD only when an order is place. This should explain the lack of features.)
Warner Bros. provided copies of all three films for review at Classic Film & TV Cafe.