Videos
Targets
Targets
An aging horror-movie icon's fate intersects with that of a seemingly ordinary young man on a psychotic shooting spree around Los Angeles.
rating
7.1
runtime
90 min

Release

1968-08-13

Cast

Tim O'Kelly
Tim O'Kelly
as Bobby Thompson
Boris Karloff
Boris Karloff
as Byron Orlok
Arthur Peterson
Arthur Peterson
as Ed Loughlin
Monte Landis
Monte Landis
as Marshall Smith
Nancy Hsueh
Nancy Hsueh
as Jenny
Peter Bogdanovich
Peter Bogdanovich
as Sammy Michaels
Daniel Ades
Daniel Ades
as Chauffeur
Stafford Morgan
Stafford Morgan
as Salesman - 1st Gunshop
James Brown
James Brown
as Robert Thompson Sr.
Mary Jackson
Mary Jackson
as Charlotte Thompson
Tanya Morgan
Tanya Morgan
as Ilene Thompson
Timothy Burns
Timothy Burns
as Waiter
Mark Dennis
Mark Dennis
as Salesman - 2nd Gunshop
Sandy Baron
Sandy Baron
as Kip Larkin
Geraldine Baron
Geraldine Baron
as Larkin's Girl
Gary Kent
Gary Kent
as Gas Tank Worker
Ellie Wood Walker
Ellie Wood Walker
as Woman on Freeway
Frank Marshall
Frank Marshall
as Ticket Boy
Byron Betz
Byron Betz
as Projectionist
Paul Condylis
Paul Condylis
as Drive-In Manager
Mike Farrell
Mike Farrell
as Man in Phonebooth
Carol Samuels
Carol Samuels
as Cashier
Jay Daniel
Jay Daniel
as Snack Bar Attendant
James Morris
James Morris
as Man with Pistol
Elaine Partnow
Elaine Partnow
as Other at the Drive-In
Pete Belcher
Pete Belcher
as Other at the Drive-In
James Bowie
James Bowie
as Other at the Drive-In
Anita Poree
Anita Poree
as Other at the Drive-In
Robert Cleaves
Robert Cleaves
as Other at the Drive-In
Kay Douglas
Kay Douglas
as Other at the Drive-In
Raymond Roy
Raymond Roy
as Other at the Drive-In
Diana Ashley
Diana Ashley
as Other at the Drive-In
Kirk Scott
Kirk Scott
as Other at the Drive-In
Susan Douglas
Susan Douglas
as Other at the Drive-In
Jack Nicholson
Jack Nicholson
as Lt. Andre Duvalier (archive footage) (uncredited)
Sandra Knight
Sandra Knight
as Helene / Ilsa (archive footage) (uncredited)
Dick Miller
Dick Miller
as Stefan (archive footage) (uncredited)
Git Luboviski
Git Luboviski
as Woman in Car at Drive-In (uncredited)
Milton Luboviski
Milton Luboviski
as Man in Car at Drive-In (uncredited)
Don Steele
Don Steele
as Deejay on Radio (voice) (uncredited)
Joey Bishop
Joey Bishop
as Self (voice) (archive footage) (uncredited)
Regis Philbin
Regis Philbin
as Self (voice) (archive footage) (uncredited)
REVIEWS
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adorablepanic

Roger Corman offered to produce (without credit) whatever film first time director Peter Bogdanovich wanted to make under two conditions: He had to cast Boris Karloff, who owed Corman two days work; and to keep the cost down, he had to pad the running time with footage from an earlier Karloff film. The result was TARGETS (1968), which proved to be too topical for many theaters to touch when it initially appeared. That's a shame, because it provided Karloff with an A-level role as the sun set on his life and career. Bogdanovich tells parallel stories which converge at the finale: One involves a young man who turns to bloodshed when he feels that he has nothing ahead of him; the other revolves around an aged film star who believes that everything is behind him. Timely when released because of the social climate; timely now because of the politically charged debate over gun control; and ultimately - thanks to the presence of the great Karloff - timeless.

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Wuchak

**_As relevant today as it was when it was made_** An aged horror icon (Boris Karloff) wants to retire because he’s weary of the biz and thinks modern life has become more horrifying than his old-fashioned movies. But a director/writer (Peter Bogdanovich) encourages him to read an atypical script or, at least, attend a promotional appearance at a drive-in, which is showing his latest movie, “The Terror.” Unfortunately, a young ordinary man (Tim O'Kelly) has snapped and is on a killing spree with the drive-in being his final shooting range. “Targets” (1968) is a minor cult masterpiece, a self-conscious postmodernist piece inspired by the “Texas Tower Sniper” from August 1, 1966, who killed 14 people and wounded 31 others at the University of Texas at Austin. Bobby (O'Kelly) is patterned after the lunatic murderer with the setting simply switched to the San Fernando Valley in SoCal. I took the flick as a bleak commentary on the way it simply is in America rather than a criticism of the 2nd Amendment. After all, outlawing alcohol during Prohibition didn’t stop people from selling & purchasing booze and neither have drug laws in the modern day stopped people from selling & buying illegal drugs. Evil doesn’t exist in a gun, knife, club or rock, but in the hearts of people bent on taking innocent lives for their own evil purposes. Plus, as clichéd as it may sound, the quickest way to stop an evil person with a gun is by a good person with a gun (certainly not an elderly man with a cane). A good recent example is the case in Charleston, West Virginia, on May 25, 2022, where a brave woman shot an active shooter dead before he was able to murder anyone gathered at an apartment complex. Dissolving the 2nd Amendment would only prevent law-abiding citizens from buying/owning firearms; it wouldn’t prevent wackos intent on bloodshed from purchasing firearms on the black market. To support this, Bobby panics at the climax precisely because some male viewers at the drive-in have grabbed their legal guns to take care of the sniper. Keep in mind that producer Roger Corman sold the movie to Paramount rather than release it through AIP. After the assassinations of Martin Luther King Jr. and Bobby Kennedy the studio released only six prints and prefaced the flick with a statement advocating gun control. Director Bogdanovich had zero to do with this. “Targets” works as an interesting psychological study: What is it that causes Bobby to ‘snap’ and ruin his life by going on a crazed killing spree? His respectable-yet-intimidating father has properly trained him on firearm safety, but he has also inadvertently made his son a frustrated weakling — a bomb just waiting to go off. The disease of legalism is all over his parent’s household, where the young couple resides. Look at the clues. This was one of Karloff’s last movies. He passed away 5.5 months after its release at the age of 81. Thankfully, he plays an interesting protagonist, a hero even, rather than some cheesy boogeyman for the millionth time. Plus I enjoyed the levity provided by his character and Bogdanovich’s, which counterbalances the stark, depressing vacancy of the rest of the story. Really, the flick is about the thin line between reality and art, the relationship between real-life and films. For instance, the killer loading his rifle is paralleled with the projectionist loading his projector at the drive-in. Also, the slayer confuses the old man intently moving toward him with the actor’s character on the big screen. It’s equally about the decline of morals and banalization of life in the modern day, particularly America and Western Culture, where we’ve lost our spiritual compass and sense of purpose. Lastly, the easy access to firearms can culminate in deadly expression of pent-up frustration and anger, which is just below the surface in some otherwise perfectly normal people. Again, the most effective way to stop ’em with the least amount of bloodshed is a good person with a gun, who’s on the scene. ’Nuff said. The film runs 1 hour, 29 minutes, and was shot in Los Angeles, including Van Nuys, Hollywood, West Hollywood and Reseda. GRADE: B

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griggs79

Hmmm… I’ve never quite got Bogdanovich. I’m still not convinced. _Targets_ is a good idea—old-school horror legend (Karloff, doing his best with what he’s given) crosses paths with a modern-day, real-world killer—but it never quite lands. Karloff’s great, obviously, and there’s something poignant about him playing a man who knows he’s past it. But the rest? Bit of a slog, honestly. The sniper stuff should be tense, but it’s weirdly flat. And the script is dreadful—people talking like they’ve just learned how conversations work. It feels like Bogdanovich had something to say about violence and movies but got distracted by showing off how clever he is. It's not a total write-off, but I wouldn’t rush to watch it again.