Movies that have focused on the decidedly dodgy practice of voyeurism (Alfred Hitchcock‘s Rear Window being the best known, most highly-rated example) or which have observed or considered characters who indulge in peeping or listening in (Blow-Up, Peeping Tom, The Conversation, Hi Mom!, Dressed to Kill, Body Double, One-Hour Photo, American Beauty, The Lives of Others) own their own little guilty corner.
But there’s one moderately interesting, not-great-but-certainly-not-awful voyeurism film that’s been pretty much destroyed — you can’t rent or stream it, and nobody has even spoken about it over the last half-century, despite an intelligent, half-decent script written by the once hugely successful Michael Crichton (Westworld, The Andromeda Strain, The Terminal Man, Jurassic Park) and directed by Jeannot Swzarc (Somewhere in Time).
Released in 1973, this somewhat pervy, low-budget indie was called Extreme Close-up, and it’s been all but erased from general consciousness, even within fringe film-buff circles. You can’t find clips or trailers or one-sheets…nothing. Crichton reportedly wasn’t a fan, but why has this admittedly-flawed-but-oddly-intriguing erotic exercise been totally squelched and all but ground into mulch?
it was basically about a TV news reporter (TV actor Jim McMullan, best known for playing “Creech” in Michael Ritchie‘s Downhill Racer) who rents some surveillance equipment in order to construct a piece about what he suspects may be a growing voyeurism phenomenon. He gradually gets sucked into high-tech peeping on his own volition, of course. It becomes a growing fetish for the guy, and it gradually swallows him up.
This little HE riff is probably the last time Extreme Close-Up will ever be mentioned, much less reflected upon by anyone, ever. There might be a few VHS copies lying around, but forget discs or streaming. Extreme Close-Up bombed financially during the last full year of the Nixon administration, and was re-titled Sex Through A Window when it played the sub-run circuit.
I’m thinking of an old Jack Klugman anecdote from a ’70s talk show. While sitting in his brightly-lit living room one evening the Odd Couple star was watching his wife try on several different evening dresses…taking one off, putting another on, over and over. She wanted Klugman’s opinion about which was the most alluring, but his main thought, he confessed on the talk show, was that he wished he was a stranger looking at her from across the street.










