As sopping-wet a love story of the why-can't-society-leave-us-alone variety as anything to come along since "Patches" and "Town Without Pity" disappeared from the Top Forty hit list. The lovers in this case are a couple of Blueboy-ish homosexuals, having to take separate turns in prison for their sexual predilections, and larding their dialogue liberally with classic lines like "What will the neighbors say?" and "Maybe we could go to another country where nobody knows us." The best thing to be said for the movie is that it's in black-and-white, a somewhat dreary specimen of that, but still rare enough in the Eighties to be hailed as a sight for sore eyes. Directed by Wolfgang Petersen. (1979) — Duncan Shepherd
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