B-Fest
Ho -- Whoa! Hold on? |
(Now,
where the heck was I?) |
I'm
not sure if it was getting brained by those
paper plates, the lack of sleep, the Nerd
Funk, or the Osco Scotch, but my recall
for this year's B-Fest is atrocious ...
Shrouded in a dark cloud that I'm having a
helluva time navigating through, there are
several chunks that are just gone; and
since I don't know where they went I'm
mostly relying on the program and some help from
a few other survivors to get this recap
put together. What follows might not be
entirely accurate, but, enh, it's close
enough.
So,
after getting some first aid by placing a
cold pop against my eye to staunch the
blood flow, I settled back into my seat, ready to take on the overnight, realizing
we still had about seventeen hours yet to
go, and then tried not to cry.
Coffy |
(Just
How I like it: Black and strong.) |
They
call her Coffy, and she'll cream you!
She's the "GODMOTHER" of them
all. The Baddest One-Chick Hit-Squad that
ever hit town! And she had a body men
would die for -- and a lot of them did!
So
screamed the taglines for Coffy,
but Coffy is, in reality, a woman
conflicted. A surgical nurse by day, she
then spends her nights out, busting up
pimps and offing drug dealers, in her one
woman crusade for revenge against those
who wronged her sister. But nothing seems
to satisfy her need for vengeance, so she
keeps at, putting herself in danger,
tracing things all the way up to Mr. Big
-- Alan Arbus (--
ya know, the psychiatrist on M*A*S*H).
Needless to say, all hell breaks loose.
That
may sound shallow on the surface, but Coffy
is a lot more complex than that; as a
person and a movie. Credit to genre
veteran Jack Hill, the film's writer and
director. This is easily Pam Grier's best
movie, too, and I'd argue with anyone that it
should be considered the best
blaxploitation movie of all time. And if
it isn't, it's on a very short list.
The
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It's
all good, and it has Sid Haig to
boot!
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Mystery
Shorts #2 & #3 |
(Tomb
it May Concern and You Are
What You Eat.) |
We
plunge into the deep end of the pool when
the next short cues
up. Tomb
it May Concern
is
an
old burlesque loop that centers on two
really bad Abbot and Costello wannabes
looting an Egyptian crypt. I'm not sure if
the reel broke, or what, but the film
ended abruptly before the female mummy
could do a semi-strip tease / belly-dance
/ hully-gully / this is sexy? / kinda of
thing. Yes, I've
seen it before. And no, you didn't miss
much. Then,
the next short spooled up and the audience
was assaulted, and I mean assaulted,
by a shrewish woman with really bad teeth,
who screams and hops and jumps and yells
and torments some guy who looks like Harry
Potter. And while he doesn't seem to mind,
the audience sure as heck does. Flash
cuts, jump cuts, and a distorted and
dissonant soundtrack hammers You Are
What You Eat into you further,
pounding the round-object viewer into
their square-holed seat with the force of
a sledgehammer until it mercifully comes
to an end.
Sweet
monkey bajeezus -- What the hell was that
all about?! I don't know, and I don't
wanna know. But I do have a knew
definition for phantasmagoric and Your
are what You Eat
is it.
The
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Make
the bad woman go away ... Make the
bad woman go away ...
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GAH!
I want my Mummy!
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Gas-s-s-s |
(Sucks
Ass-s-s-s.) |
When
an accident at a bio-weapons lab unleashes
a toxic gas that kills everyone over the
age of 25, this, of course, leaves a
vacuum in the social order that needs to
be filled. Not wanting any part of that,
our film follows a merry band of hipsters
as they wonder and wander the deserts of
west Texas, eluding those who've taken
over, and searching for ... What? Well, I
honestly have no clue. What I do know
is social satire and hippies don't mix --
especially at four in the morning. See,
back in the early sixties, schlock legend
Roger Corman was at a crossroads in his
career. He was in the middle of his
Poe-cycle, was growing tired of the
exploitation racket, and he wanted to do
something a little more poignant. The
result was The
Intruder,
where William Shatner incites a town's
racial misgivings to violence. Corman
claims it was the only film he ever made
that lost money, and after which, he went
back into the profitable formulas of
monsters, then drugs, then tits and ass.
Now, there are those that find The
Intruder achieved to something more than
its budget or creator allowed, and often
bemoan that the low-budget auteur didn't
try to make more films about societies'
social ills.
I
say, Be careful what you wish for.
Here,
we get Roger's take on the abysmal failure
of the counter-culture movement as the
sixties came to a close. And then he asks
us to pull his finger with the expected
noxious results. This was also Corman's last
film for American International, and I
must say I gotta kick out of how the whole
film basically mirrors Roger's film career
for them -- westerns, to sci-fi, to Poe,
to outlaw bikers, to drugs, to sex. While
viewing this opus, our group was split at
about fifty/fifty on the film. Some
thought it was okay, others hated it with
every fiber of their being. I'll admit I'm
not that big a fan of it. It's too long,
and it blew a golden opportunity at a
chance for extreme profundity when the
roving band finally find the oracle -- a
sign, which reads "There is no
answer. Keep searching."
It
should have ended right there.
It
didn't.
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There
is no ending. Keep searching.
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Tromeo
& Juliet |
(Where
we all suffer a little Blunt Troma
Trauma.) |
Okay,
seems the Montagues and the Capulets are
feuding porn-film merchants, and this is
what happens when two members of the
warring clans fall in love. And since
Lloyd Kaufmann's involved, I'd say some
gratuitous nudity, a lot of bodily fluids
squirting out of every possible orifice, a
faint whiff of urine coming from
somewhere, and maybe, just maybe, a girl
morphing into a cow -- and not just any
cow, a hermaphrodite cow -- will be thrown
in, too. Moo.
I
actually read Romeo
and Juliet
once -- okay, fine, I read the first three
pages and the last three pages, but I saw
the movie -- and this film actually sticks
closer to the Bard than you'd think
possible, except I don't remember all the
parts about incest, nipple piercing,
lesbian love scenes and the glass encased
discipline box ... "What
light through yonder Plexiglas
breaks?" -- I freely admit I
almost pooped myself laughing at that
line. Anyways, I don't necessarily
hate Troma movies. They're mostly
harmless, you know, but I
definitely don't go out of my way to see
them. I mean, if I had a choice between
watching Tromeo
and Juliet and,
say, getting kicked in the nuts; I'd
probably watch the film. But I'd have to
think about it for awhile first. Moo.
Actually,
this film didn't turn out half bad. Riding
with two diehard Troma fanatics on the way
to Chicago kinda warmed me up to it. And
in the end, dare I say, this thing was
kinda cute. Moo.
Go
figure.
Moo.
The
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I'd
be Janie Jensen's little Crenshaw
melon any day of the week.
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Moo. |
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Mystery
Shorts #4 & #5 |
(Stranger,
and stranger still with Thrills
and Spills & Rap.) |
When
I was about twelve, while working on the
old family farm, I got a very accidental,
and a very unhealthy, dose of anhydrous
ammonia that effectively scorched away
every odor receptor in my nose. In other
words, I don't smell things all that well;
and things have to be pretty damned odious
before I get the faintest whiff of
anything; but by the time these shorts
aired, even I was starting to notice how
thick the funk was getting in the theater
this year -- and
I know a sizeable chunk of it was
generated by yours truly. Sorry, all. As
the old B-Fest joke goes -- You wonder
what that smell is until you realize it's
you.
So,
the air was thick and frothy as these
things spooled up, and while they did, I
wandered off toward the back of theater to get above the haze, so to speak.
The first short was kind of an extension
of the opening credits of The
Fall Guy,
where stunts go awry and cars and planes
crash and burn. At least that's the way I
remembered it. The second was an odd piece
that was either a morality play, or a
perfume ad about a gal being scolded for
her promiscuous behavior, consisting
mostly of her extended game of grab-fanny
on everyone she meets; but the only thing
I really remember is when she started
thumbing through some vintage
nudie-magazines -- some vintage men's
nudie-magazines.
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The
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Aaauugh!
Man Tackle!
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Graffiti
Bridge |
(We
could be watching Tron right
now.) |
And
thus begins the musical portion of our
program, with a resounding dull thud, as his
Royal
Purpleness, the artist formerly known as
The Squiggly Mark, a/k/a Prince, poops
out this little vanity piece about finding
his artistic muse that so totally ripped
off High
Plains Drifter
it's not even funny.
Only
it sucks. A lot.
The
theater was really starting to close in on
me at this point, so I missed the first
ten minutes or so of this thing
while airing out in the lobby. When I went
back in, I never caught up with the plot.
It didn't matter. Logic does not apply,
here. Although
I think fellow Graffiti
Bridge
survivor Sean Frost summed up the film
best:
"See,
it's the tragic story of Morris Day and
how his attempt to bring godless joy to
the world was destroyed by an
insufferable androgyne in hobo
makeup."
Brilliant,
my friend. Brilliant. Moo.
Sometimes
insider information is a bad thing. For
while listening to one of Stomp
Tokyo's Cult
Movie Podcasts, I found out that
one of them -- [name withheld by editor], who
sponsored this film -- had a choice
between this and Tron,
my fellow programs, and he chose this.
Why? Because [name withheld by editor] skipped the film-fest this
year. Lucky for [name withheld by editor], or I would have
readily pointed him out to everyone and
let the pummeling commence.
End
of line.
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The
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We
could still be watching Tron
right now. Feh.
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Earth
Girls are Easy |
(Eep.
Opp. Ork. Ah-ah!) |
When
a trio of furry aliens out on deep-space
patrol get aroused by watching some Wookie
porn -- yes, deep space is a lonely,
lonely place, they get so excited by this
they crash land on Earth in Geena Davis's
swimming pool. Underneath all that hair,
they find Jim Carrey and Damon Wayans,
before they were anybody, and rounding out
the trio is Jeff Goldblum.
(Wait ... Jeff Goldblum is supposed to
pass as inter-stellar beefsteak? I call no
way.) Long
story short, Geena is Judy Jetson and Jeff
Goldblum is Jet Screamer, and together,
they get down to doing a little Eep'n,
Op'n, Ork'n and Ah-Ah'n with Jeff's magic
finger -- if you know what I mean, and I
think you do; but at
least he didn't Kryptonian mind-wipe her
when they were done. Sheesh.
I
danged near nodded off during this one.
The movie isn't terrible, a middle of the
road comedy, even saw it in the theater
when it first came out, but aside from
Geena in a bikini there wasn't a whole to
stay up for. But I sucked it up and stuck
it out. 24 hours is 24 hours. Turns out it
was well worth it to see Skip Mitchell get
his Bob Dylan on, by way of former MTV VJ
Julie Brown, with a reenactment of
"Subterranean
Homesick Blues"
by holding up an endless stream of
placards with the lyrics to Brown's ditzy ode to
bleach, "Because
I'm Blonde."
Hands down, the best gag, skit or riff
this year.
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(
Way to go Skip, Baby 'Gaz would be
proud. ) |
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Geena
Davis in a bikini is the most ut!
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