Candy
&
Skidoo
(both 1968)
Candy: Director: Christian
Marquand
Cast:
Ewa
Aulin, Richard Burton, Marlon Brando
Skidoo: Director: Otto
Preminger
Cast:
Jackie
Gleason, Carol Channing, Frankie Avalon
Note: My friend (and loyal reader) Michael Sullivan
offered to write
a double review of two specific movies that I've been trying to find
for
years, but have failed to locate so far. Considering the content, and
unavailability,
of these particular movies, I felt it was even more important than
usual
to allow a guest review. My sincere thanks to him for going to all this
trouble to inform the public about these extraordinary celluloid
visions!
By Michael Sullivan
The 60's will always be the Golden Age of movies for me,
because it
was the only time movie executives were willing to take a chance with
odd
or bizarre subjects. Many personal favorites were made in the 60's. The
over-the-top Bond parody Casino Royale, the strange
stream
of consciousness Head, the jaw-dropping anti-American Mister
Freedom, and these two gems. Candy and Skidoo
are similar to each other they both covered "in" 60's topics (The
sexual
revolution, LSD, Hippies), and they both had celebrities making
complete
jackasses out of themselves.
First up is Candy, which was based on
the Terry Southern
novel of the same name. The novel was about a young girls sexual
awakening
and all the screwed-up characters she meets: a doctor who encourages
masturbation,
a gynecologist who examines Candy publicly, a hunchbacked thief who
likes
to rub up against police officers, and many more deviates The novel was
way ahead of it's time and still remains shocking today because it
pulled
no punches. However the movie did. Everything that made the book
controversial
was removed from the movie. But who cares, when you have Richard Burton
frantically licking booze off of a limo floor. (Not since Danny Aiello
played an Italian has an actor had to stretch so much to play an
alcoholic.)
Essentially, the film is about Candy's increasingly bizarre sexual
experiences,
which begins with Candy being taken advantage by McPhisto (Richard
Burton), a pretentious poet with a constant wind
machine being blown on him. He spills booze all over himself, so Candy
takes him home to dry off, but this begets another situation, where
Candy
has sex with the Mexican gardener (Ringo Starr), and Burton screws a
lookalike
doll of Candy. This is interrupted by Candy's father (John Astin) and
his
"uptight" friends.
Because of the shame Candy's brought to the family, her
father, along
with Uncle Jack (Astin again) and her Aunt, decide to move away. During
the escape from town, our heroes are harassed by the gardener's
sister,
who then knocks out Candy's dad. Our heroes somehow make it on a war
plane
with a gung-ho Walter Matheau, who never lands the plane because war
can
happen at any time. This ends when a wildly overacting Matheau tries to
rape Candy.
After this, Marquand decides to throw any semblance of
reality out the
window. There's a party in a hospital room hosted by grisly surgeon
James
Coburn, a sex scene in a piano with the hunchbacked thief (who is later
seen crawling around on the walls like Spider-Man), locked in an
overflowing
bathroom with a Felliniesque director, and of course an over-the-top
Brando
as a guru who lives on a truck. The final twist is a little on the sick
side, and I won't reveal it (In the book the situation was more
accidental.)
After that, we get a magnificent cosmic non-ending which finds Candy
wandering
among all the big name stars, who are now decked out in some pretty
ugly
sub-Renaissance-faire type costumes.
The movie aside, let's talk about the star of our film,
Ewa Aulin, a
former Miss Teen Sweden who after this mess made the incomprehensible Death
Laid an Egg (a film about a murderer in an egg factory) with
Gina
Lollibrigida. After that, nothing. To say that Candy killed
her career before it even started is giving her too much credit as an
actress.
Aulin is quite possibly the blankest looking actresses ever. She
doesn't
change her expression even once. But it doesn't matter because her
co-stars
overact so wildly, you think they were all trying out for the role of
the
Joker on Batman.
Speaking of Batman, our next film was directed
by Mr. Freeze
himself, and also starred the Joker (Cesar Romero), the Penguin
(Burgess
Meredith), and the Riddler( Frank Gorshin) As I stated earlier, Skidoo
is a bit of a sequel to Candy. Why? Well, what is a
sequel's
job but to outdo the original. This film does just that, and then some.
Hell, Gleason's
daughter in the film looks amazingly similar to Aulin.
Well, Hunter S. Thompson's drug-fueled nightmare begins
with a lame
obvious satire of advertising, which is worked into a lame comedy
sequence
of Gleason and Channing engaged in a remote control battle. This
finally
ends when Gleason's batteries die, and Gleason's daughter coming home
with
a hippie (John Phillip Law). We are then graced by a "funny" (funny in
the sense that it isn't) my-daughter-isn't-dating-a-hippie scene.
Suddenly
Cesar Romero and the multi-talented Frankie Avalon show up to tell
Gleason
that he has to go into prison to kill Mickey Rooney. Gleason resists,
but
eventually folds.
Meanwhile, after a city council tries to kick the
peaceful
pumpkin smoking
(?) hippies out of town, Channing invites them all to stay at her
house.
Cut to Gleason, who's in prison trying to rub out Mickey Rooney. Fellow
inmate Austin Pendleton slips Gleason some LSD (on an envelope), and
this is where the film becomes a true classic. We see Groucho Marx's
head on a bouncing nail, Rooney dancing inside an eye, eyes staring at
Gleason through a bunk bed, and a shrunken Austin Pendleton inside a
glowing
pink pyramid. This leads Gleason to the conclusion that killing's
wrong.
If that wasn't enough, we are then unlucky enough to see
footage of
Channing seducing Avalon. IT GOES ON GETTING MORE AND MORE GROTESQUE,
AND
FINALLY SHE STRIPS!!! AAAAAAAAAGHHHHH!!!!! Whose bright idea was that,
anyway?
Let's go back to prison now where all the inmates are
dosed, and we're
treated to less eye-searing visuals - such as Gorshin sprouting wings
and
flying away, and the "Garbage Can Song", featuring midgets in garbage
cans
dancing around. While all this is happening, Gleason escapes prison
with
a crudely made balloon to rescue his daughter from the evil cue
card-reading
God (Groucho Marx). But Carol Channing gains the upper hand while
wearing
a Napoleon like outfit complete with a mini-skirt (Enjoy the
tantalizing
shots of her withered legs.) While an army of hippies join her in
singing
the title tune, "Skidoo". This scares God, and the movie ends with
Groucho
on a raft toking up with John Phillip Law. But it still isn't over,
because
Harry Nilsson sings the end credits. Which includes the catchy refrain,
"Your seat's on fire."
What can I say about these two films? Despite the
overwhelming disaster
factor, they're still a lot more entertaining than bad films nowadays.
So do yourself a favor, grab your friends or your family, and let them
all enjoy these wonderful films.
Check for availability of "Candy" on Amazon (VHS)
Check for availability of "Candy" on Amazon (DVD)
Check for availability of "Candy" on Amazon (DVD Special Edition)
Check for availability of original Terry Southern novel "Candy" on
Amazon
Check
for availability of "Skidoo" on Amazon (DVD)
Check for availability of the soundtrack for "Skidoo" on Amazon (CD)
See also: Didn't You Hear,
Pushing Up Daisies, Sonny Boy
|