Sonny Boy
(1990)
Director: Robert Martin
Carroll
Cast: Paul Smith, David Carradine, Brad Dourif
Sonny Boy is one of the most demented,
sick minded, and
just plain bizarre movies I have ever seen. I loved every minute of it,
from the warbling of David Carradine during the opening credits, to the
final freeze-frame. That's not to say it is without it's problems - the
movie has a number of faults to it, and if I was to be pressed to ask
just
what director Robert Martin Carrol was trying to say in this movie - if
anything - I would throw my hands up in the air. Maybe the movie is a
mess,
but if it is, everything is messed up in a way so that it comes
together
brilliantly. At the very least, I consider the movie a flawed
masterpiece.
It doesn't take long for the movie to show off its true
colors. In the
small town of Harmony, New Mexico in 1970, a freakish, snivelling
little
hustler named Weasel (Dourif) attempts to hot-wire the car of a young
couple
who have just pulled into the town's motel for the night. Confronted by
the couple, Weasel blasts them with his handgun and drives off with
their
car and luggage. In the morning, he reaches the desert junkyard home of
Slue (Smith, who was Bluto in Popeye), the crime lord of
the area who has the small town and its residents under his thumb. "My
my," the first thing he mutters when Weasel pulls up. "Don't you look
pretty.
My dogs didn't even bark at you. 'Cause they know you're a weasily
piece
of s**t!" He's especially pissed that Weasel stole a TV from the
motel
room, not just because he owns the motel, but because it's a B&W
set.
"What the f**k am I supposed to watch in black and white?
Dragnet?"
Slue is quite a guy, and Smith gives a performance both
intense and
hilarious. Not only does he keep spitting out "S**t!" or "F**k!" or
"Son
of a b***h!" throughout the movie, he's the kind of guy who will blast
a sheriff's deputy into bloody pieces with a Howitzer cannon when he
doesn't
get his way. So he's especially pissed when he finds in the back seat
there
is a baby. His first instinct is to throw the baby to the many pigs
running
around the property, but his wife Pearl stops him. Pearl is played
by
- get ready for this - Carradine. Yes, Carradine plays the movie
completely
in drag, complete with a wig, lipstick, and a dress. (Incidentally,
it's
never made clear if he is actually supposed to be playing a woman, or a
transvestite.) While our jaws are still slack, Pearl makes an
open-legged
stand (shot with the camera near the ground, pointing upward), refusing
to let a pissed off Slue kill the baby. Since he
later can't convince his
wife to play catch with the baby, he grudgedly accepts the role as a
father.
But he decides to raise Sonny Boy in his own special way. For Sonny
Boy's
6th birthday party, he cuts out the kid's tongue. When Sonny Boy is 12,
he chains him to his car and drags him across the desert. At 14, Sonny
Boy is tied to a stake, with a big ring of fire placed around him at
his
feet. By the time Sonny Boy is 17, he's kept locked up in a silo, with
live chickens thrown down a hole so he has enough to eat. Later in the
movie, Slue slaps around Sonny Boy for his seemingly selfish behaviour,
saying, "I raised you like I was raised!"
Of course this is all sick. And the movie continues to
find ways to
continue in its tasteless attitude after Slue gets the idea to use
Sonny
Boy to get back at his enemies - namely, by transporting Sonny Boy in
the
back of an ice cream truck to their houses, then letting him loose like
a dog. In one scene, Sonny Boy (who was let loose in a church) sees a
wall
hanging of a crucified Christ on a cross. Of course, the equally
whipped
and scarred Sonny Boy can't help but see something of himself there,
and
starts to pull Christ off his cross before he's interrupted by the
priest.
After he knocks off the priest, we then see Sonny Boy hugging Jesus in
the back of the truck. It's tasteless, but strangely enough the whole
scene
has a sad edge to it, making it touching at the same time. Credit actor
Michael Griffin for pulling the scene off, and doing a
brilliant job as
Sonny Boy. In an extremely difficult role, he has to play a mute
character
that must convey his feelings through his silence, and he actually
makes
the half human Sonny Boy a figure of pity. We do hear his narration
occasionally,
and even when he's saddled with familiar lines like, "Too many voices
fill
my head! I don't know what's right anymore!", he makes it work, making
the movie disturbing, as well as sick, touching, and funny.
Besides Griffin and Smith, the actors are a sight to
see. Sydney Lassick
plays another of Slue's henchmen, and his slightly effeminate self is
always
welcome. Conrad Janis has a small but noteworthy role as a sympathetic
ex-doctor who was disciplined for sewing monkey parts into his
patients.
Savina Gersak plays an especially nasty member of the community who has
possibly the worst dental work on earth. The other real find in the
movie
is Alexandra Powers as Rose, a young woman who stumbles across Sonny
Boy
in the ice cream truck one night. Seeing him, she does not cry out or
go
for help, but instead immediately starts telling him a long monologue
about
her hopes and dreams. Her action makes no sense, yet Powers delivery of
the monologue makes you forget about the scene being illogical.
She also has another great monologue when she meets up with Sonny Boy
later, though there is a real big gap between her first appearance and
her sudden re-entrance. I strongly suspect the movie suffered some cuts
in-between. There are a few other scenes in the movie where, even for a
movie this bizarre, things don't make sense or are not fully shown. The
ending seems to be the biggest indication, because the final shot is an
abrupt freeze-frame, with a few plot details that haven't been fully
resolved
yet.
Such details I brush aside in order to proclaim the
utter genius and
audacity that went into making Sonny Boy. Though I have
said
a lot about what happens here, believe me, there is a lot more that I
haven't
said, plus some of the things I have said you simply cannot picture
correctly
without having seen it with your own eyes. I've now seen this movie
three
times, and I'm still at time finding it hard to believe what I'm seeing
with my own eyes.
UPDATE: Alan P. Marshall sent me this
information:
"Decibel-shattering applause for being the only
review in the 'external
reviews' section on the Internet Movie Database for Sonny Boy.
Apart from you, the IMDb, and the misguided Leonard Maltin, I've had
trouble
finding anyone who has seen this one-of-a-kind film.
"Also, I thought you might like to cogitate on the
following :-
"Living in England, I have the U.K. video release of
this film.
Comparing the running times given on the IMDb and Maltin's video guide
to the running time of the U.K. version, I would say that the American
release is missing about 6 or 7 minutes of footage. Having not
seen
the American print I can't deduce what is missing without reciting the
entire film as I have seen it... :-(
"Sonny Boy came out direct to video in the
U.K. two years
before it was released in America. However, when it did come out
in the U.S. three years after it was made, it apparently got at least a
brief theatrical release before going to video.
"Graeme Whifler, who wrote the film, is better known
as a rock/pop
video director, in which capacity he has made videos for such offbeat
(to
say the very least!) bands as The Residents and Sparks.
"Although I can't say for certain (yet), I'm sure the
name of the
director of Sonny Boy, 'Robert Martin Carroll', is a pseudonym,
probably
for an Italian director. I'd say Ruggero Deodato, of Cannibal
Holocaust fame - he's well sick enough ;-)
"Many thanks for your review."
UPDATE 2: Paul Freitag of Video A Go Go
sent me some more interesting clues about this movie:
"Found your review of Sonny Boy while
preparing to write my own (I'm in the process of a total site redesign,
so I haven't updated it in ages) and was intrigued by the addendum of
the theory that "Robert Martin Carroll" was a pseudonym. (After all,
how can someone direct such a fascinating pic and disappear off the
pace of the earth?)
"Anyway, when I re-watched the movie something struck me--it's
similarity (in terms of placement, not quality) to Curse II: The
Bite, a forgettable crap killer snake non-sequel with Jill Schoelen
and Jamie Farr, as Savina Gersak and Sydney Lassick are in both films.
"Lo and behold, Claudio M. Cutry was the editor and Carlo Mario Cardio
composed the score for both. Both films were also shot in New
Mexico. Trans World released both, but the video arm went under
before
releasing Sonny Boy, hence Curse II's IMDB date of
1988, vs. Sonny Boy's 1990 listing. In addition, the closing
credits use exactly the same typeface.
"Curse II is credited to "Fred Goodwin," actually Italian
director
Frederico Prosperi, who has no other production credits (other than
as
producer of The Wild Beasts) and may have shot both films at
once.
"Just noticed... both films also have the same D.P. (Roberto
d'Ettorre
Piazzoli) and share one producer (Ovidio G. Assonitis)...
"I realize this sort of thing is not uncommon in quickie productions
like
these (hell, Fred Olen Ray and Jim Wynorski exchange casts and crew
every two days or so), but the Sonny Boy mystery is a bit of a
baffler. It's just a theory, but who the hell knows? Maybe we can ask
Sydney Lassick."
UPDATE 3: The truth is finally revealed! I
received the following e-mail:
"I don't know if I'm contacting the right person, but
this is in regards to
the review of the movie Sonny Boy.
"I am Robert Martin Carroll. No, it is not a pseudonym. The reason that
similar names pop up is that the producer was Ovidio Assonitos. Savina
was his girlfriend. Claudio was an editor he worked with a lot. he
definitely didn't direct it. Actually he told me one day as he puffed
on his cigar in the cramped attic in Rome where we edited it,
that he wanted to direct but he had one problem... actors. He didn't
like them. I definitely love actors. I supervised his work under
intense conditions as I was not on speaking terms with the producer at
the time. The UK version must be my version as mine was the longer
version. I've never seen it on a big screen, as they cut out those 7
minutes without my knowledge and it does make a difference. These were
scenes with Alexandra Powers and there were plot points eliminated.
They also changed my ending.
"To prove I am a real person, I have just finished another film,
Baby Luv, that has made the festival circuit winning
numerous rewards, check out the web site BabyLuvTheMovie.com. My
picture is there.
"I agree pretty much with the review you printed. I just saw it
again for
the first time in a few years and even I was shocked at times. When it
first
came out it upset the theater owners so much that it was pulled
by most of them. As far as it's meaning, to me it's about 3
things. First: someone
doesn't deserve your love just because they say they love you and
they're
your parents. 2nd: If there is good in you, it will
eventually come out.
That was the whole Jesus thing. That also why after the
fire, Sonny Boy
actually rises from the ashes to starts a new life. Finally, I'm also
saying
that once you're messed up, unlike in most movies there is no real happy
ending. you will always be a bit off. It is a complex film with
lots to
explore.
"I knew it was troubling while I made it. I kept asking them what
audience they were going for. When they told me not to worry, I didn't.
I just went for it. I always like to make complex characters that keep
the audience guessing as to what they will do. Baby Luv has
some of that also. Actually the original script of Sonny Boy,
by Graham Whiffler was even more disturbing as Sonny Boy was
deformed by his torture in the original. I felt it was more of a
tragedy is he was beautiful, but being isolated, he felt he was ugly
because he wanted to look like his parents and they (to us) are
hideous.
"Sonny Boy essentially stopped my career. While a few people
loved it such as Dennis Dermody of Paper Magazine in NY who voted it
the Best Film of the Decade in a Village Voice critics poll, many were
just disgusted. My agent actually let me go because a famous producer
she worked with said she hated it so much that she wouldn't work with
her again if she represented me. Wow, that hurt.
"I'm now trying to put together a movie on Andy Warhol that I guarantee
will be visually exciting and thought provoking.
"I hope this clears up a few things."
UPDATE 4: "Marc" sent me this interesting bit of
information:
"I did get a hold of the oft-spoken little-seen UK
tape, and did a basic comparison. Accounting for the speedup from
converting PAL to NTSC, I can't say how many minutes are cut, but these
scenes were present that are absent from the US tape:
- After the first reel change (introduction of
Sydney Lassick as Charlie P.), there is a moment when Pearl
"breast-feeds" baby Sonny, only to have Slue violently interrupt
them. On my laserdisc at least, there is still a shot of Pearl
cowering in the corner with her "breast" leaking milk.
- During the 6th birthday scene, in the current
version, Sonny's voiceover description of his tongue-cutting is layered
over Pearl's singing of the theme song. In the UK version, this
scene goes much longer. Slue, Pearl, and Weasel all put on animal
masks, then Slue violently turns over the dinner table to make some
room. He then pulls young Sonny from a wooden box, and lays him
out on the table. Slue opens his jacket and unwraps a
knife, From Sonny's POV, we see Slue bringing the knife forward
(though the tongue or any blood is never seen), and when done, Weasel
comments that Sonny is not even crying or showing pain.
- After the murder of the mayor, the US version goes
to a dinner scene. In the UK version, there is a bridge scene
where the townspeople discuss the murder in daylight, and Weasel and
Charlie hint that no one should do anything rash or else there will be
"dire consequences."
- After the murder of the prospector and Weasel's
bar scene bragging about the loss of his thumb, the US version cuts to
the doctor and the sheriff taking the prospector's body away. In
the UK version, the bar scene goes on to have Weasel and Charlie show
off Sonny Boy to the stunned bar patrons (and the depressed, revulsed
doctor), and Charlie taunts Sonny with a bottle of whiskey. Sonny
has a monologue.
- When the townspeople ambush Sonny in the garage,
he makes a dive into the crowd to escape. In the US version,
there is a quick cut to the bar as the Sheriff is called to help
out. In the UK version, there is more footage of the escape --
it's not terribly explicit, but shots of Sonny's bloody mouth and the
horrified townspeople's reactions make it clear he is biting and
fighting his way out of the throng.
"Otherwise, everything seems to be the same.
Contrary to Mr. Carroll's email, there seem to be no more scenes with
Alexandra Powers in the UK than the US, so perhaps those were cut
before the European release as well. It would make sense that
these missing scenes were cut from the US version both to obtain an R
rating, and/or to enable TWE and Triumph to cram the movie onto one
less reel for the token theatrical release. It looks and sounds pretty
ragged, but it does have the advantage of being longer and more
explicit, and the pan-scanning is less severe, there is strangely more
picture information on all four sides than the US tape."
Check for availability on Amazon (VHS)
Check for availability of David Carradine's autobiography on Amazon
See also: Baker County, U.S.A.,
Demented Death Farm Massacre, Preacherman
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