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B-Fest
'05 Part II
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Electric
Boogaloo
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Okay,
where were we?
Oh,
yes. Plan 9
was over, the audience was slowly digging their way out of the
avalanche of paper plates and we'd already cored The
Apple. The Norris
Center was now under lock down. (You can get out but you can't
get back in.) So that's six films down with 14 to go. Whoa,
we're gonna need some more Twinkies. Stat! And where the heck did I
put the Slim Jims?
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- - -
-
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Black
Caesar
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Fred
"The Hammer" Williamson stars in Larry "Commando
Filmmaker" Cohen's thinly veiled remake of Edward G Robinson's Little
Caesar. Hammer
works his way up through the syndicate, leaving dead bodies and
dismembered ears in his wake. He reaches the top but pays a heavy
price as everyone he didn't kill during his quest for power
are now conspiring against him -- including his former best friend
and his wife. (But
who can blame her after that forced rape scene. Gah!)
The
hammer drops on the Hammer and the conclusion really should have
wrapped up after the "shoe polish" scene. In the end, the
Hammer is bitten in the ass - and whomped on the head - by bitter
irony when he finally, and I mean finally, dies.
- -
- -
Black
Caesar is
blaxploitation but its tone is 180-degrees the opposite of the
originally scheduled film Black
Belt Jones.
There's still plenty to make fun of but some scenes are more than a
little disturbing. I love all the shots where Cohen was probably
filming without a permit and Hammer stumbles around on the streets
wounded and several people, unaware of what's going on, try to help
him.
The
chili on pancakes gag rears itself when Sean shouts it out after
Hammer orders something in Italian. The ending does go on too long
and the audience's patience was getting stretched way beyond the
point of credulity. I don't know. I still like to think that out
there, somewhere, the Hammer is still stumbling around, mortally
wounded going no place in particular. (In fact he was
miraculously saved for a sequel Hell
Up in Harlem.)
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Final
Score: The
Hammer 9 - The Man 10
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Boo!
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- - -
-
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Mystery
Short #2
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Prologue
to Forbidden Desire
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Did
you know you, girls, that you can get syphilis from jitterbugging?
You can also contract it just by sitting around and talking. Of
course you're just sitting around in your underwear. In fact, all
anti-social behavior will eventually lead to body parts rotting off
unless you never come into physical human contact ever again. At
least you can if you believe that old yahoo who was berating us for
fifteen minutes -- but he could never remember which camera he was
supposed to be looking at so I don't trust him. So there, *nyeah*!
- -
- -
This
was part of a promotion for Phil Gladstone's Forbidden
Desire a/k/a Damaged
Goods that's
based on a novel by Upton Sinclair (who
also wrote The
Jungle).
It was one of those "educational films" that toured towns
where the producers really made a killing selling "How To"
and "How Not To" guides and brochures after scaring the
audience with the film and a lecture by a ringer posing as an
expert. (See
also Mom
& Dad.)
"One
Moment of Ecstasy - A Lifetime of Sorrow!" With the deadly
threats of juvenile delinquents, white slavery rings and venereal
disease it really makes you long for the days of What
is Communism?.
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Final
Score: V.D.
69 - Mr. Cranky 0
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- - -
-
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Beauty
and the Robot
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a/k/a
Sex Kittens Go to College
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Mamie
Van Doren is the two-gun toting tassel-twirler from Tallahassee.
She's an ex-stripper who's trying to escape her past by becoming a
college professor who discharges firearms in public as not to draw
attention to herself. Meanwhile there's a refrigerator box robot
handicapping the horse races; Tuesday Weld breaks her bra strap to
seduce Norm Grabowski; there's two bumbling gangsters stumbling
around with a Thompson hidden in a violin case but as far as I can
tell they're pretty irrelevant to the plot; there's a monkey banging
on a typewriter (I assume he's working on the script);
then Uncle Fester shows up;
and John Carradine is dancing the Charleston; Louis Nye is running amok; I think I just saw
Vampira; and Martin Milner looks just as confused as I am (One-Adam-12. One-Adam-12. See the
man about a crappy movie.) and,
oddly enough, Conway Twitty was there summing it all up in song.
Gah.
There's
something about the college trying to get some super grant and it's
up to Mamie and the monkey to seduce the benefactors, which she does
through hypnosis and soon has them doing the Charleston. And
then the whole thing train wrecks after an extended chase scene with
a fire truck. After which Mamie decides to go back to being a
stripper rendering the entire movie pointless.
Eyegitty-eyegitty-eyegitty-eyegitty-eyegitty-eyegitty-eyegitty-eyegitty!
- -
- -
This
thing didn't make one damn bit of sense. I'm convinced that several
chunks of the film were missing. There had to be. It's the only
possible explanation. The film's schizo nature really prevents any
pleasure being rung from it beyond the sassiness of its star and
John Carradine enjoying the hell out of himself.
I
got a pretty big laugh when the producer's credit appeared:
"You mean Touch
of Evil Albert
Zugsmith?"
This
one hit Jessica pretty hard. It scared her back from the front of
theater towards us and I spent half the movie trying to "talk
her down" and together we limped to the end where she bluntly
told the movie what it could do with itself. I'm not going to argue
with her.
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Final
I.Q. Score: Robot
110 - Sex Kittens 3
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The
Monkey 280 / Norm Grabowski -12.5
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- - -
-
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Eveready
Harton in
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Buried
Treasure
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Okay,
I, uh, wow.
In between the last two reels of
Beauty and the
Robot,
A&O Films sprung another short on us. Now it's been my
experience that when this happens the short is of a very
pornographic nature. Sometimes I hate being right.
This
nonsensical experiment in animation debauchery sees the very, well,
blessed Mr. Harton screwing everything that moves -- and some things
that don't move; be it animal, vegetable or mineral. Most get sloppy
seconds. Machines or
knotholes, it just doesn't matter. Unfortunately Mr. Harton's
"equipment" has a mind of its own and has a tendency to
run off by itself much to his chagrin. And as we get deeper and deeper into inexplicable
weirdness, and we cringe as to what Mr. Harton will do with
"it" next, the short unfortunately/mercifully comes to an
end.
- -
- -
The
folks sitting behind me couldn't believe that I was snapping
pictures of this but, dammit, I needed proof that this wasn't some
kind of sleep deprived delusion. While not as patently offensive as
The Further Adventures of Super Screw
which they showed a few years
ago, Buried Treasure was
scurvy enough.
Rumored
to be the first animated porn film ever made back in 1928. The same
source alleges that the likes of Max Fleischer
(Betty Boop), Paul Terry
(Mighty Mouse)
and Walter Lantz
(Woody Wood*gack*pecker)
had a hand in making it as gag for Windsor McCay
(Gertie the Dinosaur)
as a birthday
present or a stag film. Wow.
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Final
Score: The
Donkey 2 - The Cow 1
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*shudder*
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- - -
-
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Death
Wish 3
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Charles
Bronson's Paul Kersey returns to kill more bad guys and this time he
has the full backing of the local police precinct because he can do
what they can't! Kersey comes to the defense of a tenement besieged
by local street punks that I assume are leftover extras from The
Apple. Things come to a boil after Counselor Troi from
ST: The Next
Generation is stripped and gang raped, Martin Balsam gets his head
kicked in and Kersey's new girlfriend takes a one way trip down a
very steep hill in a combustible Buick.
Kersey
starts out small using a board with a nail in it, then a bigger
board with a bigger nail it but then gets serious with a 50-caliber
machine gun and a LAW rocket in his one-man crusade for urban
renewal.
Murder!
Murder! Murder! Murder!
- -
- -
If
watching bad movies teaches us anything, we know we shouldn't meddle
with an Indian burial ground, get on a plane if William Shatner's on
board and to never, ever become romantically involved with Charles
Bronson in a Death Wish movie or your sentence is an immediate and
ludicrous death.
Something
in my right knee popped so I moved out into the aisle to watch this
one and stretch my legs. Mike returns from wherever he went to sack
out and I break it to him that he missed the Toon Porn. Tim wanders
over and Jessica returns and we tear into this one unmercifully. The
abundance of punks getting shot off of rooftops brings the very much
appreciated multiple appearances of the B-Fest Dummy being thrown
from off stage and the official Bronson-o-Meter to gauge how much
he's kicking ass at the moment. (And while I'm thinking about
it, a big shout out to Slide-Whistle Guy, whoever you are. It
wouldn't be B-Fest without you.)
There
are some days that I really wish that I could live in the Golan/Globus
universe where crap like this, The Apple and
Breakin' can happen.
Actually it would be kind of cool if all of those were in the same
universe. As Ms. Ritchey so eloquently put it "this is like Sam
Peckinpah's Breakin' 3". The riff of the overnight goes to Tim,
though, commenting on the film's villain: "Is it possible to be
a poor man's Jake Busey?"
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Final
Score: Bronson
424 - Due Process 0
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- - -
-
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Project
Moonbase
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In
the far flung future of 1974, evil forces conspire to blow up
America's orbiting space satellite by sneaking a secret agent on
board posing as some scientist. Meanwhile, Captain Cranky is mad
because he's been bumped from the pilot's chair for the new lunar
mission by a chick, Colonel Perky. (Yeah, but watch Captain
Cranky scream like a little sissy during the launch.)
The
sound of everyone that was still awake's jaw hitting the floor resonated
throughout the theater when the astronauts mounted their rockets in
very short shorts, t-shirts and rubber skull caps. The spy makes his
move; due to the fight they have to make an emergency landing on the moon.
The bad guy is killed and contact with Earth is re-established. Then
it's suggested that since they're stuck there until help arrives,
why don't those two just get married.
Sure,
why the hell not. Wait. They're going to do it?!
-
- - -
Project
Moonbase falls into the serious sci-fi category - meaning no
rubber-suited monsters and lots and lots of narration - but every attempt at scientific accuracy
only adds to the film's high hilarity; and the scenes of the ships
docking and coupling with the satellite are made even funnier for
those of us with an Eveready Harton hangover.
Jessica
officially gives up and heads off to parts unknown while I, in my
Twinkie and caffeine induced fugue state, can't stop staring at
Colonel Perky's perkiness.
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Final
Score: Science
0 - Fiction 12
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- - -
-
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3
Ninjas:
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High
Noon at Mega Mountain
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Rocky,
Cole and Tum Tum must save their new girlfriends from a Loni
Anderson led terrorist organization that has taken an entire
amusement park hostage for ransom. Luckily for them, Hulk Hogan is
there as a washed up Power Ranger to pitch in.
There
is much raping and pillaging and odd hesitations from the bad guys
so the 3 Ninjas can make their moves. (How
were we going to attack them? All at once. And what did we do?
Attacked one at a time.)
- - - -
I
think you know you're in trouble when Jim Varney steals your movie.
Nothing
says fun to me like putting pre-adolescent bratlings in mortal
danger for my bemusement. And I will argue with anyone that films
like this, Home
Alone and Ferris
Bueller's Day Off
are more detrimental to the youth of America than any horror movie
or Satan record ever made.
You
know I'm always amazed at what goes over well at B-Fest. If I was
watching this thing at home alone I'd probably have thrown a brick
at the screen. Here, though, the audience eats it up. It was awful.
Make no mistake about it but at this hour I think I'd be ready to
laugh at singing monkeys in soiled diapers.
And
I think we can all agree the most terrifying thing shown this year
was all those close-ups of Loni Anderson's surgically altered cheeks
and
skinned pulled taut face. (Jennifer? What happened to you?)
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Final
Score: Ninjas
3 - Audience 0
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- - -
-
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The
Breakfast Break
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Due
to a few slight technical glitches and the inclusion of an unscheduled
ten-minute reel of vintage toon porn, the program was running long.
Meaning there was only about a 20 minute window to round up some
grub before B-Fest heads down the back stretch.
I'm
holding up pretty well: Awake and alert and not really all that hungry.
(Along with all the other junk I'd woofed down a foot-long turkey
sub during Project
Moonbase.) We gather at a table and share war
stories and compare notes from the overnight endurance test.
The
best part of the break is to get out of the funk of the theater for
awhile and get some fresh air but it's only a brief respite. We've
barely passed the half-way point with EIGHT more films to go.
I
wander back to theater not wanting to miss any of one of my favorite
films off all time: Robot
Monster. I track Jessica down for a little
pre-game warm up for a bit we concocted during Death Wish
3.
That's
right. I'm going on the stage.
I'm
going to get to play Ro-Man.
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- - -
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This
ought to be good.
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On to
B-Fest '05 Part III!
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Back
to Part I!
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Photographic
Evidence.
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Posted: 02/03/05.
Copy and
paste at your own legal risk.
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Questions? Comments?
Click on the e-mail can.
My
dubbing policy.
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How our Rating
System works. Our Philosophy.
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