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Pandemonium
(1980)
Director: Alfred Sole
Cast: Tom Smothers, Paul Reuben, Judge Reinhold
It's funny how a likable, talented, and enthusiastic cast can do for
a movie. I've seen this happen several times before. Several years ago,
I watched a movie called Ninja Academy, which was an obvious
made-for-video knock-off of the Police Academy movies, if
you can believe that. Ninja Academy's level of humor seldom went above the level
of calling a secret agent, "Double O Seven-Eleven". However, despite mostly
lame jokes, the movie was surprisingly watchable (in a dumb movie kind of
way) because the cast of unknowns were a likable bunch of actors, and tackled
their clichéd roles with enthusiasm and a sense of fun. Because of this,
the movie seemed
funnier than it really was.
Pandemonium is kind of like that. Though the script is
nowhere at the level of the script for Ninja Academy, you know that you're
not exactly in for a laugh riot the size of Airplane! when you have a mother
by the name of "Salt" and her child named "Pepe". Or when the hero is a
Mountie on a horse with a ring around its eye a la the dog in The Little Rascals. But
somehow, it's kind of fun seeing the cast here do and say such things.
And the cast! There's Tom Smothers, Paul Reubens, Tab Hunter, Sydney Lassik,
Phil Hartmann, and Donald O'Connor among others.
As I said before, the script is a lot better than you'd think. No masterpiece,
but funny. Take the opening scene at It Had To Be University in 1963, where
after the university wins the championship football scene, an unseen killer
tosses a javelin at a line of cheerleaders carrying the props they used
during the half-time break for "A salute to vegetables". You can imagine
the sight gag and the headlines for this shish kebob killing. More killings
of cheerleaders happen, and the cheerleading school is closed. Cut to the
present day, where former cheerleader Bambi reopens the cheerleading school
to a small group of male and female cheerleaders. One student is played
by Judge Reinhold (with bleached hair!), who has one of the funniest gags
when he has shaving cuts on his face - and his hand. (The gag is even funnier
when you realize it foreshadows a certain scene he played in Fast
Times at Ridgemont High.)
Canadian Mountie Tom Smothers, and his sidekick Paul Reubens (who uses
a lot of his Pee-Wee Herman character in his performance) in the meantime
are investigating a breakout of a dangerous criminal from the state penitentiary
AND investigating a breakout of a dangerous psycho from the state asylum.
A shadowy figure starts lurking around undetected around the campus, and
Japanese tourists start visiting the legendary campus and harass Bambi
and the students. Will Tom Smothers be able to save the day?
I admit the last twenty minutes of this movie run out of gas. I could
do without a dumb scene with a character taking a bath in milk and chocolate
chip cookies, and some other equally inane attempts at humor. But even
then, I was looking back fondly at the gags that I liked. The scene at
the restaurant, despite having a number of corny gags is delivered with
such gusto by the cast that it was laugh-out-loud funny. And it was inevitable
that a comedy with a Mountie would spoof the "Indian Love Call" song from
Rose-Marie.
But it was funny all the same. It was probably inevitable that a sloppy, casual production like this couldn't coast forever on the performances
of the actors and a few good gags. On the other hand, there are definitely
a number of genuine laughs and some fun actors here. Viewers who are not
in a particularly demanding mood when they see it will probably find it
worth their while. Why resort to watching a feeble comedy like The
Pest or The 6th Man when you can watch a movie that,
at its worst, can be called half a funny movie?
Check for availability on Amazon (VHS) See
also: When Nature Calls,
Love At Stake, Prime
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