2064 lines
120 KiB
Plaintext
2064 lines
120 KiB
Plaintext
FUNHOUSE!
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The cyberzine of degenerate pop culture
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vol. 1 - no. 1; March 22, 1993
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editor: Jeff Dove (jeffdove@well.sf.ca.us)
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<Note: written on a Macintosh text editor, line feeds are on. Display in
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nine point font.>
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This issue of FUNHOUSE! was released on the day of Russ Meyer's 70th
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birthday!
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FUNHOUSE! is dedicated to whatever happens to be on my mind at the time
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I'm writing. The focus will tend to be on those aspects of our fun-filled
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world which aren't given the attention of the bland traditional media, or
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which have been woefully misinterpreted or misdiagnosed by the same.
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FUNHOUSE! is basically a happy place, and thus the only real criteria I
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will try to meet is to refrain from rants, personal attacks, and flames -
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and thus FUNHOUSE! is an apolitical place. Offbeat films, music,
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literature, and experiences are largely covered, with the one stipulation
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that articles are attempted to be detailed and well documemnted, although
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this is no guarantee of completeness or correctness, so that the
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interested reader may further pursue something which may spark her
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interest. Correspondance and contributions are thus encouraged, and any
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letters will by printed in future issues. Please send a short message to
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the above address, and arrangements will be made for the submission of
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larger items. The only other item is that FUNHOUSE! is Free-Free-
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Freeware! PLEASE copy and distribute as you wish, however please do
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not alter any text.
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Table Of Contents:
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* Confessions Of A Meyerologist - One perspective on the films of
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Russ Meyer
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* The Punk Who Finally Died - A FUNHOUSE! evaluation of the Lou Reed
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catalog
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* Pezography - An (almost?) complete listing of Pez dispensers
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* The Greatest Philosophical Question Answered - What REALLY happens
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when a tree falls in the forest and no one is there
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* Fanzine Forum - Some recommended literature for your further education
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* Reviews - Comments on selected books, records, periodicals, etc. etc.
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etc.
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Confessions Of A Meyerologist - One Perspective On The Films Of Russ Meyer
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When one is watching a film of Russ Meyer's, there can be no question as
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to the source. Russ' style is one of the most uniquely recognizable of
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all filmmakers, and as director, producer, cinematographer, editor, and
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co-writer on the preponderance of his films, he is someone who deserves
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the title auteur. Initially a purveyor of the "nudie-cutie" style, Russ
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brought a degree of quality of production, and elements of plot, that were
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largely missing in that usually pretty bleak niche of cinema. His initial
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effort, the groundbreaking THE IMMORAL MR. TEAS (1959), was a major
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financial success on the nudie circuit, and for better or worse sparked a
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great degree of mostly inferior imitations. Commonly the first aspect of
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Russ' work which is mentioned is the mammary excesses of the female stars
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he employs. While this is a definite aspect, his photography, editing,
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and sound also stand out as trademarks. Fast paced editing is
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omnipresent, with the average shot seeming to be around five seconds.
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Camera angles are often times extreme, with much use of tracks, pans, etc.
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to add to the feel of a scene, and many times to inject humor, angst, or
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other emotions. Great use is made of colors in the set designs of his
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films (four are in black and white), and the soundtrack is almost non-stop
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with nondiegetic blips of music and sound effects meant to highlight and
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emphasize the action on the screen. Bridges between scenes frequently use
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exaggerated matches on action, sound matches, and effects like fast pans
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or wipes, to keep things at a frenetic pace. It would be a good bet to
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say that the makers of the Batman TV show learned some tricks from Meyer's
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work. Every aspect of a Meyer narrative is amplified and extreme; there
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are no mild characters or scenes, everything is played to the nth degree.
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The world of a Meyer film is one of super-realistic fantasy, and one
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should not try to impose the normal rules of society or behavior to his
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situations. While females are undeniably played as ultra-sexual
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superwomen, they are also always the strong characters, largely in control
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of their situations, for good or evil, better or worse. An argument for
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Russ' having feminist credentials can be made, however I doubt that the
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more vocal activist would agree, at least on initial viewing. These women
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spend a good portion of the film manipulating weak men of both positive
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and negative bents. The stories are frequently melodramas, framed by
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tongue-in-cheek speeches, defining and resolving some amplified moral
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dilemma. This is often to the backdrop of a highly exploitable, and often
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lurid, plot. As Russ' selected his female stars more for their appearance
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and "stature", many times picking them out in topless bars, his editing
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techniques probably originated out of necessity due to the lack of acting
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skills. He was able to hone this necessity to a finely mastered craft.
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The large breasts of the heroines become symbolic of their fantastic
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status, and the fantasy world through which they move. Meyer's career
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stretched from 1959 to 1979, frequently setting standards in the
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sexploitation genre, and always producing superior product over his
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competitors. He made films which easily transcended the limits of that
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genre, and stand on there own as unique and entertaining films of quality
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and style.
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Phase One: The Early Color "Nudies" -
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Russ Meyer's film THE IMMORAL MR. TEAS was a breakthrough film in the
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realm of on screen nudity. Up until the time in which it was released in
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1959, nudies were still largely relegated to the under-ground sleaze
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circuit, or to venues such as the traveling tent shows perpetuated by the
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disciples of Kroger Babb. TEAS is a color film without synch-sound,
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containing voiced over narration. While the film was not an expensive
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endeavor, it's production values were much improved over what was typical
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of the genre at the time. The women are actually somewhat attractive to
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boot! The film was quite successful, and enjoyed play dates at many
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theaters which were not of the "Times Square" variety. TEAS thus launched
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an avalanche of films which would come to make up what would be called the
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"nudie-cutie" genre. These were silly and irreverent stories, which
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usually involved some comically oafish male stumbling across naked women
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in his everyday life (no frontal below the waist shots). TEAS is the
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story of Bill Teas, played by Meyer's army buddy Sgt. Bill Teas, who wakes
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up one day to find that he sees women through their clothes. He then
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proceeds to adjust to his situation while riding around on his bicycle.
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The film isn't actually all that particularly entertaining, however the
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editing makes sense, the camera is in focus, there is correct continuity,
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and the acting isn't horrible. As TEAS was the first of it's type to
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actually make some sense as a film, it brought a new sort of
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"respectability" to the style, and was quite influential, inspiring many
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imitators. H.G. Lewis' and David Friedman's ADVENTURES OF LUCKY PIERRE
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borrows heavily from it. As a Meyer work it is principally a curiosity,
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and Russ probably included it with his initial group of video releases for
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historical purposes. Early signs of the Meyerian humor, especially in
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regards to the use of editing, are apparent.
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EROTICA and EUROPE IN THE RAW remain largely unavailable, however
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according to press at the time they seem to follow the same basic
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nudie-cutie format. In EROTICA a filmmaker editing his work is the
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framework for viewing six different nudie shorts through the moviola.
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EUROPE IN THE RAW is a mondo style travelogue, showing strip clubs and
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sex shops in various European cities. MONDO TOPLESS is said to contain
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some of this footage recycled.
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The recently released on video EVE AND THE HANDYMAN is however a bit more
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adventurous. The film stars Meyer's wife Eve as a trench-coated spy type
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on the trail of a bumbling handyman, as he pursues his trade in and around
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San Francisco. There is actually no nudity in the movie, however plenty
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of ample cleavage abounds. The evolution of his style can be seen here,
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with excellent cinematography and some good slapstick humor. It's
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certainly not a bad film, but it isn't the stuff that made Russ a legend
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either. The early color nudie period is rounded out by HEAVENLY BODIES,
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also not now available, and WILD GALS OF THE NAKED WEST. WILD GALS was
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one of a troika of films that Meyer put out on video last year, a number
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of years after his initial set of video releases (EVE and MOTOR PSYCHO are
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the other two). It is easily the best of this early period. Also with no
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nudity beyond pasties, it's a crazily shot slapstick filled joke-fest.
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There's hardly a plot, but basically it portrays risqu high jinx in an
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old west town setting. This is a good place to get started on your
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enjoyment of the early period, as it is definitely the cream of the
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(available) crop. HEAVENLY BODIES is described as a pseudo-documentary of
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the world of fashion photography, where we see a series a shorts depicting
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"glamour" photographers at work with their nude models. Russ appears as
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"Russ Meyer, one of Hollywood's best known glamour photographers". These
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works are all a bit removed from much of what was to come, and apparently
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Russ feels they are dated now, as he only initially released TEAS to video,
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and this, as said before, probably had some historical extenuating
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circumstances backing it. All are in color, and I believe that all have
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narration over silent footage, rather than synched dialog. They do
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however contain early experiments with the style that would become his
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trademark, most noticeably in the areas of editing, sound (especially
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non-diegetic music), and breasts. Along with the humorous elements that
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abound, these traits put Meyer's early works well ahead of those of his
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contemporaries.
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Phase Two: The Violent Melodramas -
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One should not forget that above all else, Russ was in it for the money.
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He by no means intended to be a starving artist trying to get his message
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out, but lucky for him (and for us!) his particular vision was salable to
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the masses. This is mentioned in the context of the state of the nudie in
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1964. At this point, any fool with a camera could turn it on and shoot
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some women willing to drop their drawers, and many a fool did just that.
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With the trail blazed by Meyer, the flood of imitators that followed were
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fast making the style blas. Russ thus cast an eye away from the art house
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circuit and toward the drive-in circuit. The emphasis became on action,
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violence, and lurid tales of good verses evil. The production values went
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up, with larger casts and crews. Synch-sound was now utilized, and Meyer
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employed varying levels of assistance with directing, cinematography,
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editing, sound, and music. To offset these costs, the subsequent four
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films were shot in black and white, which was a perfect vehicle for their
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genre anyhow. The works that emerged, LORNA, MOTOR PSYCHO, MUDHONEY, and
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FASTER PUSSYCAT KILL! KILL! are arguably the best that he produced.
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A note concerning FANNY HILL should be made. This movie was shot in
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Germany and was produced by Albert Zugsmith (HIGH SCHOOL CONFIDENTIAL
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(1958), SEX KITTENS GO TO COLLEGE (1960), COLLEGE CONFIDENTIAL (1960)).
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Meyer had little artistic control over it, and thus this rather mundane
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film reflects little of the style one looks for in a Meyer film. He never
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made another movie which he didn't hold absolute creative control over.
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The black and white films all contain elements of exaggerated good verses
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evil, with characters moving through worlds of confrontation involving
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overblown elements of good, evil, ignorance, victimization, and of course,
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sexuality. The presence of an opening narrative defining the terms of the
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story is utilized in LORNA. This is a technique that would frequently be
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used in later films, almost always extremely tongue in cheek. LORNA is
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framed by the sermon of Prophet, with a fire and brimstone speech
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addressing moral shortcomings. This leads into Lorna Maitland, in the
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title role, seeing her new husband off to work in the salt mines, from
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their home on a swamp. He leaves in a boat with two co-workers, including
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the sleazy and mean Hal Hopper. Lorna goes for a skinny-dip in the swamp.
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This water setting would occur very frequently throughout subsequent films.
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The cost-conscious choice of outdoor settings led to a Meyer signature
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effect. Style emerging out of necessity led to many of his most
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recognizable film traits. A nude Lorna is accosted by an escaped convict,
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and what begins as rape turns into a mutual acquiescence. The sexually
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unsatisfied Lorna moves the action back to the house. Meanwhile her
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simple husband is forced to defend her honor against the sleazy comments
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of Hopper. When he leaves work early to celebrate Lorna's birthday with
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her, he encounters the affair. In the confrontation both Lorna and the
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convict are killed. This biblical retribution is dutifully pointed out by
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Prophet the narrator. The framework that emerges here, where a morality
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play is defined and acted out, was a useful vehicle for displaying the
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requisite sex and violence, and for allowing Meyer to also inject his
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caustic humor through the vehicle of the extreme melodrama. The frame
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work would serve him well over the series of films that followed.
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LORNA was tame in it's action compared to the next three films. MOTOR
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PSYCHO depicts a trio of cycle-thugs who travel around attacking and
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molesting just about every woman they come across (they in fact ride
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mopeds!). They rape the shapely, bikini-clad wife of a fisherman, and
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then proceed into town where they go after the wife of the local animal
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doctor, who had earlier chased them away from her. Russ appears as the
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small town sheriff who responds to the crime (he is billed as "E.E.
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Meyer"). While riding in the ambulance with the vet and his beaten wife,
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he leers at her and suggests that she "got what she asked for". The action
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really picks up when the husband chases after the hoods through the
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desert, and hooks up with the amazing Haji, making her first appearance in
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a Meyer flick. She plays a Cajun shrew who's traveling with her obnoxious
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older husband. They have an encounter with the gang, in which the old man
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is killed, before she hooks up with the vet. In the end the ringleader of
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the punks starts having 'Nam flashbacks while he's got the other two
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pinned down with a rifle. This gives the hero the opening to blow the nut
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up with dynamite and escape. MOTOR PSYCHO is the most action packed of his
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efforts to it's date, and is highly recommended. It's also got a great
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guitar-jammin' rock score.
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MUDHONEY takes the exploration of the backwoods "hick" culture which Meyer
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had touched upon in his previous two works, and goes all out with it. In
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a Steinbeck-like depression era setting, it is the story of Calif, a
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reformed ex-con, now a good guy, on the road to California. On the way he
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hears of work at a nearby farm, however all the locals warn him not to go
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there. He's hired on by the patriarch, played by Stu Lancaster, who is a
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tough, solid old guy who's now in ill health. His daughter lives with
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him, as does her brutal, drunken, lecherous husband, played by Hal Hopper,
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who is the reason for the warnings. Hopper is waiting around for
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Lancaster to kick off so that he can sell off the farm and take off with
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the cash. Meanwhile he spends allot of time at the farmhouse next door
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where a crazy old lady pimps her two buxom young daughters. One is a deaf
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mute, and the other is played by Lorna Maitland. The story develops as
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Hopper gets meaner and crazier, and Calif and the daughter become closer.
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There's another crazy fundamentalist preacher and his wife, who Hopper
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kisses up to and deceives into condemning Calif, and thus turning the town
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against him. A showdown is emerging between Hopper, the preacher, and the
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town folks, against Calif, the daughter, and the father, when Hopper in a
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drunken, delusional stupor rapes and kills the Brother's wife. Lancaster
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dies, Hopper gets what he deserves, and Calif and the farmer's daughter
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are able to get the proceeds from the sale of the farm with the help of
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the sheriff, an old family friend, who now knows the truth. Another
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melodrama ends with good triumphing over evil, as the lovers head off for
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California.
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All of this led up to what has to be Meyer's finest moment, his crowning
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achievement, the incredible FASTER PUSSYCAT KILL! KILL!. Tura Satana,
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the most unforgettable of all his starlets, is featured along with the
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return of Haji, and Lori Williams. They're a trio of reckless go-go
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dancers by night, who race around the desert in souped up hot rods by day.
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Tura is Varla, the ringleader with a Porsche, dressed entirely in tight
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black clothes right down to her leather gloves. She's a kung-fu kicking,
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bisexual, super-bitch, who reels off some of the funniest one liners in
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the history of cinema. Haji is Rosy, her jealous lover, while Williams is
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Billy Boom-Boom, who's more or less along for the ride. After a wet cat
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fight between Rosy and Billy, a clean cut high school type and his
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cheerleader girlfriend show up to time his laps around a car track. After
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some rousting, Varla goads the guy into racing her around the oval. The
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girlfriend is played by Playmate Sue Bernard, who looks like a skinny kid
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next to the overwhelming figures of the anti-heroines. After a near crash
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on the track, a fight between Varla and the kid ensues, in which after
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some well placed fu, Varla breaks his neck. The girlfriend is then doped
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to sleep while they figure out how to handle the situation. While gassing
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up their "bombers", the go-go chicks hear about a father (Stu Lancaster),
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and his two grown sons who live out on a nearby road. Lancaster is in a
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wheelchair, and was injured as he helped a girl climb up on a train. One
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son is studying so as to get out and make something of himself, while the
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other is a huge, super-strong, mentally deficient hulk. The mother was
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killed during his birth due to his size. Old Stu has consequently got a
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messed up head, and some bad attitudes toward women and trains. Varla
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hears about the large amount of money he's got stashed from the accident
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settlement, and decides to try to get her hands on this "long green".
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They thus head out to his house with bikini clad Sue Bernard in tow.
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Billy seduces the hulk son, while the father makes plans to capture the
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young girl for his own perverted purposes. Varla seduces the straight son
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in an attempt to get at the money while Rosy fumes jealously. When it
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eventually hits the fan, Varla throws a knife in Billy's back when she
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tries to leave. She has a strength duel between her Porsche and the strong
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son, and she runs over Stu in his wheelchair. Rosy is stabbed by the hulk
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son before he dies, when he has pulled the knife from Billy's back. It
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eventually ends with a duel in the desert between Varla, the good son, and
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good girl Sue. As Varla and the son grapple, Sue runs her over with the
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truck. Good has again triumphed over evil. What makes this film a step
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above the previous ones is the fantastic dialog, and the figure of the
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incredible Tura Satana. She's an overwhelming presence, and her character
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alone makes this a must see. The intro sequence is classic Russ. His
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extra-dramatic narration (the opening line is, "Ladies and gentlemen,
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welcome to violence..."), leads into the great theme song by The
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Bostweeds, as the girls are shown dancing in their club. Meanwhile the
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drunken patrons leer and yell at them with contorted faces - "Go baby go!,
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Come on let's go!!!". Look for The Cramps cover of the theme.
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MONDO TOPLESS, a departure of form, doesn't fit well into any of these
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categories. Apparently a sort of updated EUROPE IN THE RAW, it's a series
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of nude dances by women in a variety of surroundings, from the stage of a
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club to rolling in the mud. Intermingled between these strips is Russ'
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trademark crazy narration, and short travelogue type pieces on the cities
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in which the women perform. The opening extended segment on San
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Francisco, leading to the then burgeoning Broadway strip club scene, is
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interesting for checking out the town in 1966. Actresses Lorna Maitland
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and Babette Bardot, who starred in some of his films, are among the
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featured performers. The music is great guitar rock.
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The melodrama format was used as a vehicle for displaying all sorts of
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highly exploitable elements of sex and violence, while incorporating the
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excuse of delivering a message on good vs. evil - a kind of a built-in
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"square-up reel". The format also gave Meyer the ability to use the
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introductory and ending narration as a vehicle for his extremely
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sarcastic, over-exaggerated, comical diatribes.
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Phase Three - The golden period and the emergence of the Meyer signature
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style
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The films of this period take place in worlds where the narrative is
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basically out of the realm of reality. In phase two the characters were
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exaggerated, while here reality is exaggerated. There is a cohesion of
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all styles he utilized up to this point. The fantasy of the narrative was
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emphasized by the filmmaking style, making full use of quick edits, wild
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sounds, ultra-fast pacing, and unique camera angles.
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COMMON LAW CABIN is a transition between these two film styles, and is
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close to a color version of the melodrama era efforts. Jack Moran lives
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out on a broken down resort island in the middle of the Colorado river.
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He's out there with his chick Babette Bardot, and his (fully) grown
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daughter, Adele Rein. It seems papa is having unnatural desires at the
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sight of the buxom young girl. Frank Bolger is a drunken old boat driver
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who rounds up suckers on the mainland for a trip out to the island for
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lunch, a drink, and show of Babette leaping topless off a cliff into the
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water as a screaming "native". Here he rounds up superbitch Alaina Capri,
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her fed-up, uptight husband, and Ken Swafford as a violent felon on the
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run posing as a cop. Alaina's got nothing but insults for her husband,
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and come-on's for all of the other men. Things get violent when Moran
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refuses to sell the place to Swafford, who wants to use it as a hideout.
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He eventually seduces, and finally kills, Alaina, and attacks Babette.
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Alaina's husband dies from stress and a bum ticker, and Swafford sets his
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sites on the young daughter. She's rescued by a young heir on the run who
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motors on the scene. Swafford's head is smashed to a pulp in the final
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confrontation, and the young couple fall in love, leaving the family
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happier (and richer). CLC has more of a violent bent then a sexual one,
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without even any actual nudity (but they come close). While the narrative
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is much in the mode of the black and whites, the use of color and the
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styling definitely show the first sign of things to come. GOODMORNING AND
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GOODBYE takes the first big step into the new era. The script abandons
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the violent elements of it's immediate predecessors, and greatly picks up
|
|
on the elements of sex and nudity. There is a major leap from the earlier
|
|
nudies. Here the creative elements and character development from the
|
|
violent melodramas led to a much greater emphasis on a defined plot line
|
|
and conflict examinations between characters. In GAG, Alaina Capri
|
|
revives her caustic wife role, this time antagonizing her older, impotent
|
|
husband, Stu Lancaster. Meanwhile Karen Ciral, as the daughter from his
|
|
first marriage, is tooling around in her Khaman Ghia, sunbathing and go-
|
|
going, while filling out nicely. She contemplates taking the big step with
|
|
her new surfer-dude, Don Johnson. When Alaina isn't berating her husband,
|
|
she's cheating on him with construction stud Pat Wright. Russ utilizes
|
|
old fave Haji as a naked nymph running through the woods, who
|
|
"revitalizes" Stu so that he is able to pummel Wright, and keep his wife
|
|
in line with his new found prowess in bed. Always one with an eye on the
|
|
bottom line, Russ saw the over saturation of the "roughies", and decided a
|
|
return to a direction with a more sexual content was the way to go. When
|
|
he applied his recently developed techniques to the new more allowable
|
|
sexual contents, his fans learned that they could count on Russ' flicks to
|
|
deliver quality with the kicks.
|
|
|
|
FINDERS KEEPERS, LOVERS WEEPERS has the most fully developed script of
|
|
Meyer's more sexual films. The action takes place here in a bar run by
|
|
Paul Lockwood. He neglects his wife at home, played by Anne Chapman, and
|
|
instead is called away to the local bordello for some action, where his
|
|
buddy Lavelle Roby thinks that the new girl, played by Jan Sinclair, would
|
|
be much to his liking. In a drunken stupor, he agrees to some fun and
|
|
games in which is stomach is shaved clean, something which tips his wife
|
|
off that he's been up to no good when he finally stumbles home. Great
|
|
tension develops in the household, which eventually forces the abused wife
|
|
into a wild encounter with the bartender in the bar's back room hot tub.
|
|
Meyer plays this seen to the hilt, as shots of their naked bodies wildly
|
|
slamming into each other under water are intercut with stock cars crashing
|
|
together. It turns out that the Madame is luring Lockwood away from his
|
|
bar in order to set it up for a rip-off by her cohorts, Duncan Mcleod and
|
|
Robert Rudelson. These guys are great as a couple cartoonish louts
|
|
hanging out in the bathroom waiting for the time to make their hit. The
|
|
film reaches a violent climax as the crooks make their move, and Chapman
|
|
and the bartender, Gordon Wescourt, are still in the bar after their romp.
|
|
They're bound while the crooks attempt to blow the safe. Owner Lockwood
|
|
walks in on the scene and is captured. His wife is threatened with rape
|
|
on the pool table unless Lockwood reveals the safe combination, something
|
|
which he is tempted to let happen as he has just become aware of the hot
|
|
tub episode. Eventually, of course, the bad guys get theirs, and the path
|
|
to reconciliation is set. While most directors working in the
|
|
sexploitation genre at the time were content to allow the sex on the
|
|
screen to sell the tickets, Russ produced a movie with genuine plot twists
|
|
and tension to boot. The presence of Lavelle Roby as a strong black
|
|
character, who is also presented as sexually exciting, was a development
|
|
that Russ would incorporate into every one of his films henceforth. The
|
|
follow up is arguably the most influential film of the whole lot. VIXEN
|
|
not only was a landmark in it's use of on screen sex, it also helped to
|
|
free up the market from censorship by surviving obscenity charges in
|
|
court. The film's great success and repeat business helped to move the
|
|
genre into the more mainstream theaters, and the profits also got the
|
|
attention of the studios, leading to Russ getting a deal with Twentieth
|
|
Century Fox. Erica Gavin in the title role is absolutely unforgettable.
|
|
She one-ups the Alaina Capri character and gives the best performance of
|
|
any Meyer starlet. In playing the title character, named so due to her
|
|
sharp tongued attitude reflecting the true meaning of that word, her
|
|
sexual escapades have given a new interpretation of the term in the
|
|
vernacular as a woman with an overactive libido. The film is loaded with
|
|
softcore action, but the violent elements usually present are replaced
|
|
with both political platitudes and humor. Vixen lives in a Canadian
|
|
mountain resort with her pilot husband. He's a naive guy who flies
|
|
vacationers in for a visit, which allows Vixen to take a roll on the
|
|
ground with a mountie while he's gone. Also hanging out are her motorcycle
|
|
riding brother and his friend. The friend is a black man, played by
|
|
Harrison Page, who is a US draft dodger, and who feels that due to the
|
|
way he's been treated in his country, he shouldn't be compelled to go to
|
|
war. Vixen makes her way through both the husband and wife who come to
|
|
visit, her husband, and even her brother, through the course of the film.
|
|
The only problem with Vixen is that she's got a real racist streak, which
|
|
leads to some heated exchanges with Page. The (non-sexual) action picks
|
|
up when a left wing agitator shows up on the scene and convinces Page that
|
|
he should participate in a highjacking of the plane to Cuba. After some
|
|
coercion, Page agrees to participate, and a scene with Vixen and husband
|
|
being held at gunpoint by these two on the plane ensues. Political
|
|
discussions follow in which it develops that Page eventually helps capture
|
|
the gunman. The closing shot is of a smiling Vixen who is beginning to
|
|
see a new side to Page. Meyer has described the sex depicted in this film
|
|
as the way he likes to have it. Hard, heavy, and right to the point,
|
|
getting straight to it with no foreplay. This film makes great use of the
|
|
opening monologue, recited by Russ himself, which would be extensively
|
|
used from this point out. This lead-in technique would develop into a
|
|
distinct trademark
|
|
|
|
The wildest of all Meyer's films has got to be CHERRY, HARRY, AND RAQUEL.
|
|
All of the expected, previously mentioned, stylistic effects show up here
|
|
in spades. There's plenty of sex, plenty of violence, rapid fire editing,
|
|
a pseudo moralistic intro spiel, and the presence on many inserts not
|
|
related directly to the main narrative that keep it moving along. Cherry
|
|
is a nurse played by Linda Ashton who is the girlfriend of sheriff Harry,
|
|
played by Charles Napier. Larissa Ely is Raquel, currently shacking up
|
|
with Bert Santos, but she's not adverse to hitting the sack with many she
|
|
encounters. Santos, Napier, and ringleader Frank Bolger are running a pot
|
|
smuggling ring, and have problems with the double crossing gang member
|
|
Apache. Bolger meets a violent demise in a shocking scene that is hard to
|
|
forget. There's a dual finale of sex and violence that ends the story.
|
|
As Napier and Santos engage in a bloody shootout in the desert with The
|
|
Apache, Cherry and Raquel finally get together, and over a couple of tokes
|
|
discover the joys of sex-de-lesbo. Meyer ends as he begins, with a
|
|
moralistic speech concerning the frailties of mankind and the evils of
|
|
wacky weed. The string which runs through the film is the character of
|
|
Soul, played by Uschi Digard, who amplifies on the Haji wood nymph from
|
|
GOODMORNING AND GOODBYE. Soul appears intermittently throughout the
|
|
story, acting out some sort of nudist symbolism regarding the development
|
|
of the narrative. Tom Wolfe wrote this story with Meyer. To really get a
|
|
taste of the complete level of wildness that Russ can achieve, this film
|
|
can deliver most of his trademark stylings all in one place.
|
|
|
|
Phase four - The Seventies -
|
|
|
|
This period can actually be divided into two subgroups. The decade begins
|
|
with Meyer being hired by Twentieth Century Fox, and given the ability to
|
|
spend allot of other peoples money in the production of his vision. After
|
|
two works that met with a moderate degree of success, the big studio and
|
|
Russ mutually decided to go their separate ways. When he returned to
|
|
working independently, Russ initially had some hits and misses, involving
|
|
difficulties with completing productions due to censorship worries, and
|
|
a questionable choice of material. After getting past these rougher
|
|
times, Russ' final three projects emerged as almost conscious parodies of
|
|
himself. By the mid-seventies, the section of his audience which he could
|
|
count on coming out to the theater purely for the titillation were less
|
|
impressed by softcore features in a world of hardcore. Russ pushed his
|
|
material closer to the porno edge in these movies, without actually
|
|
crossing the line. While not explicit in the fashion of hardcore films,
|
|
these final three nevertheless are the only among all his works which
|
|
almost certainly would be rated X by today's standards. An interesting
|
|
note on these three is that Russ gives attention to the over-sized bodily
|
|
features of his actors as well as his actresses. This is accomplished
|
|
with the help of a few quick edits and the aid of size XXL rubber
|
|
prosthetics.
|
|
|
|
BEYOND THE VALLEY OF THE DOLLS was the first of the Fox features. The Fox
|
|
execs, being impressed with the quality of product and return on
|
|
investment of Meyer's late sixties works, felt he would be a good addition
|
|
at a time when the studio was looking to expand beyond the constraints
|
|
they'd been under before the newly found freedoms. At the same time they
|
|
were looking to develop a sequel to their trash hit version of the Jackie
|
|
Susann novel VALLEY OF THE DOLLS, and they felt that Russ would be a
|
|
perfect match. Film critic Roger Ebert had been giving the thumbs up to
|
|
Russ in print for a few years, giving particular praise to both VIXEN and
|
|
CHERRY, HARRY, AND RAQUEL in the mainstream press. Roger and Russ became
|
|
friends, and Ebert was brought on board by Russ to write his first
|
|
screenplay. (Russ has said of Ebert that they have allot in common,
|
|
stating that "He's a tit man"). They basically chucked out any pretense
|
|
of a real sequel to VALLEY OF THE DOLLS, instead going "beyond" that
|
|
story, and largely relating to it in name only. Susann would contest an
|
|
unsuccessful lawsuit with Fox after the film's release, attempting to have
|
|
it's name changed. The premise of the story is of an all-girl rock trio
|
|
who head out to Hollywood to make it big. The line-up has playmate Dolly
|
|
Read as Kelly, the singer and guitar player, Cynthia Meyers as Casey, the
|
|
bassist and daughter of a US Senator, and Marcia McBroom as the drummer,
|
|
Pet. The group, originally dubbed "The Kelly Affair" is re-christened
|
|
"The Carrie Nations" by rock impresario Ronnie "Z-Man" Barzell. Z-Man is
|
|
an effeminate take-off on Phil Spector, who takes the girls under his
|
|
(her?) wing after they jam at his party using the equipment of The
|
|
Strawberry Alarm Clock. As they rise up the ladder of success, they sink
|
|
into the cesspool of Hollywood. Kelly drops her faithful boyfriend/band
|
|
manager for and egomaniacal face-man actor, played by Michael Blodgett,
|
|
Pet cheats on her good-guy law school student dude (Harrison Page, from
|
|
VIXEN) with the heavyweight champ, and Casey falls for lesbian Erica
|
|
Gavin. Other characters moving throughout their world of decadence are
|
|
Edy Williams (the then Mrs. Meyer) as a presently in vogue sex actress,
|
|
Phyllis Davis and Charles Napier as Kelly's high society aunt and her
|
|
lover, Duncan McLeod as sleazy lawyer Porter Hall, and Henry Rowland as a
|
|
Nazi. When the hi-jinx really kicks into gear, Kelly's jilted boyfriend
|
|
jumps from the rafters of a TV show that The Carrie Nations just performed
|
|
on, in a suicide attempt. In the grand finale, at a sleazy party, Z-Man
|
|
ties up Blodgett while trying to have his way with him, and pulls off HER
|
|
shirt revealing HER breasts. Yes, Barzell was not effeminate, but female -
|
|
The 'Whining' Game has nothing on Meyer. The scene ends with Blodgett's
|
|
head being lopped of by Z-Man to the tune of the Fox theme. The most
|
|
bizarre scene has Erica Gavin asleep, when a 45 is stuck into her mouth.
|
|
In a half sleep, she starts "performing" on the gun with her mouth. She
|
|
then wakes into consciousness, is shocked at what she sees, and then
|
|
Blaaaaam! (off camera). Russ was able to utilize a large cast and
|
|
elaborate indoor sets for the first time, and the results are something to
|
|
see. He does manage to fit in a couple of outdoor sex scenes, including
|
|
Edy Williams on the beach, just to maintain the streak. The industry
|
|
reaction to BVD was extremely negative. Fox initially shelved the film,
|
|
and the critic community closed ranks around them. Even "Murf", the long
|
|
time Russ reviewer and praiser in Variety, pans the movie, calling it
|
|
"grotesque" and "extreme". Don't believe them - this is a Meyer must see!
|
|
And if this was "extreme", well "they ain't seen nothing yet".
|
|
|
|
THE SEVEN MINUTES is the second of the Fox flicks, and is the only
|
|
post-LORNA film that I have yet to see. This is an adaptation of Irving
|
|
Wallace's best seller about censorship, and again has the benefit of
|
|
studio financing to provide a large cast, and (supposedly) elaborate
|
|
sets. Notables that appear are Edy Williams, John Carradine, Yvonne De
|
|
Carlo, and Tom Selleck. The critics were a little kinder to this film
|
|
than to BVD, giving it moderate to good reviews, but it was nevertheless
|
|
the first Meyer film to not bring in a profit. This and BVD are the only
|
|
films that Russ had artistic control over (thus excluding FANNY HILL)
|
|
which he doesn't have ownership of today. While DOLLS has been released
|
|
on video, I don't think that this one has been, however it is possible
|
|
that Fox may come around some day. Once back in the realm of independent
|
|
production, RM started working on various projects that would get back to
|
|
the more explicit content which Meyer fans had come to know and love. A
|
|
project designed to highlight Edy was shelved at the last minute due to
|
|
censorship worries possibly endangering some of his investor's money.
|
|
Eventually Meyer decided to produce his next film entirely with his own
|
|
funds, and opted for a story which went back to relying on action and
|
|
violence over sexual content. BLACKSNAKE emerged, and it is a mistake.
|
|
Moving on the edges of the blaxploitation genre, it's the tale of a
|
|
Caribbean slave colony in the mid-19th century, run by a sadistic blonde
|
|
plantation boss-bitch (Anouska Hempel). The film is loosely constructed
|
|
around the story of a man traveling from Britain to go undercover in
|
|
looking for his brother, who was married to Hempel. The husband appears
|
|
as a castrated zombie, who Hempel had disposed of, played by David "Darth
|
|
Vader" Prowse. Everything you'd expect from a slave colony film is here,
|
|
including a murderous male overseer, rebellious slaves, a turncoat black
|
|
security chief (who's also gay), and a female love slave. The final
|
|
take-over by the slaves has some rather effective violent scenes,
|
|
including a shot of the murdered traitor immersed in a bathtub filled with
|
|
his own blood. The film has very little sex, and virtually no nudity. It
|
|
resembles a Meyer film in it's styling, especially in sound and editing,
|
|
but hardly at at all in the storyline and message. BLACKSNAKE also didn't
|
|
turn a profit, however this and THE SEVEN MINUTES were the only two not to
|
|
do so.
|
|
|
|
After a couple of years off, Russ came back with what serves as his
|
|
ultimate statement on his career, his de facto swan song, SUPERVIXENS.
|
|
This film is the longest independent he made (105 minutes!), and presents
|
|
a wild overview of his works up to that point. SUPERVIXENS is also the
|
|
most explicit film of his up to this time. In the movie's set-up, Shari
|
|
Eubanks does her best Alaina Capri imitation as SuperAngel (Capri was
|
|
"Angel" in GOODMORNING AND GOODBYE) a demanding, insulting, insatiable,
|
|
obnoxious woman, who insists that Clint (Charles Pitts), her gas station
|
|
attendant boyfriend, leave his job to come home and satisfy her urges.
|
|
Clint works at "Martin Boorman's Super Service", where Henry Rowland plays
|
|
the Nazi, as he did as "Otto" in BEYOND THE VALLEY OF THE DOLLS. Before
|
|
heading home, Clint is enticed by customer SuperLorna. When Clint gets
|
|
home he can't perform, and that leads to a wild fight between Clint and
|
|
SuperAngel, witnessed by a neighbor, in which SuperAngel takes an axe to
|
|
Clint's truck. This causes Charles Napier to show up as Harry the cop, in
|
|
a reprise of his character from CHERRY, HARRY, AND RAQUEL. What comes of
|
|
it is a planned liaison between Harry and SuperAngel. When Harry can't
|
|
"get in the mood", SuperAngel throws down Harry's 15" rubber prosthetic
|
|
stand-in in disgust. This sends Harry into a rage, leading to an
|
|
incredibly violent rampage in which SuperAngel is murdered in a bathtub.
|
|
With this film Russ began giving equal time to his male actors in the
|
|
enlarged body part department, with quick shots of jumbo imitation members
|
|
between their legs. Clint is framed for the murder, and is forced to take
|
|
it on the lamb. From here the movie shifts into it's much lighter middle
|
|
section, and becomes a sort of wacky road picture. Clint has a series of
|
|
run-ins with the SuperWomen as he thumbs across the country, each one more
|
|
hot to seduce him than the last. He first encounters SuperHaji (Haji
|
|
herself) tending bar in her pastie tops and bottoms. When he refuses her
|
|
come-on's, she refuses to provide his alibi. Clint is picked up
|
|
hitchhiking by Calif McKinney (from MUDHONEY), and his partner
|
|
SuperCherry. SuperCherry tries to entice Clint to help her with her
|
|
desires right there in the cab of the truck, while Calif drives. When he
|
|
rejects her, the two of them kick his butt and mug him. While Clint lays
|
|
out on the ground, a direct scene lift from MOTOR PSYCHO occurs. Calif is
|
|
bitten by a snake, and while SuperCherry is siphoning the venom with her
|
|
mouth, his hand is on the back of her neck, while her head bobs up and
|
|
down, and he yells, "Suck it! Suck it!". Clint is next picked up by Stu
|
|
Lancaster, as Lute, the farmer in overalls from MUDHONEY. At his farm we
|
|
meet Uschi as SuperSoul (CHERRY, HARRY, AND RAQUEL), his Austrian mail
|
|
order bride. When SuperSoul traps Clint and gets his pants down in the
|
|
hay loft, Lute catches them and chases Clint away by javelin throwing a
|
|
pitch fork at him. Next on the escapades is the deaf SuperEula, who is
|
|
derivative of the deaf prostitute Eula in MUDHONEY. Clint's escapade with
|
|
her is after a dune buggy ride in the desert, where they are discovered by
|
|
her overprotective father and the sheriff. From there Clint is picked up
|
|
by Garth Pillsbury, who is Tom the pilot from VIXEN. Before dropping
|
|
Clint off, Tom invites him to come out to their fishing lodge for a
|
|
vacation. With this we see a quick cut to a mimic of the wire bed scene
|
|
between Vixen and her brother from VIXEN. At this point the film comes
|
|
full circle, when Tom drops Clint off at SuperVixen's Oasis, a diner/gas
|
|
station run by SuperVixen, a woman with a striking resemblance to
|
|
SuperAngel. This may have something to do with the fact that she is also
|
|
played by Shari Eubanks. This whole affair is overseen by a spiritual
|
|
SuperAngel, who is perched up on top of a hill amongst bursts of fire, in
|
|
an imitation of the Haji wood nymph spirit from GOODMORNING AND GOODBYE.
|
|
Clint's back to happiness pumping gas and sleeping with Shari, until a
|
|
vacationing Harry roles through one day. Harry stays in a motel were the
|
|
proprietor is played by "E.E." Meyer, as Russ also billed himself for his
|
|
cameo in MOTOR PSYCHO. When he calls the operator, he is connected to a
|
|
naked Indian woman straddling train tracks, in a flashback to CHERRY,
|
|
HARRY, AND RAQUEL. When SuperVixen, Clint, and Harry go out for drinks,
|
|
the bar is a close match to the watering hole from FINDERS KEEPERS, LOVERS
|
|
WEEPERS. All this time Harry is laying low, waiting for the right time to
|
|
eliminate Clint once and for all. He gets his chance when he tricks Clint
|
|
into leaving town, while he nabs SuperVixen. Harry calls on the cb to
|
|
alert Clint of his identity and of SuperVixen's predicament. When Clint
|
|
rushes back, what he is met with is Harry slingshotting lit sticks of
|
|
dynamite at him from atop a hill. SuperVixen is then bound to the ground,
|
|
and a lit stick of dynamite with a long fuse is stuck into the dirt
|
|
between her legs. While Clint tries to rescue her, Harry takes shots at
|
|
him from above. SuperVixen is eventually rescued, and Harry blown up, in
|
|
an unlikely manner, but this is entirely beside the point. SUPERVIXENS is
|
|
one of Russ' better films, and is greatly entertaining in itself. However
|
|
for maximal enjoyment, it is recommended that the hardcore Meyer fans
|
|
become familiar with the body of his previous work, to get the most
|
|
appreciation to the humorously reflective elements of this movie. The
|
|
film was eliminated of roughly 30 min. of it's running length in Britain,
|
|
where the opening brutal murder was snipped, leaving an indecipherable
|
|
story.
|
|
|
|
Russ might have been wise to end his film career here, having basically
|
|
achieved cloture with the previous film. He instead produced two more
|
|
movies, which are both hit and miss affairs. UP! has even more sexual
|
|
activity and violence than the previous film, however as is Meyer's style,
|
|
the violence is so cartoonish that it's hardly offensive as it's so
|
|
unbelievable. UP! returns to the cabin in which VIXEN was filmed, and is
|
|
set up as a murder mystery with a sort of Shakespearean format.
|
|
Girlfriend Kitten Natividad appears as the "Greek Chorus", where she
|
|
appears intermittently frolicking nude in the forest, and giving updates
|
|
and commentary concerning the story so far. (Her dialog is overdubbed by
|
|
another actress). The murder victim here is "Adolph Schwartz" who appears
|
|
to be Der Fuhrer living in America under an assumed name. After being
|
|
homosexually sodomized, Adolph is killed when a piranha is tossed in his
|
|
bath. As the investigation develops, Raven De La Croix, as Margo, is
|
|
accosted while out for a rather bouncy jog. When she is raped, and
|
|
subsequently kills her attacker, she is forced to succumb to the whims of
|
|
the local hick Sheriff, Homer. In Russ Meyer's fantasyland, they become
|
|
just a normal, loving couple, without regard to how they were forced
|
|
together. As the investigation continues, married couple Alice and Paul,
|
|
who was also Adolph's secret sodomizer, run a diner where Margo starts
|
|
working. From there we go through various sexual romps and we are
|
|
periodically interrupted by Kitten presenting the evidence to that point,
|
|
to a montage of clips from the film so far. It reaches a climax when a
|
|
huge, dumb, lumberjack named Rafe takes a liking to Margo. When she's
|
|
performing in the diner one night, Rafe has too many drinks and tosses her
|
|
on the floor to have his way with her. When Alice attempts to stop him,
|
|
Rafe throws her on top and starts in on her too. When Homer shows up to
|
|
handle the situation, the ensuing battle involves a chainsaw being thrust
|
|
into an abdomen, which is then pulled from it's bloody receptacle and
|
|
thrust back. This type of unreal activity takes place throughout, and
|
|
thus is more ridiculous than offensive. After a few more sexual romps we
|
|
learn who the killer was, but we also learn that we don't really care as
|
|
there was never any real suspense developed around this story line. As
|
|
hard as this film tries, it really isn't much fun. The violence and
|
|
sexual content are greater even than in SUPERVIXENS, but it's starting to
|
|
appear that with the new extremes in general that film had gone to, and
|
|
with Russ already having parodied himself, he really doesn't have much
|
|
left to say. UP! is a disappointment. With BENEATH THE VALLEY OF THE
|
|
ULTRAVIXENS Russ began to parody himself in the title of his film. The
|
|
stamp of Kitten Natividad is all over this one, where not only is the most
|
|
explicit sex of any Meyer films shown, but it is also of a much kinkier
|
|
variety. Russ had been heard to pronounce that the way he likes to do it
|
|
is to get right in there fast, hard, and without delay. When interviewed
|
|
together, Russ and Kitten tell of how his living with her got him to
|
|
expand his horizons a bit, and he expanded his cinematic horizons as well.
|
|
The story is completely comedic and often borders on the silly. It also
|
|
depicts virtually no violence. The format is basically "Our Town", where
|
|
narrator Stu Lancaster takes us through the story of the insatiable
|
|
Lavonia (Kitten) and her dimwitted husband Lamar, who is only able to work
|
|
up a good carnal urge when he can engage in intercourse of an unnatural
|
|
sort. Russ employs a boinging-spring sound effect while this act is
|
|
depicted. The story takes us through Lavonia's efforts to cure him of his
|
|
peculiarity. She traps him and attempts to seduce him in the guise of
|
|
stripper "Lola Langusta". They go for counseling to a Psychiatrist/
|
|
Dentist, who turns out to be gay and goes after him while Lavonia gets it
|
|
on with his female assistant. And eventually he is healed by radio
|
|
evangelist Eufaula Loop in her "tub of joy", in a ceremony broadcast over
|
|
the air. Lavonia intermittently satisfies her needs with various denizens
|
|
of the town. Narrator Lancaster returns home to his Austrian mail order
|
|
bride SuperSoul, again played by Uschi Digard, Henry Rowland returns as
|
|
Martin Boorman, and Russ himself comes out from behind the camera for an
|
|
extended cameo at the end of the film. There's a definite shift from the
|
|
intense action that was dominant in Russ' films since the black and
|
|
whites, toward a sort of zany comedy. If Meyer wasn't shacked up with
|
|
Kitten, I believe that this film would have taken a different angle.
|
|
While not a terrible movie, it doesn't present the elements of his style
|
|
that have created the aura around his cinema that came to exist, and as
|
|
his last true film, it isn't representative of the best of his work.
|
|
|
|
|
|
filmography:
|
|
|
|
THE IMMORAL MR. TEAS (1959); A Pad-Ram Enterprises release, Pr: P.A.
|
|
De Cenzie, Dr/Wr/C/Ed: Russ Meyer, Cast: W. Ellis (Bill) Teas, Marilyn
|
|
Wesley, Ann Peters, Michele Roberis, Dawn Dinielle, Narration and music:
|
|
Edward Lasko, 63 min.
|
|
|
|
EVE AND THE HANDYMAN (1960); A Pad-Ram Enterprises release, Pr: Russ
|
|
Meyer, Dr/Wr/C/Ed: Russ Meyer, Cast: Eve Meyer, Anthony-James Ryan,
|
|
64 min.
|
|
|
|
EROTICA aka EROTICON (1961); A Pad-Ram Enterprises release, Pr: P.A.
|
|
De Cenzie and Russ Meyer, Dr/Wr/C/Ed: Russ Meyer, Cast: Donna Townsend,
|
|
Peggy Martin, 68 min.
|
|
|
|
WILD GALS OF THE NAKED WEST aka THE IMMORAL WEST-AND HOW IT WAS LOST aka
|
|
THE NAKED WEST-AND HOW IT WAS LOST, aka THE IMMORAL WEST, aka THE IMMORAL
|
|
GIRLS OF THE NAKED WEST (1962); A Pad-Ram Enterprises release, distributed
|
|
by Pacifica Productions, Pr: P.A. De Cenzie and Russ Meyer, Dr/Wr/C/Ed:
|
|
Russ Meyer, Music: Marlin Skiles, Cast: Julie Williams aka Goldie Nuggets,
|
|
Jack Moran, Teri Taylor, Sammy Gilbert, Frank Bolger, Topanga Gulch
|
|
Players, 62 min.
|
|
|
|
HEAVENLY BODIES aka HEAVENLY ASSIGNMENT; (1963); An Eve Productions
|
|
release, Pr: Russ Meyer, Dr/Wr/C/Ed: Russ Meyer, Cast: Ken Parker, Gaby
|
|
Martine, Marian Milford, Russ Meyer, Don Cochran, Werner Kirsch, Fred
|
|
Owens, Billy Newhouse, Orville Hallberg, Bill Cummings, Althea, Monica,
|
|
Rochelle Kennedy, Charles Schelling, Nancy Andre, Don Goodwin, Ivana
|
|
Nolte, 60 min.
|
|
|
|
EUROPE IN THE RAW (1963); An Eve Productions release, Pr: Russ Meyer,
|
|
Dr/Wr/C/Ed: Russ Meyer, Narrator: Franklin L. Thistle, Cast: Denise
|
|
Duval, Heidi Richter, Yvette Le Grand, Greta Thorwald, Abundavita, Gigi La
|
|
Touche, Veronique Gabriel, Fred Owens, 70 min.
|
|
|
|
LORNA (1964); An Eve Productions release, Pr: Russ Meyer, Dr/C/Ed: Russ
|
|
Meyer, Wr: James Griffith and Russ Meyer, Sound: Charles G. Schelling,
|
|
Music: Hal Hopper and James Griffith, Cast: Lorna Maitland, Mark Bradley,
|
|
James Rucker, Hal Hopper, Doc Scortt, James Griffith, 78 min.
|
|
|
|
FANNY HILL: MEMORIES OF A WOMAN OF PLEASURE (1964); A Favorite Films
|
|
release of Famous Players Corporation production, Pr: Albert Zugsmith, Dr:
|
|
Russ Meyer, Wr: Robert Hill from John Cleland, C: Heinz Hilscher, Ed:
|
|
Alfred Srp, Music: Erwin Halletz, Cast: Miriam Hopkins, Letitia Roman,
|
|
Walter Giller, Alex D'Arcy, Helmut Weiss, Chris Howland, Ulli Lommel, Cara
|
|
Garnett, Karin Evans, Syra Marty, Albert Zugsmith, Christiane Schmidtmer,
|
|
Heide Hansen, Erica Ericson, Patricia Houstoun, Marshall Raynor, Hilda
|
|
Sessack, Billy Frick, Jurgen Nesbach, Herbert Knippenberg, Susanne Hsiao,
|
|
Renate Hutte, Ellen Velero, 134 min.
|
|
|
|
MOTOR PSYCHO (1965); An Eve Productions release, Pr: Russ Meyer, Dr/C/:
|
|
Russ Meyer, Wr: W.E. Sprague and Russ Meyer, A.Dr: George Costello, Ed:
|
|
Charles G. Schelling, Music: Igo Kantor, Sound: Carl G. Sheldon Cast:
|
|
Stephen Oliver, Haji, Alex Rocco, Holle K. Winters, Joseph Cellini, Thomas
|
|
Scott, Coleman Francis, Sharon Lee, Steve Masters, Arshalouls Aivasian, F.
|
|
Rufus Owens, E.E. Meyer, George Costello, Richard Brummer, 73 min.
|
|
|
|
MUDHONEY aka ROPE OF FLESH (1965); An Eve Productions release, Pr: Russ
|
|
Meyer and George Costello, Dr: Russ Meyer, Wr: Raymond Friday Locke and
|
|
William E. Sprague, C: Walter Schenk, Ed/Sound: Charles G. Schelling,
|
|
Music: Henri Price, Cast: Hal Hopper, Lorna Maitland, Antoinette
|
|
Cristiani, John Furlong, Stu Lancaster, Rena Horten, Princess Livingston,
|
|
Sam Hanna, Nick Wolcuff, Frank Bolger, Lee Ballard, Mickey Foxx, F. Rufus
|
|
Owens, 92 min.
|
|
|
|
FASTER, PUSSYCAT, KILL! KILL! aka LEATHER GIRLS, aka MANKILLERS, aka
|
|
PUSSYCAT (1966); An Eve Productions release, Pr: Russ Meyer and Eve Meyer,
|
|
Dr/Ed: Russ Meyer, A.Dr: George Costello, Wr: Jack Moran, C: Walter
|
|
Schenk, Music: Paul Sawtelle and Bert Shefter, Cast: Tura Satana, Haji,
|
|
Lori Williams, Susan Bernard, Stuart Lancaster, Paul Trinka, Dennis Busch,
|
|
Ray Barlow, Mickey Foxx, 84 min.
|
|
|
|
MONDO TOPLESS aka MONDO GIRLS aka MONDO TOP (1966); An Eve Productions
|
|
release, Pr: Russ Meyer, Dr/C/Ed: Russ Meyer, Cast: Babette Bardot, Sin
|
|
Lenee, Diane Young, Donna X, Pat Barringer, Darla Paris, Darlene Grey,
|
|
Lorna Maitland, Veronique Gabriel, Greta Thorwald, Denise Duval, Gigi La
|
|
Touche, Abundavita, Heidi Richter, Yvette Le Grand, 61 min.
|
|
|
|
GOOD MORNING AND GOODBYE (1967); An Eve Productions release; Pr: Russ
|
|
Meyer, Dr/C: Russ Meyer, A.Dr: George Costello, Wr: John E. Moran and
|
|
Russ Meyer, Ed: Russ Meyer and Richard Brummer, Sound: Richard Brummer and
|
|
John E. Moran, Music: Igo Kantor, Cast: Alaina Capri, Stuart Lancaster,
|
|
Pat Wright, Haji, Karen Ciral, Don Johnson, Tom Howland, Megan Timothy,
|
|
Toby Adler, Sylvia Tedemar, Carol Peters, 78min.
|
|
|
|
COMMON-LAW CABIN! aka HOW MUCH LOVING DOES A NORMAL COUPLE NEED aka
|
|
CONJUGAL CABIN (1967); An Eve Productions release; Pr: Russ Meyer and Eve
|
|
Meyer, Dr/E: Russ Meyer, Wr: Jack Moran and Russ Meyer, C: Wady Medawar,
|
|
Jack Lucas, Sound: Richard Brummer and Irwin Cadden, Music: Igor Kantor,
|
|
Pr. mngr: George Costello, Cast: Ken Swofford, Alaina Capri, Jack Moran,
|
|
Adele Rein, Andrew Hagara, Frank Bolger, Babette Bardot, John Furlong,
|
|
70 min.
|
|
|
|
FINDER KEEPERS, LOVERS WEEPERS (1968); An Eve Productions release, Pr:
|
|
Russ Meyer, Ex.Pr: Eve Meyer, Dr/C: Russ Meyer, A.Dr: George Costello, Wr:
|
|
Richard Zachary and Russ Meyer, Ed: Russ Meyer and Richard Brummer, Sound:
|
|
Richard Brummer, Music: Igo Kantor, Cast: Anne Chapman, Paul Lockwood,
|
|
Gordon Wescourt, Duncan McLeod, Robert Rudelson, Lavelle Roby, Jan
|
|
Sinclair, Joey Duprez, Nick Wolcuff, 71 min.
|
|
|
|
VIXEN (1968); An Eve Productions release; Pr: Russ Meyer, D/C/Ed: Russ
|
|
Meyer, A.Dr: George Costello, Wr: Robert Rudelson, Russ Meyer, and Anthony
|
|
James Ryan, Sound: Richard Brummer and John Koester. Music: Igo Kantor and
|
|
William Loose, Cast: Erica Gavin, Harrison Page, Garth Pillsbury, Michael
|
|
O'Donnell, Vincene Wallace, Robert Aiken, Jon Evans, Peter Carpenter,
|
|
Jackie Illman, John Furlong, 71 min. Soundtrack on Beverly Hills Records.
|
|
|
|
CHERRY, HARRY, AND RAQUEL (1969); An Eve release of a Panamint Film
|
|
production; Pr: Russ Meyer, D/C: Russ Meyer, Wr: Tom Wolfe and Russ Meyer,
|
|
Ed: Russ Meyer and Richard Brummer, Sound: Richard Brummer, Music: Igo
|
|
Kantor and William Loose, Cast: Larissa Ely, Linda Ashton, Charles Napier,
|
|
Bert Santos, Franklin H. Bolger, Astrid Lillimor, Michele Grand, John
|
|
Milo, Robert Aiken, Michaelani, John Koester, Daniel Roberts, 71 min.
|
|
Soundtrack on Beverly Hills Records.
|
|
|
|
BEYOND THE VALLEY OF THE DOLLS (1970); A Twentieth Century-Fox release,
|
|
Pr: Russ Meyer, Dr: Russ Meyer, A.Dr: David Hall, Wr: Roger Ebert and Russ
|
|
Meyer, C: Fred J. Koenekamp, Ed: Dann Cahn and Dick Wormel, Sound: Richard
|
|
Overton and Don Minkler, Music: Stu Phillips, Art Dr: Jack Martin Smith
|
|
and Arthur Lonergan, Set Dr: Walter M. Scott and Stuart A. Reiss, Cast:
|
|
Dolly Read, Cynthia Meyers, Marcia McBroom, John LaZar, Michael Blodgett,
|
|
David Gurian, Edy Williams, Erica Gavin, Phyllis Davis, Harrison Page,
|
|
Duncan McLeod, Jim Iglehart, Charles Napier, Henry Rowland, 109 min.
|
|
Soundtrack on Twentieth Century-Fox.
|
|
|
|
THE SEVEN MINUTES (1971); A Twentieth Century-Fox release, Pr: Russ Meyer,
|
|
Dr: Russ Meyer, A.Dr: David Hall, Wr: Richard Warren Lewis from Irving
|
|
Wallace, C: Fred Mandi, Ed: Dick Wormel, Sound: Don J. Bassman and
|
|
Theodore Soderberg, Music: Stu Phillips, Art Dr: Rodger Maus, Set Dr:
|
|
Walter M. Scott and Raphael Bretton, Cast: Wayne Maunder, Marianne
|
|
McAndrew, Philip Carey, J.C. Flippen, Edy Williams, Lyle Bettger, Jackie
|
|
Gayle, Ron Randell, Charles Drake, John Carradine, Harold J. Stone, John
|
|
Sarno, Billy Durkin, Robert Moloney, Berry Kroeger, Olan Soule, Stanley
|
|
Adams, Tom Selleck, Alex D'Arcy, David Brian, Yvonne De Carlo, 115 min.
|
|
Soundtrack on Twentieth Century-Fox.
|
|
|
|
BLACKSNAKE aka SWEET SUZY aka SLAVES (1972); A Signal 166 Inc. release,
|
|
Pr: Russ Meyer, Dr: Russ Meyer, Wr: Russ Meyer, Len Neubauer, and Anthony
|
|
James Ryan, C: Arthur Ornitz and Russ Meyer, Ed: Fred Baratta, Art Dr:
|
|
Rick Heatherly, Sound: Richard Serly Brummer and Producers Sound Service,
|
|
Music: Bill Loose and Al Teeter, Cast: Anouska Hempel, David Warbeck,
|
|
Percy Herbert, Milton McCollin, Thomas Baptiste, Bernard Boston, Vikki
|
|
Richards, Dave Prowse, 82 min.
|
|
|
|
SUPERVIXENS (1975); A Semptember 19 production presented by R M Films
|
|
International Inc., Pr: Russ Meyer, Dr/C/Ed/Wr: Russ Meyer, Cast: Shari
|
|
Eubanks, Charles Napier, Uschi Digard, Charles Pitts, Henry Rowland,
|
|
Christy Hartburg, Sharon Kelly, Deborah McGuire, Glenn Dixon, John LaZar,
|
|
105 min.
|
|
|
|
UP! (1976); An R H M Distributors release of a Russ Meyer production; Pr:
|
|
Russ Meyer, Dr/C/Ed: Russ Meyer, Wr: B. Callum, Art Dr: Michele Levesque,
|
|
Sound: Dan Holland, Richard Anderson, and Fred Owens, Muisc: William Loose
|
|
and Paul Ruhland, Cast: Robert McLane, Edward Schaaf, Mary Gavin, Elaine
|
|
Collins, Su Ling, Janet Wood, Linda Sue Ragsdale, Harry, Monte Bane, Raven
|
|
De La Croix, Larry Dean, Marianne Marks, Bob Schott, Foxy Lae, Fred Owens,
|
|
Wilburn Kluck, Ray Reinhardt, Francesca "Kitten" Natividad, 80 min.
|
|
|
|
BENEATH THE VALLEY OF THE ULTRAVIXENS (1979); An R M Films International
|
|
Inc. release of a Russ Meyer production; Pr: Russ Meyer, Dr/C/Ed: Russ
|
|
Meyer, Wr: R. Hyde, B. Callum and Russ Meyer, Cast: Francesca "Kitten"
|
|
Natividad, Anne Marie, Ken Kerr, June Mack, Lola Langusta, Pat Wright,
|
|
Michael Finn, Steve Tracy, Sharon Hill, Henry Rowland, Robert E. Pearson,
|
|
De Forest Covan, Don Scarbrough, Aram Katcher, Uschi Digard, Mary Gavin,
|
|
Stuart Lancaster, 93 min.
|
|
|
|
Meyer has alluded to other projects throughout his career which were
|
|
halted at various levels of completion. Those I'm aware of are listed
|
|
below:
|
|
|
|
CHOICE CUTS - For Darryl Zanuck at Warner Brothers circa 1971.
|
|
|
|
ELEVEN - A horror project for Tempo productions, that was to be filmed in
|
|
the south circa 1972.
|
|
|
|
BEYOND...BEYOND - Russ was talking of this BVD "non-sequel" around 1972.
|
|
|
|
FOXY - To feature then wife Edy Williams. In 1973 some censorship
|
|
decisions from courts caused Russ to drop production for fear of losing
|
|
his investors money. Russ produced BLACKSNAKE that year completely with
|
|
his own funding.
|
|
|
|
UP THE VALLEY OF THE BEYOND - A project co-written with Roger Ebert, which
|
|
was being planned around the time of UP! and BENEATH THE VALLEY OF THE
|
|
ULTRAVIXENS (also co-written by Ebert using a pseudonym).
|
|
|
|
WHO KILLED BAMBI? - Another project to be co-written by Ebert, in 1980.
|
|
This was a planned feature on the Sex Pistols. Meyer quit after some
|
|
early shooting over disagreements with Malcom McLaren. The film
|
|
eventually emerged as THE GREAT ROCK AND ROLL SWINDLE.
|
|
|
|
THE JAWS OF VIXEN and THE JAWS OF LORNA - Projects sometimes alluded to in
|
|
the post-BTVOTUV period. THE JAWS OF VIXEN was promoted at the end of
|
|
that film.
|
|
|
|
MONDO TOPLESS II - A sequel spoken of in the mid-80's which is still
|
|
being listed as available "someday". According to Russ' current
|
|
literature, some of the featured talent appears to be Eva "Tundi" Horvath,
|
|
Tami Roche, "Baby Doll" Devereaux, and Kristine Mills.
|
|
|
|
THE BREAST OF RUSS MEYER - A twelve hour videography incorporating
|
|
segments from all of his films, and newly shot footage organized into a
|
|
biographical form. This labor of love is frequently referred to in
|
|
interviews over the last ten years, but it has yet to be released.
|
|
|
|
Other 80's projects by Russ are a video for the LA metal band Faster
|
|
Pussycat, and a video feature on stripper Melissa Mounds, coming soon as
|
|
VOL. A in THE BREAST OF RUSS MEYER series. It looks as if Pandora Peaks
|
|
will be the featured performer in VOL. B. Russ also served as
|
|
photographer on a pre-IMMORAL MR. TEAS project with producer Pete De
|
|
Cenzie called THE FRENCH PEEP SHOW or FRENCH POSTCARDS, which featured
|
|
stripper Tempest Storm. He was the cinematographer on the film THE
|
|
DESPERATE WOMAN (1954), which was produced by Samuel Newman and directed
|
|
by Louis Appleton Jr. Russ was also a photographer during WWII, and
|
|
footage that he shot was later used in PATTON.
|
|
|
|
A 1954 film titled ROOGIE'S BUMB has been falsely identified as starring
|
|
Meyer. This was a movie featuring the Brooklyn Dodgers, and one of the
|
|
players was named "Russ Meyer". The "RE/SEARCH" filmography lists THIS IS
|
|
MY BODY (1959) and NAKED CAMERA (1960), which are not included in any
|
|
other filmographies, and I haven't found any other references to them.
|
|
I seem to recall having read a mention of NAKED CAMERA elsewhere, in which
|
|
I believe it was described as being made with a hidden camera in a
|
|
suitcase, but I can't now locate this reference.
|
|
|
|
Some reference books have listed the film KISS ME QUICK aka DR. BREEDLOVE
|
|
aka HOW I LEARNED TO STOP WORRYING AND LOVE (1964) as a Russ Meyer film.
|
|
This is incorrect; it was a Harry Novak/Box Office International release
|
|
directed by Peter Perry using the pseudonym Seymour Tuchas. This film is
|
|
now available from Something Weird Video, and watching it leaves no doubt.
|
|
The AFI Catalog also lists a film titled STEAM HEAT (1961) as being
|
|
produced and directed by Meyer. I have never seen this mentioned in any
|
|
other source. The confusion may have stemmed from the fact that it was a
|
|
Pad Productions release starring Bill Teas (alternate title: MR. TEASE AND
|
|
HIS PLAYTHINGS).
|
|
|
|
Meyer has full ownership of all of his films as director with the
|
|
exception of FANNY HILL, BEYOND THE VALLEY OF THE DOLLS, and THE SEVEN
|
|
MINUTES. An interesting side note is that every film he made was
|
|
profitable with the exception of THE SEVEN MINUTES and BLACKSNAKE. Meyer
|
|
has put out the following titles on video, which are currently available
|
|
from him on his RM International label: THE IMMORAL MR. TEAS - EVE AND THE
|
|
HANDYMAN - WILD GALS OF THE NAKED WEST - LORNA - MOTOR PSYCHO - MUDHONEY -
|
|
FASTER PUSSYCAT KILL! KILL! - MONDO TOPLESS - GOODMORNING AND GOODBYE -
|
|
COMMON-LAW CABIN! - FINDERS KEEPERS LOVERS WEEPERS - VIXEN - CHERRY, HARRY
|
|
AND RAQUEL - SUPERVIXENS - UP! - BENEATH THE VALLEY OF THE ULTRAVIXENS
|
|
|
|
RM International is at: P.O. Box 3748, Hollywood, CA 90078. Word has it
|
|
that when you call to place an order, Russ himself answers the phone.
|
|
Tapes are currently $79.95 each, or $40.00 each when ordering six or more.
|
|
|
|
BLACKSNAKE can be obtained from Video Search Of Miami in a letterboxed,
|
|
French language version, with English subtitles ("SERPENT NOIR"). Video
|
|
Search is at P.O. Box 16-1917, Miami, Florida, 33116-1917.
|
|
|
|
BEYOND THE VALLEY OF THE DOLLS was put out by Magnetic Video in 1980, and
|
|
The Video Watchdog has recently reported that Fox video was planning a new
|
|
release. FANNY HILL has also been put out on video, but I don't have the
|
|
information as to by who and when.
|
|
|
|
Also look for Russ' cameo as the video store clerk in the late-80's AMAZON
|
|
WOMEN ON THE MOON.
|
|
|
|
some further reading:
|
|
|
|
books-
|
|
|
|
A Clean Breast-The Lives and Loves of Russ Meyer (2 vol.); by Adolph A.
|
|
Schwartz (aka Russ Meyer), 1989, Hauck, 1007 pp., ISBN: 0-96217-972-8,
|
|
$79.50
|
|
|
|
Russ Meyer-The Life and Films: A Biography and a Comprehensive,
|
|
Illustrated, and Annotated Filmography and Bibliography; by David K.
|
|
Frasier, 1990, McFarland & Co., 236 pp., ISBN: 0-89959-475-2, $39.95
|
|
|
|
For One Week Only: The World of Exploitation Films; by Richard Meyers,
|
|
1983, New Century Publishers, 270 pp., ISBN: 0-83290-142-3, $12.95
|
|
|
|
Sinema: American Pornographic Films and Those Who Make Them; by Kenneth
|
|
Turan and Stephen F. Zito, 1974, Praeger, 244 pp., ISBN: 0-27550-770-X
|
|
|
|
Kings of the Bs-Working Within the Hollywood System: An Anthology of Film
|
|
History and Criticism; ed. Todd McCarthy and Charles Flynn, 1975, E. P.
|
|
Dutton, 561 pp., ISBN: 0-52514-090-5/0-52547-378-5 (paperback), $12.50
|
|
|
|
Incredibly Strange Films; Ed. V. Vale and Andrea Juno, 1986, Series:
|
|
RE/SEARCH #10, 220pp., ISBN: 0-85965-161-4, $15.00
|
|
|
|
Shock Value; by John Waters, 1981, Dell, 243 pp., ISBN: 0-44057-871-X,
|
|
$9.95
|
|
|
|
Russ Meyer, Ou Trente Ans de Cinema Erotique a Hollywood; by Jean-Pierre
|
|
Jackson, Series: Collection "Grand Ecran", Paris: PAC, 1982, 109 pp.
|
|
|
|
Russ Meyer, Der Konig des Sexfilms; by Rolf Thissen, Series: Heyne
|
|
Filmbibliothek Nr. 32/87, Munchen: W.Heyne, 1987, 252pp.
|
|
|
|
A Clean Breast is Meyer's comprehensive self-told story, with a great
|
|
collection of photos and illustrations from his personal collection, and
|
|
is the best reference above. It does however have a limited availability,
|
|
and isn't in many libraries or book stores. It can still be ordered
|
|
directly from Russ from his RM International address. The introduction is
|
|
by Roger Ebert. Russ Meyer-The Lives And Films is a collection of
|
|
references, broken down into categories, and extensively indexed, and is
|
|
also recommended. The European citations are the only other works above
|
|
devoted solely to Meyer, but they are in French and German respectively.
|
|
Both books are reportedly riddled with errors, and in fact Meyer got a
|
|
court injunction preventing the Thissen book from being distributed
|
|
outside of Germany. Frasier reports that this inspired Meyer to write his
|
|
autobiography. The other books contain chapters devoted to Meyer amongst
|
|
other material, many times with interviews.
|
|
|
|
Russ is currently advertising a new edition of A CLEAN BREAST, scheduled
|
|
for release in December 1993, which will be three volumes, in an
|
|
"over-sized, deluxe-bound set". This is to be released in a serially
|
|
numbered, autographed, 5000 copy run. The listed price is $500.00.
|
|
|
|
articles-
|
|
|
|
There have been many articles and interviews concerning Russ or particular
|
|
aspects of his work, in mainstream news sources, highbrow film journals,
|
|
and fanzines devoted to sleaze. The great majority of these are
|
|
chronicled in Frasier's excellent work cited above (over 1100 of them),
|
|
and should be consulted. It is still in print, and can probably be found
|
|
in a good sized library. There are a couple of articles which are a
|
|
little more in depth, and deserve mention:
|
|
|
|
"Sex, Violence and Drugs: All in the Name of Fun", by S. Berkowitz, FILM
|
|
COMMENT, vol. IX, no. 1, Jan-Feb 1973, pp. 47-51
|
|
|
|
"Russ Meyer: King of the Nudies", by R. Ebert, FILM COMMENT, vol. IX, no.
|
|
1, Jan-Feb 1973, pp. 34-45
|
|
|
|
"Russ Meyer: Ten Years After the 'Beyond'", by R. Ebert, FILM COMMENT,
|
|
vol. XVI, no. 4, Jul-Aug 1980, pp. 43-48
|
|
|
|
CINE-ZINE-ZONE; no. 8, 1987, 70p special Russ Meyer issue by Jean-Pierre
|
|
Jackson.
|
|
|
|
|
|
The Punk Who Finally Died - A FUNHOUSE! evaluation of the Lou Reed catalog
|
|
--------------------------------------------------------------------------
|
|
|
|
All good deviants are most likely aware of the inspired decadence that Lou
|
|
Reed was responsible for with The Velvet Underground. With the 1984
|
|
re-issue of three of their four classic studio albums (The "Velvet
|
|
Underground And Nico" [1967], "White Light/White Heat" [1967] , and "The
|
|
Velvet Underground" [1969]) the public was easily allowed to see that
|
|
pretenders like REM and Echo And The Funnymen had nothing on the original.
|
|
Since then the entire Velvet catalog has become available, including the
|
|
fourth studio album ("Loaded" [1969]), the two albums of unreleased studio
|
|
material ("VU" and "Another View"), and various live recordings. When
|
|
enjoying these albums make no mistake about one thing, Lou Reed was the
|
|
auteur - the rest of the band were guest stars in his movie. It thus goes
|
|
without saying that "Squeeze" (1972) is not considered a Velvet
|
|
Underground album by us at FUNHOUSE!, much like "Cut The Crap" is not
|
|
considered to be a Clash album. When you attempt to enter the world of
|
|
Lou's solo material things begin to get fuzzy, with a large number of
|
|
records covering more than twenty years, and multiple bands, producers,
|
|
and attitudes. FUNHOUSE! will thus attempt to evaluate this material from
|
|
a fan's perspective.
|
|
|
|
Comments are, of course, entirely subjective. I'm not trying to say that
|
|
a certain record is "good" or "bad", but rather that >I< "like" or
|
|
"dislike" it. Grading will thus be done on the one to four syringe scale:
|
|
" -[==]-I ". Officially released albums only are evaluated, and
|
|
compilations are left off.
|
|
|
|
LOU REED (1972)
|
|
rating: -[==]-I, -[==]-I, -[==]-I
|
|
contents: I Can't Stand It / Going Down / Walk And Talk It / Lisa Says /
|
|
Berlin / I Love You / Wild Child / Love Makes You Feel / Ride Into
|
|
The Sun / Ocean
|
|
|
|
Lou comes out of the box with his first post-Velvet's release having many
|
|
songs carried over from the previous band. I Can't Stand It, Lisa Says,
|
|
Ride Into The Sun, and Ocean would all later turn up on Velvet albums of
|
|
live and outtake material. Lou co-produced with Richard Robinson, and the
|
|
studio band includes Rick Wakeman and Steve Howe of Yes. Despite the
|
|
presence of those two, the record rocks along at a pretty good pace. It's
|
|
interesting to hear Lou play these songs with a really tight, musically
|
|
advanced band. This isn't necessarily a plus, but here it isn't a
|
|
negative.
|
|
|
|
|
|
TRANSFORMER (1972)
|
|
rating: -[==]-I, -[==]-I, -[==]-I
|
|
contents: Vicious / Andy's Chest / Perfect Day / Hangin' Round / Walk On
|
|
The Wild Side / Make Up / Satellite Of Love / Wagon Wheel / New York
|
|
Telephone Conversation / I'm So Free / Goodnight Ladies
|
|
|
|
Lou hooks up with Bowie, who co-produces this LP. At least Bowie didn't
|
|
do to him what he did to Iggy. This is one of Lou's more upbeat albums,
|
|
lacking allot of the desperate attitude that permeates much of his work.
|
|
Bowie side hack Mick Ronson and Sixth-Beatle Klaus Voorman are amongst the
|
|
back-up band. The production makes this tribute to NY 70's gay culture
|
|
sound allot like some of the contemporary Ziggy LP's. A good intro for
|
|
new listeners. Andy's Chest came out in a Velvet version on the VU album.
|
|
|
|
|
|
BERLIN (1973)
|
|
rating: -[==]-I, -[==]-I, -[==]-I
|
|
contents: Berlin / Lady Day / Men Of Good Fortune / Caroline Says I / How
|
|
Do You Think It Feels / Oh Jim / Caroline Says II / The Kids / The Bed /
|
|
Sad Song
|
|
|
|
Lou makes up for the upbeat feel of his previous release with what has
|
|
been referred to in some quarters as "The most depressing album ever
|
|
made". Bob Ezrin produces, and Lou takes us on a journey with the tortured
|
|
souls in the city with the wall. My suggestion is to get a version with
|
|
the lyrics intact, and read this thing like a book along with the songs.
|
|
Musically Lady Day and How Do You Think It Feels stick out. The sound is
|
|
very grand, with lots of piano, build-ups, and crescendos, with the
|
|
exception of the acoustical "Oh Jim". It's the story of a prostitute who
|
|
hangs out in the bars of Berlin, takes allot of drugs, gets beaten, has
|
|
her kids taken from her due to her character, and commits suicide. Fun
|
|
huh?
|
|
|
|
|
|
ROCK AND ROLL ANIMAL (1974)
|
|
rating: -[==]-I, -[==]-I
|
|
contents: Intro / Sweet Jane / Heroin / White Light White Heat / Lady Day
|
|
/ Rock And Roll
|
|
|
|
The first live album of Lou without the Velvet's, and four of five songs
|
|
are tunes initially put out on Velvet albums. Lou's performance is not
|
|
lacking, however he should have ditched the hotshot guitar duo who attempt
|
|
to overshadows Mr. Reed with their needless six string doodling. For a
|
|
better sampling of Lou live from the period, seek out the 1972 recorded
|
|
boot "Stiff On His Legend".
|
|
|
|
|
|
SALLY CAN'T DANCE (1974)
|
|
rating: -[==]-I, -[==]-I
|
|
contents: Ride Sally Ride / Animal Language / Baby Face / N.Y. Stars / Kill
|
|
Your Sons / Ennui / Sally Can't Dance / Billy
|
|
|
|
After the unique styles of "Transformer" and "Berlin", Lou went looking
|
|
for a follow-up, and came up with this somewhat weak attempt at
|
|
perpetuating that Reed style. The music is basically straight ahead rock,
|
|
and Lou seems less interested in that aspect of the album than the lyrics
|
|
and songwriting. A pattern will seem to develop with Lou's records in
|
|
which they are better when he gets himself involved in the playing and
|
|
arranging of the tunes. Lou sounds like he just showed up and sang here.
|
|
Ride Sally Ride and Baby Face appear to be "Berlin" leftovers/rehashes,
|
|
while "Sally Can't Dance" makes an attempt at funk; he almost pulls it
|
|
off. The standouts here are Kill Your Sons and N.Y. Stars, but the rest
|
|
don't reach their level. Lou co-produced with Steve Katz.
|
|
|
|
|
|
LOU REED LIVE (1974)
|
|
rating: -[==]-I, -[==]-I
|
|
contents: Walk On The Wild Side / I'm Waiting For The Man / Vicious /
|
|
Satellite Of Love / Oh Jim / Sad Song
|
|
|
|
See "Rock And Roll Animal" entry. Only one song here was previously
|
|
recorded by the Velvets.
|
|
|
|
|
|
METAL MACHINE MUSIC (1975)
|
|
rating: -[==]-I, -[==]-I, -[==]-I, -[==]-I
|
|
contents: Metal Machine Music A-1 / Metal Machine Music A-2 / Metal
|
|
Machine Music A-3 / Metal Machine Music A-4
|
|
|
|
Wow!, what huevos, what chutzpah, what nerve! Lou delivers a giant middle
|
|
finger to the record industry, the critics, and yes even his fans! The
|
|
album rates four syringes on shear attitude alone. The record has NO
|
|
instruments. Lou hooks up a series of amps, effects, filters, and other
|
|
electronic devices, lets the feedback roar, and records the whole thing.
|
|
The exact line-up of devices is noted in detail by Lou in the liner notes.
|
|
Each of four sides starts with the tape being turned on, and exactly 16:01
|
|
later, turned off. Proof positive that RCA, the label who released this,
|
|
didn't even listen to material before they put it out. The question is
|
|
actually how serious was Lou when he made this. Interviews with Lester
|
|
Bangs at the time, since reprinted in the book "Psychotic Reactions And
|
|
Carburetor Dung", suggest that in his drug induced state Lou might have
|
|
actually felt he was making serious art; he's not talking these days. The
|
|
big joke is that someone has actually recently re-released this on CD,
|
|
which misses the whole point completely. Easily the most audacious album
|
|
ever made.
|
|
|
|
|
|
CONEY ISLAND BABY (1976)
|
|
rating: -[==]-I, -[==]-I
|
|
contents: Crazy Feeling / Charley's Girl / She's My Best Friend / Kicks /
|
|
A Gift / ooohhh Baby / Nobody's Business / Coney Island Baby
|
|
|
|
Most of the songs which emerged on this album were culled from a group
|
|
that Lou was working on when he conceived and executed "Metal Machine
|
|
Music". After that episode, he decided to make a record of sensitive and
|
|
introspective songs. The music here is different than on any of his other
|
|
records, being a simple guitar/bass/drums format, played in a tight and
|
|
clean manner. The music isn't boring, but it's also not too adventurous.
|
|
Lyrically however, that Lou edge is mostly missing. She's My Best Friend,
|
|
which can be heard in a Velvet Underground version on the "V.U." LP, has a
|
|
really good guitar jam, and Kicks has some of the more familiar Reed
|
|
themes. Lou even strikes a delicate and reserved pose on the cover. It's
|
|
interesting to note that this was his last album for RCA for six years.
|
|
They probably wanted to get rid of him after "MMM", but went ahead with
|
|
this mostly complete, commercial attempt first. Lou co-produced with
|
|
Godfrey Diamond.
|
|
|
|
|
|
ROCK AND ROLL HEART (1976)
|
|
rating: -[==}-I
|
|
contents: I Believe In Love / Banging On My Drum / Follow The Leader / You
|
|
Wear It So Well / Ladies Pay / Rock And Roll Heart / Chooser And The
|
|
Chosen One / Senselessly Cruel / Claim To Fame / Vicious Circle / A
|
|
Sheltered Life / Temporary Thing
|
|
|
|
This first Arista release came out the same year as "Coney Island Baby",
|
|
and the impression I have is that after being shown the door by RCA, he
|
|
wanted something out quickly on the new label. Most of this sounds
|
|
like "Coney Island Baby" leftovers, with the musical effort of "Sally
|
|
Can't Dance". The lyrical content is almost nonsensical, with themes in
|
|
line with "C.I.B." While the music isn't all that unique in it's
|
|
composition, this was Lou's first collaboration with Michael Fonfara, and
|
|
a sound begins to emerge here that would develop into some real exciting
|
|
things in the future. There's more feedback and overlaid guitars, a
|
|
denser sound, and a wider variety of instruments, including subdued horns
|
|
and keyboards. Ladies Pay and Rock And Roll Heart, with it's great
|
|
feedback guitar part, are the standouts. This is a Lou Reed solo
|
|
production.
|
|
|
|
|
|
STREET HASSLE (1978)
|
|
rating: -[==]-I, -[==]-I, -[==]-I, -[==]-I
|
|
contents: Gimme Some Good Times / Dirt / Street Hassle / I Wanna Be Black
|
|
/ Real Good Time Together / Shooting Star / Leave Me Alone / Wait
|
|
|
|
Two years is an eternity in this guys world; his drugs of choice, relative
|
|
level of cynicism, and sexual preference can all greatly shift, and any of
|
|
these can have an impact on his work. Whatever happened, the results are
|
|
astonishing. The attitude which was missing on "Coney Island Baby" and
|
|
the sincerity that was missing from "Sally Can't Dance" turn up here in
|
|
spades. While both were present on "Metal Machine Music", not many people
|
|
were, or could be, listening; neither were present on "Rock And Roll
|
|
Heart". Gimme Some Good Time makes reference to Sweet Jane and "Rock And
|
|
Roll Heart" in it's opening lines. Real Good Time Together can be heard
|
|
in Velvet form on the "1969 Velvet Underground Live" album. Dirt, and
|
|
maybe some others, are set asides from when Lou went the direction that
|
|
resulted in "C.I.B." Street Hassle is in the form of a three part suite,
|
|
which in one section Lou gives us his interpretation of I Fought The Law.
|
|
The music is original and exciting, and for the first time in a long while
|
|
Lou sings like he means it. This was his first experiment with Stereo
|
|
Binaural Sound recording, and he co-produced with Richard Robinson, who he
|
|
had worked with on his first album.
|
|
|
|
|
|
THE BELLS (1979)
|
|
rating: -[==]-I, -[==]-I, -[==]-I
|
|
contents: Stupid Man / Disco Mystic / I Want To Boogie With You / With You
|
|
/ Looking For Love / City Lights / All Through The Night / Families / The
|
|
Bells
|
|
|
|
A solid follow-up to "Street Hassle" in much the same vein. Another
|
|
stereo binaural sound effort, this time produced by Lou in collaboration
|
|
with Michael Fonfara. A steady layer of feedback guitar permeates most of
|
|
the tracks, with intermittent alto sax wailing, and occasional guitar
|
|
soloing, coming up in the mix. The first side is good throughout, with
|
|
tunes incorporating bits of the new wave, disco-rock (don't worry - it
|
|
works, much like The Stones played with on parts of "Some Girls"), and
|
|
rock and roll. Almost every song is co-written with someone else,
|
|
something unusual for Reed. Stupid Man, co-written by previous Neil Young
|
|
and future Boss sidekick Nils Lofgren, carries the disco beat, followed by
|
|
the fantastic Disco Mystic, in which only that phrase is said, repeated
|
|
over a driving, wailing beat. Lofgren also co-wrote "With You" and "City
|
|
Lights", while Fanfara co-wrote "Boogie". If side two matched side one,
|
|
this would be a four-syringer. The three last tracks, co-written by Don
|
|
Cherry, Ellard Boles, and Marty Fogel respectively, try for the same
|
|
extended experimental piece effect as in Street Hassle. While interesting
|
|
in its sound, it doesn't consistently come up with solid songwriting.
|
|
|
|
|
|
GROWING UP IN PUBLIC (1980)
|
|
rating: -[==]-I, -[==]-I, -[==]-I
|
|
contents: How Do You Speak To An Angel / My Old Man / Keep Away / Growing
|
|
Up In Public / Standing On Ceremony / So Alone / Love Is Here To Stay /
|
|
The Power Of Positive Drinking / Smiles / Think It Over / Teach The Gifted
|
|
Children
|
|
|
|
Another good album from Lou, working with a great band and great
|
|
production. With Michael Fonfara co-producing, and with his piano and
|
|
occasional synthesizer a prominent element of the music, the record has a
|
|
real clean and uptempo rock beat throughout it. You can always count on
|
|
Lou to deliver clever, funny, and insightful lyrical quips, and they are
|
|
abundant here. "Keep Away" and "Love Is Here To Stay" are the best songs,
|
|
while in "The Power Of Positive Drinking" Lou informs us why he's a scotch
|
|
drinking man, "Teach The Gifted Children" contains the chorus from Al
|
|
Green's "Take Me To The River", and "Smiles" reprises the
|
|
dum-da-dum-da-dum chorus from "Walk On The Wild Side". "So Alone" even
|
|
slips into a disco/rap/rock mode where Lou intones, "Get up and boogie,
|
|
Get up and dance, Shake your booty mamma...". If a few of the songs went
|
|
beyond some of their somewhat formula tendencies, in music not in playing,
|
|
this may have been a four-syringer. It's still a good album worth picking
|
|
up.
|
|
|
|
|
|
THE BLUE MASK (1982)
|
|
rating: -[==]-I, -[==]-I, -[==]-I, -[==]-I
|
|
contents: My House / Women / Underneath The Bottle / The Gun / The Blue
|
|
Mask / Average Guy / The Heroine / Waves Of Fear / The Day John Kennedy
|
|
Died / Heavenly Arms
|
|
|
|
The first album back with the old label, RCA, and it's a real winner. Lou
|
|
put together a quality group of musicians from working New York bands,
|
|
made up of Robert Quine on guitar (ex of Dick Hell + Voidoids), Fernando
|
|
Saunders on bass, and Doane Perry on drums. Perry would be replaced by
|
|
Fred Maher for the next couple of albums and a tour. This band would
|
|
produce the best music Lou ever had backing him. He worked with these
|
|
guys to create a unique sound which was integral to the music. The tunes
|
|
here range from the the gentle story telling of My House and John Kennedy,
|
|
to the rockers Bottle and Average Guy, to the wailers Blue Mask and Waves
|
|
Of Fear. Lou found himself a new label, a new band, and a new wife (who
|
|
he frequently references in songs over the next few years - here Heavenly
|
|
Arms is his tribute), and the result is a happy guy making some of his
|
|
best music. Co-produced with Sean Fullan.
|
|
|
|
|
|
LEGENDARY HEARTS (1983)
|
|
rating: -[==]-I, -[==]-I, -[==]-I
|
|
contents: Legendary Hearts / Don't Talk To Me About Work / Make Up My Mind
|
|
/ Martial Law / The Last Shot / Turn Out The Light / Pow Wow / Betrayed /
|
|
Bottoming Out / Home Of The Brave / Rooftop Garden
|
|
|
|
The continuation of "The Blue Mask", with Fred Maher now on drums. The
|
|
band creates the same tight, clean, sound, which is in itself enough to at
|
|
least warrant giving this one a listen. The songs are mostly fine,
|
|
however they lack the sort of "edge" which makes "The Blue Mask" a great
|
|
record. That leaves the impression that allot of these may have been
|
|
leftovers from the previous album. Overall however, if the previous album
|
|
was to your liking, you'll probably enjoy this one also. Legendary
|
|
Hearts, Martial Law, and Pow Wow are the highlights. The production was
|
|
by Lou Reed by himself.
|
|
|
|
|
|
LIVE IN ITALY (1984)
|
|
rating: -[==]-I, -[==]-I, -[==]-I
|
|
contents: Sweet Jane / I'm Waiting For My Man / Martial Law / Satellite Of
|
|
Love / Kill Your Sons / Betrayed / Sally Can't Dance / Waves Of Fear /
|
|
Average Guy / White Light White Heat / Some Kinda Love-Sister Ray / Walk
|
|
On The Wild Side / Heroin / Rock And Roll
|
|
|
|
Following the release of "Legendary Hearts", Lou takes advantage of his
|
|
working band to hit the road on the only extended tour he's done in the
|
|
last fifteen years. This is a well played and well recorded set, taped
|
|
from shows on September 7 and September 10, 1983. A nice retrospective,
|
|
with Sweet Jane, I'm Waiting For My Man, White Light White Heat, Some
|
|
Kinda Love, Sister Ray, Heroin, and Rock And Roll representing some of the
|
|
best from the Velvets, Satellite of Love, Kill Your Sons, Sally Can't
|
|
Dance, and Walk On The Wild Side representing earlier parts of his solo
|
|
career, and Martial Law, Betrayed, Waves Of Fear and Average Guy being
|
|
from the then current period. Lou has always made no distinction between
|
|
songs written early in his career from those on his current record, often
|
|
treating older songs as if the were new and fresh. This is evident from
|
|
this recording. This is a good starting point for the uninitiated,
|
|
however I don't think it ever had a US release so you might have to pay
|
|
import price.
|
|
|
|
|
|
NEW SENSATIONS (1984)
|
|
rating: -[==]-I, -[==]-I, -[==]-I, -[==]-I
|
|
contents: I Love You Suzanne / Endlessly Jealous / My Red Joystick / Turn
|
|
To Me / New Sensations / Doin' The Things That We Want To / What Becomes A
|
|
Legend Most / Fly Into The Sun / My Friend George / High In The City /
|
|
Down At The Arcade
|
|
|
|
Lou must have been invigorated by his touring, and he used the opportunity
|
|
to fine tune these songs while he was at it. Fred Maher on drums, and the
|
|
amazing fretless bass of Fernando Saunders remain, but Lou takes over all
|
|
of the guitar parts himself. It's his best guitar work in a LONG time,
|
|
and along with that which he would later put down on "New York", probably
|
|
the best he's recorded. Sharp, exciting riffs abound. I Love You
|
|
Suzanne, which he once referred to as a "stupid pop song", was a minor hit
|
|
for him. This tune, coming at the same time as the re-issue of the
|
|
Velvet's catalog and Walk On The Wild Side being used in a phony-scooter
|
|
TV ad, gave a big boost to this dudes career. A good record throughout,
|
|
My Friend George, Down At The Arcade, and especially Doin' The Things That
|
|
We Want To are standouts. The production was by Reed along with John
|
|
Jansen.
|
|
|
|
|
|
MISTRIAL (1986):
|
|
rating: -[==]-I
|
|
contents: Mistrial / No Money Down / Outside / Don't Hurt A Woman / Video
|
|
Violence / Spit It Out / The Original Wrapper / Mama's Got A Lover / I
|
|
Remember You / Tell It To Your Heart
|
|
|
|
Lou tries for an '80's AOR hard rock sound, with the result sounding
|
|
musically like something hacks like Def Leppard might make. Coming in the
|
|
midst of so many quality releases, this one should be overlooked.
|
|
|
|
|
|
NEW YORK (1989)
|
|
rating: -[==]-I, -[==]-I, -[==]-I, -[==]-I
|
|
contents: Romeo Had Juliette / Halloween Parade / Dirty Blvd. / Endless
|
|
Cycle / There Is No Time / Last Great American Whale / Beginning Of A
|
|
Great Adventure / Busload Of Faith / Sick Of You / Hold On / Good Evening
|
|
Mr. Waldheim / Xmas In February / Strawman / Dime Store Mystery
|
|
|
|
Reed must have spent the previous three years staring out his window, as
|
|
he came up with an incredible document of the state of that megalopolis in
|
|
the late 80's. Lou has a history of coming up with his best work when he
|
|
takes some time off after a weak effort, and this certainly follows that
|
|
pattern. The music is inspired, the production with Fred Maher is
|
|
outstanding, and every song gives graphic description of usually bleak
|
|
characters and situations. It's difficult to analyze any song or songs
|
|
individually, as they all fit together into one piece. Lou writes on the
|
|
album jacket that the record is meant to be listened to in one continuous
|
|
58 minute sitting. Right up there with the best Velvet Underground
|
|
albums, and probably the best solo record Lou made. He even had somewhat
|
|
of a rock radio/MTV hit with Dirty Blvd. A label switch to Sire started
|
|
with this release.
|
|
|
|
|
|
SONGS FOR DRELLA, BETWEEN THOUGHT AND EXPRESSION, MAGIC AND LOSS, and
|
|
various EP's etc (1990-192)
|
|
collective rating: -[==]-I
|
|
|
|
Seems like Lou shot his whole wad with "New York", as this is mostly
|
|
uninspired dreck. Punk wasn't dead until the Godfather put out these
|
|
recent works. Basically safe and middle of the road. Maybe he'll rise
|
|
from the grave, he has in the past.
|
|
|
|
|
|
Pezography - An (almost?) complete listing of Pez dispensers
|
|
------------------------------------------------------------
|
|
|
|
The following is a nearly complete listing of the Pez Candy dispensers
|
|
that have been manufactured. There are apparently some color variations
|
|
within individual items listed below. The next series is reported to be
|
|
of The Flintstones, and thus other Hannah-Barbara characters could follow.
|
|
This was received from a secondary source by me, with the primary
|
|
reference being: PEZ BOOK, by David Welch, P.O. Box 714, Murphysboro, IL,
|
|
62969, (618) 687-2282. The list price is $22.95
|
|
|
|
CHRISTMAS: Angel, Rudolph, Santa (A), Santa (B), Santa (C).
|
|
|
|
CIRCUS: Big Top Elephant, Clown with collar, Clown with chin, Gorilla,
|
|
Li'l Lion, Mama Giraffe, Mimic the Monkey, Monkey Sailor,
|
|
Pony Go Round, Roar the Lion
|
|
|
|
CRAZY FRUIT: Orange, Pear, Pineapple
|
|
|
|
DIE-CUTS: Bozo, Casper, Donald Duck, Easter Bunny, Mickey Mouse
|
|
|
|
DISNEY: Baloo, Bambi, Captain Hook, Chip, Dalmation Pup, Dewey (blue),
|
|
Donald Duck, Donald Duck (1989), Dopey, Duck Child, Dumbo,
|
|
Goofy, Goofy (Remake A), Goofy (1989), Huey (red), Jiminy
|
|
Cricket, King Louie, Li'l Bad Wolf, Louie (green), Mary
|
|
Poppins, Mickey Mouse, Mickey Mouse (remake A), Mickey Mouse
|
|
(remake B), Mickey Mouse (1989), Mowgli, Peter Pan, Pinocchio,
|
|
Pinocchio (Remake), Pluto (A), Pluto (B), Practical Pig (1),
|
|
Practical Pig (2), Scrooge McDuck (A), Scrooge McDuck (B),
|
|
Snow White, Thumper, Thinkerbell, Winnie the Pooh, Zorro,
|
|
Zorro with "Z" logo
|
|
|
|
EASTER: Bunny (A), Bunny (B), Bunny (C-fat ears), Chick in Egg
|
|
(No Hat), Chick in Egg with hat (Green nest), Chick in Egg
|
|
with Hat (Red nest), Duckie, Lamb (A), Lamb (B), Rooster
|
|
|
|
|
|
EERIE SPECTORS (ALL SOFT HEADS): Air Spirit, Diabolic, Scarewolf,
|
|
Spook Vamp, Zombie
|
|
|
|
FULL BODY: Santa Claus, Space Trooper
|
|
|
|
HALLOWEEN: Blob Octopus, Dr Daedhead, Dr Skull, Fishman, Mr Ugly,
|
|
One Eyed Monster, Pumpkin, Witch (A), Witch (B-1 piece),
|
|
Witch (C-3 piece), Witch (D)
|
|
|
|
HUMANS: Astronaut (A), Astronaut (B), Cowboy, Football Player, Pilot,
|
|
Spaceman, Stewardess
|
|
|
|
BI-CENTENNIAL: Betsy Ross, Captain, Daniel Boone, Indian Brave, Indian
|
|
Chief, Indian Squaw, Uncle Sam, Wounded Soldier
|
|
|
|
KOOKY ZOO: Cockatoo, Crocodile, Cow (A), Cow (B), Panda (A), Panda (B)
|
|
Panther, Fuzzy Cat with Derby, Raven, Yappy Dog
|
|
|
|
CHARACTERS: Annie, Asterix, Bozo, Bullwinkle, Casper, Green Hornet,
|
|
Mueslix, Peter PEZ, Flintstones: Barney, Dino, Fred,
|
|
Pebbles,
|
|
|
|
GARFIELD: Aelene, Garfield, Garfield with Green Hat, Garfield with
|
|
teeth, Nermal
|
|
|
|
MGM: Barney Bear, Droopy Dog, Jerry (A), Jerry (B), Muscle Mouse,
|
|
Spike, Tom (A), Tom (B), Tyke
|
|
|
|
MOVIE MONSTERS: Creature from the Black Lagoon, Frankenstien, Wolfman
|
|
|
|
MUPPETS: Fozzie Bear, Gonzo, Kermit the Frog, Miss Piggy
|
|
|
|
PEANUTS: Charlie Brown, CB (Frowing), CB (Tongue), CB (Eye closed),
|
|
Lucy, Snoopy, Woodstock
|
|
|
|
POPEYE: Brutus, Olive Oyl, Popeye (A), Popeye (B), Popeye (C-with
|
|
pipe)
|
|
|
|
SMURFS: Papa Smurf (A-large eyes), Papa Smurf (B-small eyes), Smurf
|
|
boy (A-no tongue), Smurf Boy (B-painted tongue), Smurf boy
|
|
(C-no country on base), Smurfette
|
|
|
|
SUPERHEROS: Batgirl (soft), Batman (A-with cape), Batman (B-soft),
|
|
Batman (C-"DC Comics 1965"), Capt America, Hulk (A), Hulk
|
|
(B-1989 Marvel), Joker (soft), Penguin (soft), Spiderman
|
|
(A), Spiderman (B-1989 Marvel), Thor, Wonder Woman (A-soft),
|
|
Wonder Woman (B-"DC Comics 1979")
|
|
|
|
WARNER BROS: Bugs Bunny, Cool Cat, Daffy Duck (A), Daffy Duck (B),
|
|
Foghorn Leghorn, Henry Hawk, Merlin Mouse, Petunia Pig,
|
|
Roadrunner, Speedy Gonzales, Sylvester, Tweety (A),
|
|
Tweety (B- Warner Bros Inc 1990), Wile E. Coyote
|
|
|
|
MERRY MUSIC MAKERS: Camel, Clown, Dog, Donkey, Duck, Frog, Indian,
|
|
Koala, Lamb, Monkey, Panda, Parrot, Penguin,
|
|
Pig, Rhino, Rooster, Tiger
|
|
|
|
MISCELLANEOUS: Baseball Glove, Hippo, 1962 Lions Club Lion, Make
|
|
A Face, Personalized, Psychedelic Eye, Psychedelic
|
|
Flower, Regular, Regular with Advertising, Scarecrow,
|
|
Whistle
|
|
|
|
OLYMPICS: 1972 Alpine Man, 1976 Snowman, 1984 Wolf (Vucko),
|
|
1984 Wolf with cap, 1984 Wolf with Helmet
|
|
|
|
PEZ PALS: Boy, Boy with Cap, Bride, Doctor, Engineer, Fireman, Girl,
|
|
Groom, Knight, Maharajah, Mexican Boy, Nurse, Pirate,
|
|
Policeman, Ringmaster, Sailor, Sheik, Sheriff
|
|
|
|
PREMIUMS: Arithmetic, Candy Shooter Gun, Cocoa March, Donkey Kong Jr.,
|
|
Golden GLow, Icee Bear, Pif The Dog, Silver Glow, Stand By
|
|
Me, 1950's Space Gun, 1980's Space Gun
|
|
|
|
TRUCKS: Single Rear Axle: Cab #1, Cab #4, Cab #16
|
|
Double Axle Indented Fender: Cab #8, Cab #9, Cab #13
|
|
Double Axle No Indentions: Cab #1, Cab #2, Cab #3, Cab #4,
|
|
Cab #5, Cab #16, Cab #R1, Cab #R2, Cab #R3, Cab #R4
|
|
|
|
VALENTINE: Valentine Boy (A-Brown Hair), Valentine Boy (B-Blode hair),
|
|
Valentine Girl (Blond hair)
|
|
|
|
|
|
The Greatest Philosophical Question Answered - What REALLY Happens When a
|
|
--------------------------------------------------------------------------
|
|
Tree Falls In The Forest And No One Is There.
|
|
----------------------------------------------
|
|
|
|
The scenario of the tree falling in the unoccupied forest has long been
|
|
metaphorically held up as a philosophical quandary. It is the position of
|
|
FUNHOUSE! that this debate is not a valid situation to be held up as an
|
|
example of an unanswerable question. FUNHOUSE! believes that the question
|
|
of a tree making or not making a noise whilst toppling in the woods
|
|
without a living being present can be easily defined in physical terms,
|
|
and thus is not susceptible to the metaphysical debate for which it is
|
|
held up as example. It is not on the level of the merits of the
|
|
teleological argument for the existence of God.
|
|
|
|
When a tree is felled, there is the same disturbance of molecules in the
|
|
air, producing sound waves, whether or not anyone or anything is present.
|
|
When a person, or other organism with a hearing organ is present, the ear
|
|
through it's anatomical make-up (the workings of which are not the scope
|
|
of this commentary) convert the sound waves into the physiological nerve
|
|
impulses that carry the representation of the sound to the brain, where it
|
|
is "heard". The question of whether or not a noise is made is thus
|
|
explained by what one means by "noise". The sound waves, through the
|
|
displacement of air molecules, exist independent of anyone or anything
|
|
else's presence. What we are referring to as "being heard" only exists
|
|
within our brains; it is a matter of the interpretation of the waves by
|
|
our nervous systems. Therefore just as a television station is
|
|
broadcasting whether or not your set is turned on to see the image, a
|
|
falling tree produces the exact same physical changes to the environment,
|
|
or sound, whether or not your head is there to tune it in.
|
|
|
|
So there.
|
|
|
|
|
|
Fanzine Forum - Some Recommended Literature For Your Further Education
|
|
----------------------------------------------------------------------
|
|
|
|
Below is a sampling of fanzines of various topics which I can recommend as
|
|
entertaining and informative to read. As far as I know all are still
|
|
active, and have at least some back issues available. Look for them at
|
|
your local alternative newsstand, or send a self addressed stamped
|
|
envelope to the publisher, and ask for information.
|
|
|
|
ANSWER ME! - Wow!, a 'zine with ATTITUDE! A no quarter, no fears delving
|
|
into some of the most hard core social issues and news figures of the day.
|
|
100 pages with a graphic color cover. Issue number two has articles on
|
|
Jeffrey Dahmer, The Geto Boys, David Duke, Anton LaVey, El Duce, Al
|
|
Goldstein, Vietnamese gangs, and more. Not for the faint of heart. $4.50
|
|
from: 6520 Selma Ave., Suite 1171, Hollywood, CA 90028.
|
|
|
|
ASIAN TRASH CINEMA - Dedicated to the wild, and sometimes bizarre and
|
|
strange, film culture of the far east, mostly Hong Kong. Issue number
|
|
three is the latest, and has reviews of titles from Japan, Indonesia, and
|
|
India, as well as Hong Kong. There are articles on John Woo's
|
|
"Hardboiled", Japanese "Yakuza" films, "Godzilla Vs. King Ghidora", a Jade
|
|
Leung interview, laserdisc reviews, a good letters section, and more. The
|
|
back cover girl in this issue is Maggie Cheung. Sister publication to
|
|
European Trash Cinema (see below). This one is 38 pages of slick paper,
|
|
with a fantastic full-color cover of Godzilla in action. $6.00 an issue
|
|
from PO Box 5367, Kingwood, TX 77325.
|
|
|
|
BLACK TO COMM - Issue number 18 from Spring 1991, the latest that I have,
|
|
is 86 pages of densely packed text and illustrations in black and white.
|
|
The cover price is $4.50. The editors worship at the alter of The
|
|
Stooges, The MC5, and The Velvet Underground, and all things derivative of
|
|
them. Plenty of record reviews, book reviews, and commentary. Issue 18
|
|
has articles on Link Wray, Stiv Bators, Handsome Dick Manitoba, Amon Duul
|
|
I, and The Hampton Grease Band, as well as Iggy, and the Velvets. Write:
|
|
714 Shady Ave., Sharon, PA 16146.
|
|
|
|
CULT MOVIES AND VIDEO - Issue number 6 is current, and is 80 pages with
|
|
many photos and illustrations in black and white, with a color cover. A
|
|
really good effort devoted to sleazy horror and sexploitation movies,
|
|
mostly from the 50's and 60's. Subjects they have covered are Ed Wood
|
|
Jr., Tor Johnson, Dave Friedman, Harry Novak and Boxoffice International,
|
|
Bela Lugosi, and Boris Karloff, as well as many detailed looks at
|
|
individual films. Cover price is $4.95, write: 11225 Magnolia Blvd.,
|
|
Suite 200, North Hollywood, CA 91601.
|
|
|
|
ECCO - What began as a magazine devoted to the "Mondo" genre of films,
|
|
those which purport to expose the strange and weird factual wonders of the
|
|
world, has since expanded to review and chronicle weird horror and sleaze
|
|
films of all stripes. What makes Ecco unique to me is that they
|
|
consistently come up with titles that I haven't seen referenced in any
|
|
other publications. Issues aren't very large, only about 24 pages, for a
|
|
cover price of $3.50. Write: P.O. Box 65742, Washington, DC 20035.
|
|
|
|
EUROPEAN TRASH CINEMA - Concentrates on the horror and thriller films
|
|
produced in Europe, especially the unique styling that come out of Italy
|
|
and Spain. The latest issue I've seen, vol. 2 no. 6, is dedicated entirely
|
|
to reviews of the Italian "Giallo" genre. These are stylish murder
|
|
mysteries, sometimes with elements of the fantastic, that are probably
|
|
best known in the US in some of the works of Dario Argento. Regular
|
|
issues have feature articles and many reviews. This is an area of cinema
|
|
that any horror who isn't now familiar with it, should definitely
|
|
investigate. Copies are $5.00 each, from P.O. Box 5367, Kingwood, TX
|
|
77325.
|
|
|
|
FACTSHEET FIVE - Not just a 'zine, but a huge listing of 'zines.
|
|
Literally hundreds of fanzines are broken down by categories, reviewed,
|
|
and information is given regarding subscriptions, size, advertising,
|
|
trades, etc. If your interested in exploring any aspects of the world of
|
|
independent publishing, this is a must. The latest is issue #46, 96 pages
|
|
with a $3.95 cover price. A on-line version is coming, and may already
|
|
exist. For more info email at jerod23@well.sf.ca.us. Hard copy address
|
|
is: P.O. Box 170099, San Francisco, CA, 94117-0099.
|
|
|
|
FLIPSIDE - This long lasting punk and post-punk hard rock 'zine is still
|
|
going strong, and is still a good source of info on that particular aspect
|
|
of the rock underground. Starting as a fanzine for the LA punk subculture
|
|
in the late 70's, they're now approaching their 80th issue. The latest
|
|
issue is 110 pages for $2.50 - that punk idealism even keeps the price
|
|
down. Each has interviews and features on bands and the lifestyle
|
|
surrounding them, along with numerous reviews, letters, etc. Write: PO
|
|
Box 60790, Pasadena, CA 91116.
|
|
|
|
FANTASYNOPSIS - A nice, slick, well-illustrated fanzine from England
|
|
focusing primarily on the horror film. I have issue number four from
|
|
1991, which is 54 pages with a full color cover, and a price of 2.50
|
|
pounds. It also has a pull-out color poster from THE HOUSE OF WHIPCORD.
|
|
The contents of this issue include interviews with Dario Argento, David
|
|
McGillivray, and Alex Gordon, features on "Lifeforce" and Frank Langella's
|
|
"Dracula", and many reviews of videos, books, and magazines. There's even
|
|
some original fiction. Contact them at: 1 Bascraft Way, Godmanchester,
|
|
Huntingdon, Cambs, PE18 8EG, England.
|
|
|
|
HIGHBALL - A new publication focusing on the sleaze/sexploitation films of
|
|
the sixties. A heavy stock, slick, 66 page 'zine, with many fine photos
|
|
and illustrations. Issue number one is from September 1992, and has a
|
|
$6.95 cover price. Contained in the first ish are interviews with Lee
|
|
Frost and with Dave Friedman, features on Barry Mahon and Brigitte Bardot,
|
|
as well as many reviews and analysis of films and of the genre. Highly
|
|
recommended for anyone interested in this unique segment of filmdom. The
|
|
address is: MPO Box 67, Oberlin, OH 44074-0067.
|
|
|
|
KICKS - A very well produced 'zine covering wild early sixties rock and
|
|
roll and the culture surrounding it. Issue number 7 is 100 pages of dense
|
|
text and illustrations, all meticulously researched. The interior is
|
|
black and white, and the cover is heavy stock full color. Number seven
|
|
has The Trashmen, The Iguanas, Esquerita, The Del-Aires (from Horror Of
|
|
Party Beach), and the amazing tale of actor/singer/comic and sleaze
|
|
writer/horror fanzine publisher Ron Haydock. Very detailed articles.
|
|
$5.00 at: Box 646, Cooper Station, New York, NY 10003.
|
|
|
|
MONSTER! INTERNATIONAL - Issue number 2 is $3.50, and is dated October
|
|
1992. This is 42 black and white pages, with a black and white slick
|
|
cover. The focus here is obviously on (mostly old) horror movies. There
|
|
are many reproduced stills and movie ads, with the focus being on foreign
|
|
films which haven't yet been covered as well as they should. Articles are
|
|
very complete. Number two discusses Mexican monster movies, Jesus Franco,
|
|
Santo, and a special column dedicated to Asian horrors. A sister
|
|
publication to HIGHBALL; the slogan is "100% pure creature features, no
|
|
slashers allowed!" Write: MPO, Box 67, Oberlin, OH 44074-0067.
|
|
|
|
MOTORBOOTY - This 'zine mainly documents aspects of the Detroit / Ann
|
|
Arbor rock scene, with articles on places, culture, and bands past and
|
|
present. Number five is 72 pages of black and white, with heavy stock and
|
|
color cover. Inside are interviews with Rob Tyner of the MC5, and Ron
|
|
Asheton of The Stooges. There's a history of Detroit rock, a feature on
|
|
the Stooges Wax Museum, an interview with psychedelic poster artist Gary
|
|
Grimshaw, and other comics and articles. This issue is $3.00 from winter
|
|
1990, and I believe is still out on some newsstands. There is an issue
|
|
six out, which I don't own, with stories on Miles Davis and The Firesign
|
|
Theater among others. Write: P.O. Box 7944, Ann Arbor, MI 48107.
|
|
|
|
PYSCHOTRONIC VIDEO - The granddaddy of all offbeat movie fanzines.
|
|
Published by the editor of the (highly recommended) Psychotronic
|
|
Encyclopedia Of Film. The latest issue is number 14, and is 72 pages in
|
|
black and white. Every issue has a fantastic color cover, and all except
|
|
number one are available as back issues. Each issue has many reviews of
|
|
movies on video and books about films. Regular features are on
|
|
underground records, fanzines, a lengthy letters section, and obituaries
|
|
of recently deceased psychotronic personalities. In addition there are
|
|
several articles per issue on actors, producers, writers, or directors of
|
|
movies in genres such as horror, biker, drug, sexploitation, mondo, or any
|
|
other strange commodity. Write: 151 First Avenue, Department PV, New
|
|
York, NY, 10003.
|
|
|
|
VIDEO WATCHDOG - A publication absolutely obsessed with detail. This is
|
|
heavy stock, slick paper in an 8 1/4 x 5 3/4 format. It is published
|
|
regularly on a bi-monthly basis, with a $4.95 cover price. Each issue is
|
|
loaded with intricate information as to the various titles, running times,
|
|
screen dimensions, soundtracks, video releases, and just about any other
|
|
information that may pertain to films in the horror, SFX, or fantasy
|
|
genres. Each issue has complete videographies of selected artists, and
|
|
usually a feature or two on a particular actor or director. Very valuable
|
|
for learning about the re-titling of old films in new video releases.
|
|
Write: P.O. Box 5283, Cincinnati, OH 45205-0283.
|
|
|
|
WE ARE THE WEIRD - A collection of Joe-Bob Briggs rants which are too far
|
|
over the line for his weekly syndicated newspaper column. Frequently
|
|
published, and the subject matter can cover any of Joe-Bobs unique and
|
|
varied interests, not just sleaze flicks. Subscriptions are $35.00 for 52
|
|
issues, but Joe-Bob has been known to mail out free samples if you ask
|
|
him. Write: P.O. Box 2002, Dallas, TX 75221.
|
|
|
|
ZONTAR THE MAG FROM VENUS, ZONTAR'S EJECTO-POD, and ZON-TOWER - It's
|
|
difficult to describe these other than - hysterical. ZONTAR is a way of
|
|
life! The blurb on the cover states, "Dedicated to the intensive study of
|
|
the most obscure and disreputable cultural manifestations of the decaying
|
|
hu-man empire!" The main Zontar mag is into it's ninth issue, while
|
|
spin-offs Ejecto and Zon-Tower have reached issues two and four
|
|
respectively. Subjects covered have been Larry Buchanan, Bozo, Bob
|
|
Tilton, the Bakkers and other TV preacher-thieves, "Michael Medved -
|
|
Golden Turkey Or Neo-Fascist", sleazy comics, "Yellow Ribbonism: Symbol Of
|
|
Shame", "The Great Bad-Film Debate", the indispensable All-Nixon issue,
|
|
and the chronicled re-printing of Ed Wood Jr.'s sleaze/porn novel "Drag
|
|
Trade". Issue sizes vary, but the main mag is around 60 wildly
|
|
illustrated pages for $6.00, and the spin-offs about half that at
|
|
$3.50-$5.00 each. Also ask about the two hour video "Pervert Preachers,
|
|
Fascist Fundamentalists, and Kristian Kiddie Kooks". The address is: 29
|
|
Darling St. #2, Boston, MA 02120.
|
|
|
|
And while not a fanzine, I'd also like to recommend the LOOMPANICS
|
|
UNLIMITED MAIN CATALOG. This organization publishes or distributes a
|
|
large number of provocative and controversial books, without fear or
|
|
hesitation. A maverick operation from which titles covering privacy,
|
|
security, protection, fake ID, weapons, avoiding government intrusion,
|
|
dropping out, and other topics of an anarchist or libertarian bent can be
|
|
obtained. The catalog has detailed descriptions of each book that is
|
|
offered, and is interesting in itself. Ask about their "greatest hits"
|
|
book, with reprints of original articles. Their slogan states, "You are
|
|
what you know, you are what you do to help yourself. No more secrets. No
|
|
more excuses. No more limits." The catalog is over 250 pages for $3.00
|
|
from: PO Box 1197, Port Townsend, WA 98368.
|
|
|
|
|
|
Reviews - Comments on Selected Books, Records, Periodicals, Etc. Etc. Etc.
|
|
--------------------------------------------------------------------------
|
|
|
|
Items described below are not necessarily new, however they are new to me,
|
|
and thus the majority are relatively recent releases or publications.
|
|
They all are available at the time of this writing.
|
|
|
|
recorded music:
|
|
|
|
DINOSAUR (JR.) - WHERE YOU BEEN; The "Jr." is in parenthesis as I still
|
|
refuse to acknowledge this addition that was foisted upon this great group
|
|
by some bar band hacks. This is a fantastic album, the best I've heard
|
|
yet this year, and it will be difficult to be topped. This is the first
|
|
really good item from J. Mascis and co. since 1988's BUG. Something got
|
|
lost when he tried to play every instrument on the last record, but
|
|
there's a return to a full band here, including old drummer Murph. WHERE
|
|
YOU BEEN has all of the grinding, distorted, swirling guitar crunch that
|
|
one would expect from good Dinotunes, and some great melodies to go with
|
|
it. Heavy riffs, wild jams, and the pained and strained vocalizing of
|
|
Mascis are present amidst a batch of well crafted songs. A good Dinosaur
|
|
record is as good as anything, and this is a good Dinosaur record. News
|
|
is that drummer Lynn Perko from Sister Double Happiness is recording with
|
|
J. for the next record. The mini-hit is "Start Choppin", and it deserves
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|
to be. If there were justice in the world, or if things were like they
|
|
were at the birth of Rock and Roll, this tune would be in the top ten.
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(Sire/Warner Bro.s 9 45108-2)
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FLAMING LIPS - HIT TO DEATH IN THE FUTURE HEAD; If WHERE YOU BEEN may be
|
|
the best record of this year, H.T.D.I.T.F.H. (along with The Beastie Boys
|
|
CHECK YOUR HEAD) was probably last year's best. These hyper-amplified
|
|
acid rocker Okies have put out another great collection of sounds for
|
|
trippin'. The sound is part metal, part psychedelia, part garage, and
|
|
part pop, and a great mixture of wild sounds, making full use of stereo
|
|
effects. What makes music like that put out by The Flaming Lips and
|
|
Dinosaur so great is that you get the loud, driving, guitar crunching
|
|
distortion that you need to get your ya-ya's out, without sacrificing
|
|
melodies, beats, and subtleties in the music, that are too often lost in
|
|
much of the punk, sludge, and metal that we get these days. If you're
|
|
unfamiliar, and the musical description above isn't clear enough, perhaps
|
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song titles like "Talkin' 'Bout The Smiling Deathporn Immortality Blues",
|
|
"You Have To Be Joking (Autopsy Of The Devil's Brain)", and The Magician
|
|
Vs. The Headache" will give you an idea of where these guys are coming
|
|
from. (Warner Bro.s 9 26838-2)
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SUGAR SHACK - CHARMER; This is a heavy, heavy, heavy band out of Houston,
|
|
who sound like a bunch of metal mutants weaned to the beat of early
|
|
Sabbath. 19 songs of upbeat pinhead posturing, consisting of mostly two
|
|
to three minute crankers that you can beat you head against the wall to.
|
|
The musical philosophy may be on the order of the Ramones, with the band
|
|
getting right to their riff heavy point, without messing around with allot
|
|
of guitar solo posturing. Musically they don't have the creative gonzo
|
|
pop sensibilities of that classic band, but if your full of angst, or
|
|
spend most of your time in a cave, you may get off on these guys. The
|
|
shortcoming are that there isn't enough distinction of sound between some
|
|
of the songs, but the best of them with have you jumping, and even
|
|
laughing, if your sense of humor is somewhat warped. The highlight is a
|
|
ditty called "You're A Freak And You Don't Even Know It". (Cargo Records
|
|
FIST 006)
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L7 - BRICK ARE HEAVY; I used to be somewhat dubious as to the talents of
|
|
these all-female hard rock wailers, but the MTV hit "Pretend We're Dead"
|
|
caused me to give them a second look with this latest release. That track
|
|
is one kick-ass, God-jam, monster of a tune - an instant classic. While
|
|
no other tunes on the album are as good as that one, the rest are good
|
|
enough to be enjoyable to anyone who likes the post-Runaways,
|
|
hard rocking, monotone, slams that these dudettes specialize in. I'm
|
|
enjoying listening to it now, but I'm not sure of the lasting power of
|
|
anything outside of "Pretend We're Dead". (Slash/Reprise 9 26784-2)
|
|
|
|
JELLYFISH - SPILT MILK; Man these guys suck! They remind me of some of
|
|
those seventies, TV show type, bubblegum pop bands, in a mutant cross with
|
|
the kings of corporate hack rock, Journey. I don't know if the rock critic
|
|
hype I keep hearing around these guys is a local angle due to their coming
|
|
from this area (SF), or if it's a widespread effect. I suspect it's local
|
|
because there's a long history amongst some of the critics around here of
|
|
sucking up to bland commercial morons like Huey Lewis and Starship,
|
|
probably in excahnge for free tickets, or the honor of being in the
|
|
presence of such "greatness". Don't believe the hype! These wimps are
|
|
boring and trite! (if you really want this crap, I'm not going to help
|
|
you!)
|
|
|
|
BEYOND THE VALLEY OF THE DOLLS - SOUNDTRACK; Some outfit called Media
|
|
Archives has re-released this hard to find soundtrack from the RM classic.
|
|
To those who have seen the film, you should be happy to add the fun tunes
|
|
of The Carrie Nations to your collection. If you're a Strawberry Alarm
|
|
Clock fan, I'm not, then you get their tracks from the film, "Girl From
|
|
The City", and "I'm Comin' Home" also. The songs are written by the hard
|
|
working film composer of that era, Stu Phillips, and the non-Carrie
|
|
Nations stuff really isn't any good. But if you were pumped by the great
|
|
"Look On Up At The Bottom", "Sweet Talkin' Candy Man", and "Find It" from
|
|
watching the film, you'll want to seek this out. Six Carrie Nations songs,
|
|
the two Strawberry Alarm Clock tracks mentioned above, the title song by
|
|
The Sandpipers (done twice), and two instrumentals round out the
|
|
collection. As a bonus to the twelve BVD songs, this also has a six song
|
|
version of one of the multitude of soundtrack releases from the film
|
|
VALLEY GIRL tacked onto the end. The liner notes say "limited edition of
|
|
1000 copies", but I've seen it in just about every non-chain record shop
|
|
in my area. Look in Goldmine ads if it's not available in your locale. I
|
|
have a strong suspicion that this is in fact a bootleg release. (Media
|
|
Archive MF-9201-2)
|
|
|
|
FREEDOM OF CHOICE: YESTERDAY'S NEW WAVE HITS AS PERFORMED BY TODAY'S STARS
|
|
- COMPILATION; Well I hear we're in the midst of a "new wave" revival.
|
|
When we have nostalgia for ten years ago, you know the world's moving
|
|
fast. For that matter didn't we just get past the seventies disco
|
|
revival? What's next, a Guns And Roses flashback craze? Anyway, more to
|
|
the point of the music, what we have is 18 songs recorded by 1992 bands of
|
|
tunes ranging roughly from the years 1978-1983. Some of the bands here,
|
|
such as Sonic Youth, Redd Kross, and White Flag, were even contemporaries
|
|
of some of the groups covered. Nothing is really bad here, and some of it
|
|
is actually pretty good. The key to good cover songs is either taking a
|
|
crappy tune and turning it into something at least interesting, or in
|
|
taking a good song and giving it a radically new sounding. The problem
|
|
with some of the covers here are that they're either not very distinct
|
|
from the original, or the original is such a good song that the cover
|
|
version doesn't come close to it. The latter is the case with Mudhoney
|
|
doing Elvis' "Pump It Up", Das Damen with a version of The Pretenders "The
|
|
Wait", and Tiny Lights covering "5' 1" originally done by Iggy. I like
|
|
Sonic Youth with the Plastic Bertrand song "Ca Plane Pour Moi" and Redd
|
|
Kross' wailing on The Go-Go's "How Much More". Other items include
|
|
Erectus Monotone covering Missing Persons "Destination Unknown" (an
|
|
interesting choice as that bands "Words" is the only even semi-decent song
|
|
that they did, and would have been a better cover), Big Dipper with Pete
|
|
Shelley's "Homosapien", Polvo with Wall Of Voodoo's "Mexican Radio",
|
|
Superchunk doing Devo's "Girl U want", and Permanent Green Light with The
|
|
B-52's "Hero Worship". This record is probably better if your a fan of the
|
|
bands here, rather than if your a fan of the songs they're doing. You've
|
|
probably got the original albums anyway. (Caroline Carol 1715-2)
|
|
|
|
THE PHANTOM SURFERS - PLAY THE MUSIC FROM THE BIG-SCREEN SPECTACULARS!; A
|
|
surf rock band that draws from the likes of The Lonely Ones rather than
|
|
Jan And Dean. A three guitars/bass/drums line-up who wail away on their
|
|
Fenders like it was 1965 all over again. There isn't much new or original
|
|
here, but if you're into the REAL surf music sound of jammin' guitar
|
|
romps, you might want to play this at your next party. The premise of
|
|
this record is 14 remakes of songs which originally were heard in movie
|
|
soundtracks in the 50's and 60's. Highlights are "Bikini Drag" from
|
|
BIKINI BEACH, "Pursuit Of The Leather Girls", from BLOOD ORGY OF THE
|
|
LEATHER GIRLS, "Geronimo" from THE GHOST OF DRAGSTRIP HOLLOW, "Eaffin' And
|
|
Surfin'" from RAT PFINK A BOO BOO and a jam from the Mexi-classic THE WILD
|
|
WORLD OF BATWOMAN. Misses include "Bali Hai" from SOUTH PACIFIC and the
|
|
theme from HUSH, HUSH SWEET CHARLOTTE. There's also an Ennio Morricone
|
|
song, a Frank Sinatra ditty, and even a Phantom Surfers original. (Estrus
|
|
ES125)
|
|
|
|
books:
|
|
|
|
GEEK LOVE by Katherine Dunne - One of the more bizarre novels that I've
|
|
had the pleasure of reading. It's the story of The Binewski family and
|
|
their traveling "Carnival Fabulon". Papa Al Binewski and Mama Crystal Lil
|
|
Binewski work on producing offspring that are their planned little
|
|
creations for the show. Al concocts recipes consisting of drugs,
|
|
insecticides, and radioisotopes for Lil to ingest while pregnant in order
|
|
to produce the most "special" children possible. What sounds like a
|
|
morbid and horrible plot really doesn't come off that way once the story
|
|
gets rolling. What emerges is a portrait of a loving family that revels
|
|
and rejoices in their uniqueness, and a vehicle for the reader to really
|
|
contemplate what it means to be different or atypical in the world we're
|
|
all moving through. Dunne uses the framework of the family and their
|
|
characteristics, and the carnival atmosphere, to weave in a variety of
|
|
anecdotes about how people perceive themselves and others, and the insec-
|
|
urities they have about themselves and their positions in the world. A
|
|
great deal of it is actually quite humorous as well as insightful. You'll
|
|
read about Arturo The Aqua Boy, with fins instead of arms and legs, who
|
|
callously manipulates the development of a religious cult of personality
|
|
around him as he preaches from his tank, about Electra and Iphigenia the
|
|
piano playing Siamese twins who eventually turn to prostitution for
|
|
experimental purposes, Fortunato the telekinetic boy who uses his powers
|
|
to perform surgery, and the protagonist Olympia, who only being a bald,
|
|
hunchback, albino, dwarf is considered a little to "norm" by the family to
|
|
have a major performing role in the show. If you do read it , it won't
|
|
soon leave your mind. (1983, 1990; Warner Books, 355 pp., $9.95 in
|
|
softcover, ISBN: 0-446-39130-1)
|
|
|
|
FEAR AND LOATHING: THE STRANGE AND TERRIBLE SAGA OF HUNTER S. THOMPSON by
|
|
Paul Perry - Perry, who knows Thompson personally, describes this as a
|
|
"violently unauthorized biography". As the book covers a span of roughly
|
|
thirty years in 274 pp., it is not especially dense in it's details.
|
|
There's some new material regarding Thompson's early days in Louisville
|
|
and New York which hasn't yet been covered in much detail, and which is
|
|
culled from interviews with Thompson's cohorts from the time. Details
|
|
provided from interviews with artist and sidekick Ralph Steadman, and work
|
|
that Perry himself did as editor on a Thompson piece additionally offer
|
|
some interesting insights as to the methods to his madness. Other than
|
|
that, most of this material has been covered before, and should be known
|
|
by any dedicated gonzo fanatics. One other good thing that can be said
|
|
for Perry is that he avoids the sort of "awe" or "hero worship" that some
|
|
other chroniclers of Thompson's escapades fall victim to. Some of the
|
|
truly uncomplimentary tales we are told of involve Thompson's threatening
|
|
a group of gays with Dobermans and a baseball bat, and his physical abuse
|
|
of his wife Sandy. This book in conjunction with William McKeen's HUNTER
|
|
S. THOMPSON volume of TWAYNE'S UNITED STATES AUTHORS series (Twayne,
|
|
1991), which has a detailed bibliography, and the Hunter sections of
|
|
Robert Drapers ROLLING STONE MAGAZINE: AN UNCENSORED HISTORY (Doubleday,
|
|
1990) can provide all of the hard facts regarding his life, but the best
|
|
way to enjoy this material is straight from the horses mouth, especially
|
|
in THE GREAT SHARK HUNT (1979), and SONGS OF THE DOOMED (1990). (1992,
|
|
Thunder's Mouth Press, 274 pp., $22.95 in hardback, ISBN: 1-56025-012-7)
|
|
|
|
THE VIDEO WATCHDOG BOOK by Tim Lucas - Lucas is the editor by The Video
|
|
Watchdog Magazine (see 'zine section), and this is a self-published
|
|
collection of Video Watchdog columns that were originally written between
|
|
1985 and 1992, in the magazines VIDEO TIMES and GOREZONE. The format is
|
|
similar to the magazine, in which video releases of mostly horror, science
|
|
fiction, and fantasy films are scrutinized for re-titling, screen ratios,
|
|
running lengths in comparison to the original release, edited scenes,
|
|
changed soundtracks, etc. There are additionally feature length articles
|
|
on the video releases of Dario Argento, Terence Fisher, Jess Franco, and
|
|
Edgar Wallace. Each column is followed by an update correcting anything
|
|
from the original column that needs to be, and giving more current (as of
|
|
1992) information regarding video releases of films mentioned. Where else
|
|
can you find out that there have been four different versions of EXORCIST
|
|
II - THE HERETIC on video, or that there exists a 121 minute (!) Italian
|
|
language only version of Argento's PROFONDO ROSSO, which is 16 minutes
|
|
longer than the most complete English language version, a Japanese
|
|
subtitled, letterboxed release. There's plenty of interesting reading
|
|
beyond just the raw data, and you can stumble across allot of films you'll
|
|
want to run out to see for yourself. Almost every page has a still or
|
|
some poster art from one of the movies being written about. All of the
|
|
information regarding the companies that put out the films is given, and
|
|
there is an index to both the book and the first twelve issues of the
|
|
magazine. Another valuable feature is 32 pages of retitling information
|
|
of films onto video, both by original title and by retitle. The forward
|
|
is by Joe Dante. (1992, Video Watchdog, 391 pp, $19.95 in softcover, ISBN:
|
|
0-9633756-0-1)
|
|
|
|
THE WILD WORLD OF THE CRAMPS by Ian Johnston - The only English language
|
|
bio of the seminal psycho/sleazo/fuzzo primitive rock and roll band. This
|
|
book is densely illustrated with photos, drawings, cover art, poster art,
|
|
ads, backstage passes, and a wide variety of other interesting
|
|
brick-a-brack. The story of the band is told from the beginning through
|
|
1990. The biographical track largely follows the music, with all band
|
|
member changes, recordings, and major tours documented. We learn that Lux
|
|
was hatched Erik Lee Purkhiser in Akron, Ohio, and that he is old enough
|
|
to have run around The Hashbury during The Summer O' Luv. We even get to
|
|
see his high school yearbook picture. Poison Ivy, aka Kristy Marlana
|
|
Wallace, was picked up hitchhiking by Lux in 1972, and a new form of
|
|
musical bizarreness was conceived. There's a discography with every song
|
|
they ever recorded, complete with pictures of all the LP, 12", and single
|
|
covers, and a description of some of the better bootlegs. Interviews are
|
|
utilized throughout, and we get listings of both Lux and Ivy's favorite
|
|
songs and films (at the time at least, this list is probably mutating
|
|
constantly). Topping Ivy's tune list are Wanda Jackson's "Funnel Of
|
|
Love" and Tommy Jim Beam And The 4/5ths "Golden Boy", while Lux is partial
|
|
to Alfred E. Neumann's "It's A Gas", and The Rivington's "Mama Oow Mow
|
|
Mow". Among their celluloid pleasures are THE PHANTOM OF SOHO (1964), THE
|
|
WORLD'S GREATEST SINNER (1962), and DERANGED (1974). Any Cramps fanatic
|
|
should enjoy this work. (1990, Omnibus, 128 pp, softcover, ISBN:
|
|
0-7119-2350-7)
|
|
|
|
|
|
----------------------------------------------------------------------------
|
|
----
|
|
----
|
|
Thanks for coming! See you next time!!
|
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