By Trotsky’s beard it’s Burl, here to
review a movie about the death of revolution! That’s right, I’m talking about Sweet Movie! Ha ha, have you seen this
picture? It’s a wild and weird one, but nothing in it will come as any great
shock to those who’ve seen WR: Mysteries
of the Organism, the previous film from director Dušan Makavejev!
Well, a few things might be a little shocking, ha ha! Like WR, Sweet
Movie is a sort of pastiche or collage film, with revolution as its general
subject and the naturally, if regrettably, ephemeral nature of same!
But much of the movie demonstrates the need
for it, too: revolution is not futile; in fact is necessary, so long as there are people like Mr.
Dollars, the world’s richest man, a Howard Hughes-style clean freak who assumes
he can buy and sell people as he pleases! This entity is played by none other
than John Vernon, well known from Herbie Goes Bananas, Fraternity Vacation, and Curtains! Ha ha, Herbie fans in
particular will be taken aback when Vernon gets his kit off to reveal that he
has a solid gold willis! (Vernon too was reportedly taken aback when he saw
this at the film’s premiere screening!)
Another person taken aback by this is Miss
Canada, played by the comely Carole Laure, whom we of course know from Get Out Your Handkerchiefs and Naked Massacre! She, who had won the Crazy Daisy Show contest to marry Mr.
Dollars, is packed away in a suitcase by a big bodybuilder and sent to the
Eiffel Tower, where she makes sweet love with El Macho, played by Sami Frey
from Band of Outsiders and Black Widow, and emergency attention is
soon required, ha ha!
Meanwhile a boat, the Survival, with the head of Marx on
the prow, captained by the homicidally revolutionary Anna Planeta, glides down
the canals of Amsterdam! It picks up a sailor called Potemkin played by Pierre
Clémenti from The Conformist, and
pretty soon, after affixing a single tear to the giant Marx head, Anna and
Potemkin are rolling around in the big box of sugar, making sweet love, ha ha, but a
couple of gory bites and a knife-poking later, the sugar is bubbling with
blood! There’s also a very queasy scene in the ship’s sweet shoppe, in which a
group of young boys are “seduced” by the lingerie-wearing Planeta!
Miss Canada has by now hooked up with Otto
Muehl’s Vienna Aktionists, who are doing their thing in a warehouse somewhere!
Ha ha, these bits of the movie might cause viewers some little disquiet: there
is all manner of gross foodeating, rank upchuckery, regression to babyhood, and
of course a notorious scene of platform pooping! Miss Canada, and indeed Carole Laure, doesn't seem to be enjoying her experience very much! Even worse than all of this, for
me, was the German documentary footage of unearthing corpses in the Katyin
Forest, which I wish Makavejev had resisted putting in his movie! It’s really
awful, gruesome stuff! I didn’t care much for the baby gymnastics either, ha
ha!
However, after a friendly reappearance from
Mrs. Alplanalpe, played by Jane Mallett from Nothing Personal, the old painted lady whom we’d seen earlier on
the Crazy Daisy Show, the sugary
theme of the picture reasserts itself! Miss Canada immerses herself in a vat of
chocolate and rolls around in it nude for a while, and that’s a pretty good
scene! But it’s a sad scene, too - it seems to represent a surrender of some
kind, a drowning of ideals in crass, confectionary-excreta!
But the final image offers hope: a row of
apparently murdered children, wrapped in plastic, who slowly shuffle out of
their wrappings and reveal themselves as an alive, alert new generation, ready, we
hope, to continue the struggle! Workers unite, ha ha, you have nothing to lose
but your plastic wrap! Anyway, Sweet
Movie is an intriguing blumpkin, a relic of a sadly bygone age, and beyond
all question an earnestly felt combunction! I give it two and a half strips of
yellow suckers!
I got this to watch on VHS about a million years ago, and after watching it I immediately taped over it, half-convinced I'd be raided by the authorities for owning such filth! Mind you, I did see the same director's Montenegro on TV, totally uncut, toy tank scene and all. One of those liberated free thinkers who was basically one arthouse cinema visit away from Gerard Damiano.
ReplyDeletePolitically he seems to be the real deal, and as much sex and nudity as he might be able to put in his movies, they never really seem to be sexy! But I haven't seen Montenegro, and I really should! Nor The Coca-Cola Kid, for that matter!
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