Woman or animal?

“Vixen!” is yet another masterpiece from Russ Meyer. The title character is a nymphomaniacal beauty living in the Canadian bush country with her pilot husband, who knows no bounds when it comes to satisfying her voracious sexual appetite. Vixen gets it on with everyone : one of her husband’s clients, his wife, her own brother… everyone, except her brother’s black best friend. For Vixen, a sexual ultra-liberal, is an extreme-right conservative when it comes to race. She is also ultra-conservative in her attitude to communism. Can she warm up to her black nemesis if it’s the only way to save him from the clutches of an evil commie?

If the above summary sounds weird, it’s because the movie is. After a first hour of non-stop softcore scenes, interspersed with some hilarious dialogue, including some delicious bickering between Vixen and the black Niles, the film ends with a confrontation aboard a plane between Vixen, her husband, Niles and an undercover communist trying to hijack the plane to Cuba. This is after all Russ Meyer.

Watching Vixen, I couldn’t help but wonder if Meyer wasn’t the main inspiration for Paul Verhoeven. The man was making exploitation movies with socio-political messages when the Dutchman was still in diapers. “Vixen!” is pure B-Movie sexploitation, but it is strange in its refusal to adhere to conventions. Vixen is a “sex machine” as one character calls her, with no apparent moral reservations. Yet her quest for sexual gratification is strangely innocent, like a survival instinct (hence the “animal” in the film’s slogan, which is hardly derogatory). Vixen actually gives happiness to everyone : her husband is a happy fulfilled man (”no one satisfies me like you do”, Vixen tells him after one hot night); her seduction of a client and then his wife mends their broken marriage.  And the  movie  doesn’t criticise her, nor does it give her a purgatory ending. Rather, the film ends with her apparently shedding her only fault : her racism.

Meyer succeeds in cramming a lot of political and social issues into the few non-sex scenes : the Vietnam war, the malaise of American blacks, differences between the US and Canada, the communist ideal (excellently and attractively laid out by the communist character, before he turns out to be a hypocrite). Meyer also succeeds in never taking a clear stance on most issues, the ambiguity providing fodder for after-movie reflection and discussion.

Oh and one last thing : Erica Gavin is hot! if you see this movie on the Arrow DVD, be sure to check out the new interview with her for some great insight on Meyer’s working ethics and the effect of “Vixen!” on her subsequent life. And she still looks hot, although in a very different way.

Add comment April 6, 2008

Planet Terror tries too hard…

Just saw the second of the “Grindhouse” movies, Robert Rodriguez’s Planet Terror. Living in France, I got to see the movies as two separate releases rather than the combined double-feature the directors intended. For the un-initiated, Grindhouse was originally released as a double feature, along with four trailers for non-existent movies, designed to recreate the atmosphere of a double-bill evening at a B-movie theater (a grindhouse, hence the name). When this concept tanked at the US box-office, they decided to split the movie in two, releasing Tarantino’s Death Proof first to raise momentum for the Rodriguez movie. Judging by people around me, the first movie didn’t do so well, so I don’t think the second will make a killing either.

I have to say I personally LOVED Death Proof. I am a bit of a B-movie fan myself (though I’d call myself a “casual” fan compared to some of my friends), and Death Proof pushed just the right buttons, referencing exactly the kind of movie I like. Seeing Planet Terror after it proved to be a disappointment. While I’d hardly call the film bad (in fact, it’s quite entertaining) I didn’t come out with that incredibly giddy feeling I got after Death Proof (I couldn’t stop thinking or talking about that movie for two days). The main problem, I think, comes from the two different approaches: Tarantino goes for a subtle treatment, making what is unmistakably a Tarantino movie while paying homage to his beloved genres (and not in an over-stylized Kill Bill vein, either). Rodriguez, on the other hand, goes for all-out fireworks, taking every genre cliché and blowing it out of proportion, making it sometimes look more like a parody than a tribute.

One aspect illustrates this perfectly: both directors decided to “deteriorate” the film reels, giving the movies the scratchy, decaying feel of original grindhouse movies, complete with jump cuts and de-synchronized soundtracks. While Tarantino does this with finesse, hardly allowing it to obscure what’s going on on-screen, Rodriguez goes at it with childlike glee, totally messing up parts of the movie (at one cringe-inducing moment, interrupting a steamy sex-scene with a strategically placed “missing reel”).

While there are moments of witty dialogue, extremely funny scenes, and some rather likeable characters (not to mention GORGEOUS women), it just gets too over-the-top at times. I think in its original context, this movie would have worked well, providing the madcap first-act and allowing Tarantino to finish up with a classier conclusion. As it is, the reshuffled release does this film a disservice.

Note that of the four fake trailers, only one made it to the European shores: Machette, shown just before Planet Terror. I had already seen all four (thank heaven for YouTube) and this was easily the best of the bunch. It looked great on the big screen.

Add comment August 29, 2007

Come to Daddy

Having just turned four, my son is getting more and more selective in his music choices. Whereas some might argue his father influences his judgement, I now have little control over which track he will take to his heart and demand to listen to constantly.

For the curious, here is my four-year-old’s all-time top five songs (in no particular order) :

  • She’s Got Spies – Super Furry Animals
  • Vitamin C – Can
  • Another Girl, Another Planet – The Only Ones
  • We Are The Robots – Kraftwerk
  • Prince Charming – Adam Ant

Does the little critter have taste or what?

Add comment March 6, 2007

In the beginning…

Having milked every possible film franchise first by endless sequels, then by remakes, the studios are now turning towards “prequels”, with atrocities like Hannibal Rising and Texas Chainsaw Masacre : the Beginning. At least Sylvester Stallone had the dignity not to give us a movie about Rocky Balboa’s high school days. For that alone, he deserves your respect.

Add comment February 19, 2007

“If a man is considered guilty for what goes on in his mind, then give me the electric chair for all my future crimes…”

So I had to wait up till 2 in the morning to watch Prince do his ten-minute show on the Superbowl, all the while dreading a major deception. Well, guess what? it was only a minor deception! Prince’s show was understandably “safe” (this is family entertainment after all, and the breast-flashing incident two years back has obviously got the promoters on their guard.) And while he didn’t defy expectations by performing any obscure masterpieces–imagine “Erotic City” on the Superbowl!–he did limit himself to one album (Purple Rain) and chose one of its non-singles (”Baby, I’m a Star”, one of its best tracks), trading its briliant funk jam for a verse of the Ike and Tina classic “Proud Mary”. He did a medley of Hendrix and some other stuff I didn’t recognise (an article I read spoke of the foo Fighters, but then i wouldn’t know about that…) He didn’t strip but took off his pretty terrible headscarf to reveal a bad hairdo. All in all, it didn’t suck.

 So, to keep riding on this Prince wave, if you are a one-time fan who lost interest along the way, or just getting to discover the pleasures of the Purple One, check out this guide to Prince’s musical legacy.

 Here is my mini-guide to Prince for beginners :

You don’t even know who the frack he is : Get The Very Best of Prince

You liked what you heard? get Purple Rain and Sign o’ The Times

Still interested? get 1999, Parade and The Hits/The B-Sides (you’ll be getting two discs that overlap with The Very Best of…but you’l also get a disc of stuff you can’t find elsewhere and the triple disc can be found for the price of a single disc on the web)

Want more? Batman is solid Prince, and rapidly going out of print… get it while it lasts!

Still hooked? Oh you sucker! Just get everything else, then! (Not to be missed : the collector’s edition DVD of Purple Rain, and the concert movie Sign o’ The Times.)

A loop is a loop is a loop …

Add comment February 5, 2007

“You can be the side effect, I’d rather be the dope…”

I have never watched a Superbowl in my life, but this year I am going to make the effort just to watch Prince’s mid-game performance.

Here is an interesting article on PopMatters about Prince’s recent resurgence and, most interestingly, how his latest compilation Ultimate Prince was totally botched up. I have long wondered why there was no decent Prince compilation with a bit more depth on the market : you can either get skimpy “hits only” comps such as The Hits 1 & 2 and The Very Best of Prince, or  B-Sides and rarities overkill with the 4-disc Crystal Ball (which is out of print anyway) . Why can’t anyone do a decent two- or three-disc anthology with the best hits, key B-sides and essential album tracks? The way the compilers originally conceived Ultimate seemed like a good idea, with extended mixes of several hits complemented by classic B-side “Erotic City”, but meddling from the label and the man himself turned it into a travesty. It seems like the best way to do a prince comp is just to piece it together yourself; the blueprint for Ultimate as explained in the article looks like a good template to start you off. Don’t forget to throw in the brilliant “Ripopgodazippa”!

Add comment February 4, 2007

Hello world!

Here  am on the blogscape at last. For years,  have wanted to create an outlet to babble on about my favorite topics, namely : music, movies, comics and the occasional dabbling in politics. My chronic laziness has held me back, but by launching this blog I hope to overcome my inertia.

Over here on “Sound and Vision” you will hopefully find insightful reviews, commentary and essays on the above topics. I will also try to post MP3’s of stuff I think is worth discovering. This is only the beginning, so hang on with me and I hope this little hobby will evolve to a worthy source of pop culture.

 Thanks for reading.

 Sherif

Add comment December 27, 2006


Categories

  • Linx

  • Music

  • Feeds