Wednesday, June 27, 2018

B-Movie Bomb: Gas-s-s (Or We Had to Destroy The World In Order To Save It) (Spoilers, old review)

NOTE: As a bit of a bad movie geek, I'm well familiar with the works of Roger Corman from his iconic stuff such as Wasp Woman and the original Little Shop to stuff he only produced or had some hand in one way or another such as his Wasp Woman remake for Showtime's anthology "Roger Corman Presents."  The man could stretch a dollar and actually is viewed as a hero to most modern filmmakers on the grounds that he's one of the few that can get the creative control many wish they had.  This movie started out as such...only for half way through filming to have the (Then) 44 year old realize he's 44 years old and it went from connecting with the hippies to an old man shouting "GET OFF MY DAMN LAWN!"  Oh, and the writer?  3 years older than most of those involved in the hippy movement.

So, if the perspective goes from "If hippies ruled the world" to "Oh God, the hippies rule the world" and back, it's not me, it's a story by a 28 year old directed by a middle age "Damn kids" man.  Enjoy.

When crafting a story, you don't have to be the gender, age, or creed of the characters you're writing, you just have to write them as human. Not every body who writes a gay man is gay, not everybody who writes a white woman is a white woman, etc. That said, when you do write characters outside of who you are, especially on political and civil topics, keep in mind you are writing from a certain point of view for obvious reasons, namely you're not who you're writing.

But filming? Filming is the story from the POV of the director, meaning while you wrote one thing the director sees another or has another opinion about it. Myra Breckenridge went from being a satire on the state of Hollywood by Gore Vidal...to a satire on the state of Hollywood with rape being the centerpiece about how then modern manly men can't hold up a candle to the classics and all future rugged men are gonna be nothing but boys with the focus being on the act and not so much the message.

Yeah, is it any reason Vidal wrote a sequel book that took everything off the rails and was a non stop F-U to Hollywood?

That said, there are times where when you do want to do that you might wanna take a breath and think if that really is a good idea or just wait a bit to make sure nothing influences that thinking...like say a 44 year old making a movie about the hippie movement of the 60's and putting it to film just after the 60's ended ala Roger Corman and his last effort for American International, Gas-s-s...Or It Became Necessary To Destroy The World In Order To Save It.

I'd throw in the Mixed Up Zombies bit like when I did with my Civil War: Warzones review, but the title twisted most tongues already.

At first glance, Gas-s-s... does have a few things going for it, namely it's writer (George Armitage) was 28 around the time of the movie's release, so he was in someway part of the culture, directly or he can relate I have no clue...on the other hand Corman was 44 around that time and a b-movie director that didn't meet a pair of boobs he didn't say “No” to filming and had his own POV on the youth movement of the 60's. How do I know this? While I have no problems believing a member of said movement wrote stuff that was a middle finger to those running the country, said movie has a plot where a tribe of football players go around and rape women to the cheers of the local cheerleaders and that's supposed to serve as the answer to the army.

All because society crashed and the youth ruled the land. Yeah, I saw The Tribe when one of the Encore Networks actually tried back in the day, what's it say a kids show can do this same plot better with an even LESS budget?

The end result of the age gap is you have a writer who in the youth movement filmed by a director that thinks leaving the kids unsupervised will cause mass chaos. Not even kidding, Corman started becoming disillusioned with the youth movement shortly before filming. Any sane director would go to the studio or even the writer and go “Look, this isn't my opinion anymore, I'll help you find somebody that can do the movie justice,” but sane and Corman go together like honesty and a congressman.

So after an animated opening that explains the world gets screwed over thanks to the Government opening a chemical plant and mistaking a bottle of stuff that can kill people over 25 as champagne to crack open with...

Because you open buildings like ships, I guess.

We jump to a montage of a city on the go...then a hippie running around campus with a crossbow...right, a howler monkey did the editing, expect things to go nuts...

The hippie, later named Coel (Robert Corff) is running from the cops with his crossbow and decides to hide in a church, dressed as a priest and speaking with a horrible Irish brogue. Naturally, on the grounds that both the 28 year old writer and the 44 year old director agree that cops are stupid, the cop buys it to the point where he tries to see if he can get into confession...even though the brogue drops every now and then. Coel goes into the confession booth where he meets Cilla (Elaine Giftos) who worked with and under...

Remember, it's Corman.

...the guy who made the gas from the animated intro...which gets interupted when the cop says he has to confess that he's sin via beating people. This leads to the hippie telling the cop that his penace is to go to a Black Panther rally in Alabama and teach them bike riding. Dark, yet karmaticly funny. After a bit seeing people around them dying (After a bit where an HMO says a woman with no insurance has no hope, but the Medicaid one can be saved), we then jump to Cilla and Coel at a drive in, deciding the best thing they can do is toss random words out to mean sex as they get it on.

Oh, heaven help them if they skip the four play, I hear supercalafragilisticexpaladosious can knock you off your feet!

Fast forward to all the adults being dead and the two trying to get out of Dallas when they're captured by the goon squad of some sinny nobody that cashed in on the Apocalypse...that sounds like he was ADRed/dubbed by a 32 year old German...K. Turns out they need to see this guy to get the papers to leave Dallas...and they apparently do as the next scene has them leaving. Huh...given this is Roger Corman, I would've thought there'd be something at least tasteless doing this...oh well, let's jump to the next scene via jump cut and the sound of bullets to...the Texas School Book Depository and somebody pulling away...

Right...somebody wrote the script, but Corman's got the camera...

So then we see our...people we have met...driving down a high way full of wrecked and abandoned cars...and driving...and driving...and driving...to a library where they take books that nobody would read at the time...don't ask me who, I'm too young for the reference...and then proceed to screw...meaning throwing out MORE random words to substitute for sex as they have sex...which doesn't matter because they both shout out “Orgasim” in the end.

I'm guessing if this is the part Corman had a hand in creating, his mind was on “Gotta get out of AIP, no effort needed.”

This leads to...more freakin' driving... until they see a sign that says there's an Oracle...that's 851 miles...

Ok, pardon me from stealing from a Rifftrax Live show, but if I see a sign that says “Valley Lodge,” I'm leaving.

They get captured by a gang lead by a cowboy named Billy The Kid (George Armitage...yes, the guy who wrote this) who takes peoples cars and sells what he takes because he's a used car salesman. Get it? 'Cause they're all thieves, ha, ha. This causes them to run into the city on foot, play with some kids, and go into a record store commandeered by a couple, Marissa (Cindy Williams...you read that right) and Carlos (Ben Vereen...you read that right, too). She's in it for the music...he wants to shoot them on sight after Coel remarks the property value was going down.

Remember, Corman.

They also run into Hooper (Bud Cort) and Coralee (Talia Shire). After meeting them, Marissa goes on how the 60's where the music scene and...wait...this was filmed in 1969, released in 1970...just...just how much time passed between the opening and now? It couldn't be that long, they still look 25...and events still look too recent...WHAT THE HELL IS THIS!?

So they make a deal: The new guys help get the car back, our...people we have met...will give them a ride to a place in New Mexico they hear everybody's going to. This leads to a shoot out where...everybody shouts the name of famous Hollywood cowboy actors...and the names actually kill some of the people...

I...I don't know...

...and Coel kill Billy via calling out John Wayne. After they celebrate, they hear a motorcycle ridden by...Edgar Allan Poe (Bruce Karcher) and Lenore (Can't find who played her, sorry). And yes, this is supposed to be the same Edgar Allan Poe you're thinking of, because not only is he with Lenore, but there's a stuffed Raven on the bike.

And no, we get NO explanation as to how this is possible other than Roger Corman has a message via Poe, namely the hippies better watch it, or they'll get as corrupt as the adults that killed the world the last go around. I KNEW Zoobalee Zoo was up to no good!

Look, it was ether this I make the joke about the beer company Shirley worked at.

They get their car back, which means...yep, more frickin' driving. I've seen Shippuden filter that wasn't this long. All this leads to...a concert at a drive in. I'd skip this on the grounds it feels like a concert movie invaded this thing, until the singer says he's the new God and if not, may the real one speak up.

And He does... in a Jewish voice (Can't find who, sorry) saying somebody left their parking lights on. No...really...

This leads to Coel to hook up with a random girl and...they keep shouting “Arrowfeather” to each other...still trying to find what sex means I guess...while lazier Floyd and acid trips play on their body. After hooking back up with Cilla, who says the new word for sex he found can't be shared with them due to it being personal...

I guess one night stands are more important.

...we do a MERCIFULLY quick driving scene and jump to...oh God...

If you ever said “Hey, this is a hippie movie, where's the 'Military is bad, m'kay” moments?” Well, here we go...in the form of an invading High School/college varsity football team and marching band, where they invade a town for the purposes of rape, pillage, and destruction. And we're treated to a whole bit where the gang are forced to help the team train, including building house frames for them to knock down, teaching them how to hussle while stealing TVs, and the race to...rape...one of the women...

Roger Corman...Roger *BLEEP*ing Corman...

Oh, they don't do it...thank freakin' God...but it's enough.

And our...people we have met... feel the same way as they try to make a break for it. They jack a dune buggy and managed to out run the jocks, but before your brain can scream “NO MORE DRIVING,” they thankfully shorten the trip to an abandon construction site where...oh no...

And this is where the whole POV of the director thing comes in.

Turns out Marisa is ready to pop...and she looks and acts like she'd couldn't give two shits about it...so they lay her down while the guys go find a doctor (Alan Braustein)...who's the same age as them and is only a doctor to give stuff that wouldn't be 100% legal for docs to give for another two or three decades. Yeah...you can probably guess what's about to slam into the script's wall here. They take the doctor to her and the doctor...freaks out and panics because, surprise, he's mainly a doctor so the kids can get their buzz and real responsibility freaks him the Hell out.

While all that goes on, Cilla gets kidnapped and taken to a different construction site where her kidnappers argue over who's gonna rape her...until she says she should have her choice of who's gonna go first and picks one of 'em. There's only so many times I can say *BLEEP*ing Corman. Turns it doesn't happen because...she talks until they get so bored, they decide not to do it.

Ha... ha... ha...ha-ha-ha?

Going back to the previous paragraph for a bit, ignore the whole spiel about the doc---NAME ME ONE FLOWER POWER LOVE CHILD THAT WANTED TO KILL A BABY WHEN IT WAS TOO LATE TO HAVE AN ABORTION!

Sure, some of them were probably stupid/naive enough to believe it's no big deal, they can go right through it, but that's more the mind set of youth than the movement. Top it all of, she looks 6 to 9 months pregnant. A BIT LATE FOR AN ABORTION! And this is the problem of having somebody who's disconnected/disillusioned with the hippie movement directing a satire of the hippie movement, namely we're seeing this from the POV of somebody who's idea over filming of said movement is “Damn irresponsible kids, get off my lawn.”

I don't know what the original script had, nor I think will anybody other than the writers on the ground that this whole thing was re-written on the fly multiple times while filming...and by God does that show...with Corman putting his disconnected hands in it like he does with most of his projects. What could've been a dark satire of what happens when the era of peace, love, and rock & roll inherit the Earth in one of the most turbulent decades it had turns into a middle aged man shouting at the top of his lungs that these kids are freakin' screw ups and are this close to making it worse as it goes on.

Bet you said to yourself you got as sick of those driving montages like I was, right? Good! Because we now have a WALKING montage, complete with the gang playing in a scrapyard full of World War II bombers. Gotta make this movie length somehow, huh Corman? They come across a Texas Ranger who dresses them down...until they point out they're in New Mexico, causing him to realize that's why he's not effective and high tails it back to Texas.

This is why you never take directions from Ryoga Hibiki, people.

This convinces our...people we have met...to dress more mainstream and conformist so they don't scare people away. Why? Because we need our set up for GOLF to be a symbolism for war! Yeah, couldn't get enough of that through the football players and their actions? Well, how about, as Mark Twain once called it, a “Good walk spoiled” taken over by a biker gang...that talks like they're the clean cut rich guys that usually run places like that when they're introduced...

*THUD* OW! OW! UNSUBTLE THUD HURT ME! OW!

This leads to a bit where the gang is forced by the biker's leader (Lou Procopio) to do various odd jobs around the club as Carlos meets Ginny (Jackie Farley) and they both decide to bolt along with the others, save for Melisa who decides to stay because she found a juxbox and thus it means it's the best place for her and the ba...by...wait...she's still pregnant? But...earlier she was about to pop...that whole thing with the doctor...wait, that wasn't an abortion, that was her actually telling her body/baby “I'm good, wait several more weeks/months?” That's...that's... that's not... I need a minute...

*HEADDESK*
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Ok, I'm nack to bormal.


*HEADDESK*

Back to normal.

They leave, complete with the truck from the book depository from WAAAAAAAAYYYYYYYYYYY back in act one with them for some reason, only for the truck to disappear when they get into one of the back 9 thus calling for the bikers to launch golf balls at them as if they were bombs complete with sound effects. If this wasn't enough to drive home...again... “War is bad, m'kay,” the bit with a bikers turns into this really obnoxious reenactment of Patton being kicked out of the Korean War, only with the war terms replaced with golf ones.

I'm a freakin' pacifist and even I'm going “ENOUGH ALREADY!”

Thankfully, I don't have to shout that for the walking as we see, after the...people we have met... see a sign that says they're closer to the Oracle, the gang stumbles on to a property full of Army surplus supplies AND Coralee wants to get it on with Hooper! Things are looking u---BWA-HAHAHAHA-HAHAHAHAHAHA-HAHAHAHAHAHA!

Remember, Roger Corman!

Sure enough, turns out she ate enough food to literally explode. This is not a metaphor, I don't mean the belt on her pants, I mean she actually went boom from eating too much, right down to the sound effects. I just stopped asking questions at this point, I'm already six pages in to this thing. Hooper says he wants to be alone and wonders off to points unknown as the rest of the...people we have met...

Yeah, have they done anything for me to call them anything outside of the Red Dwarf reference?

...take some farm equipment and continue the journey with the truck from earlier back and following. I'd comment on that, but this leads to the return of Edgar Allen Poe and Lenore, observing the gang and remarking that they're close to making the world as messed up as it was before, but she thinks they have a better chance of fixing it. This causes Poe to remark Usher was warned about his path and that even creators can lose patients, leading to God replying “Don't I know it.”

In other words, Corman going “Damn hippies.”

After calling an operator for a joke about wondering where the phone operator was when people were still around...

Ha...hahaha...ha...hahaha?

...the...people we have met... run into a tribe of Native Americans who use the state the new world to take America back and give back the stereotype stuff based on them we put out over the years, including blankets made in Japan. Get it? Get it, huh!? Get it!? GET IT!? GEEEEEEEEEEEETTTTTTTTTTTT IIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIITTTTTTTTTTT!?

The truck vanishes before that, btw. Yeah, I don't know ether.

The gang then find the spot they were supposed to...only for it to be a rock saying “There is no answer, but keep going.” Or to put in my generation's terms, the princess is in another castle. They eventually find a commune...along with the truck popping in then popping out again...and meet it's leader who looks like if Woody Allen were part of the Woodstock generation right down to the nervous ticks. The gang decides it perfect and start their new lives.

And what kind of lives can our...people we have met...have? Well, Coel becomes an elementary teacher and his first topic is hallucinogens, namely how a pill caused people to see movies in their mind thus turning studios into drug pushers...even though it was funnier when one of the students said it was the other way around...anyway, we also see Cilla having such protein deficiency, she remembers running through the meat fields, and Carlos and Ginny become a family.

Well, too much good things, time for the other shoe to drop! And boy howdy does it as the football team finds the commune, this leads to the commune deciding if they wanna arm themselves...or be better fascists than the football team by talking to them. ...wait, what? Whatever, if that's the most confusing thing about this, I'll take it. The team meets with the commune and reveal that Hoop is...a...member...wait...WHAT!? But...but...but...butbutbut... GAAAAAAAAAAHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHH!
ERROR! ERROR! REBOOT! REBOOT!

Let's just finish this up as quick as I can, there's only six mercifully short minutes left.

They try to deal with the football team, seeing as they want fruits and veggies: They hunt and raise cattle, the commune will give them what they want. Well, the leader says they've come too far, they give them a deadline of 20 minutes to surrender or put up a fight. Coel comes up with an idea and that's...put a kid in a ref's uniform and the rest of the commune in Red Cross helmets. And...it works. Turns out the team has standards and refuse to fire on or hurt anybody that's under the Red Cross.

If that wasn't enough, a wind intervenes as it blows Hooper's hat towards somebody he kept an eye on through the time there and decides he no longer needs the football team after all. Coel says this is a sign, and the team leader remarks he's still gonna fight, causing God to strike the peace sign between the commune with lightning, asking “How's that for a sign!?”

...very confusing on the grounds it was lightning hitting the peace symbol...

Well, this was enough to cause the band who was trying to escape via tunnel from the first encounter with the team to pop up with EVERYBODY our...people we have met...encountered over time...including some that were bad gu---whatever, let's just wrap this up.

Everybody parties, we finally get an answer to that damn truck as inside is...Abe Lincoln, Ghandi, JFK, Castro, and Martin Luther King Jr...all driven by...Alfred E. Newman...

*THUD* OW! OW! OWWWWWWWWWWWWWWWWWWWWW!

And it all ends with Lenore asking if the kids will make the world as it once was, with the raven saying “Nevermore.” And no, this wasn't Corman's idea for an ending, in fact this edit is why he left AIP in the first place. Editing as a whole went NUTS on this thing under studio orders, including removing the original ending that had 300 people looking to the sky as God had a final message. What was it? We don't know, AIP dropped that ending in favor of a mega happy ending because they, according to Corman, didn't like God's final message.

Probably “Oy vey” if He saw the same stuff I did.

This was a satire of the youth taking over America written by a then 28 year old from the POV of a then 44 year old man who was losing all faith in the hippie movement said youth was in. Uneven? Oh yeah. For every moment that comes off as said youth's response to violence, there's moments where the director is shouting “Damn hippies, get off my lawn.” Stuff like a character stuck in the 60's or even the alternative words to screw, that sounds like a response from somebody in the flower power era; a football team making rape a sporting event in the middle of an anti-war alagory, that sounds like a paranoid middle age man, the whole picture is like this.

And before you say “Oh, how much control can a director have over the writer on this thing,” two things: This is Roger Corman and this was constantly re-written on the fly with him having his hand in it as shooting was going on.

Corman has a LOT of creative control on his movies, that's how he's always rolled and was able to make his movies with the budget he had. Top it all of, not only was Gas-s-s a thought he himself had, but the script was constantly re-written on the fly as the movie went on shooting, so you have a mix of somebody who is 3 years older (At the time) than our leads writing a satire on the hippie movement with a 44 year old director (At the time) getting further and further away from agreeing with the generation responsible for the Summer Of Love. Never a good combination.

Uneven writing, uneven editing, characters that aren't exactly compelling leads, confusing jokes, stuff that is never explained (Bad editing or not)...this movie maybe called Gas-s-s, but it's anything but.

FINAL VERDICT: For uneven writing, uneven filming, horrible editing (Most of which was the studio), characters that aren't exactly compelling, unsubtle satire and/or messages, and not really aging well, this movie gets a MEGA ATOMIC DESTRUCTION B-MOVIE BOMB. Tune in, turn on, brain fried. Now if you'll excuse me, I heard the voice of God...and I left the lights on again.

Tuesday, June 5, 2018

B-Movie Bomb: The Pirate Movie (Spoilers)


“You know what Gilbert and Sullivan needs? More 1980's!”

Said nobody ever. But, too bad, because we got The Pirate Movie anyway.

A 1982 very loose remake of The Pirates Of Penzance, the movie was a rock and roll musical that decided, as the opening joke stated, it needed more 1980's, along with a ton of references, a sequence that screams more they needed to wrap this thing up than being funny, and stuff that makes you think that somewhere up in the entertainment section of Heaven, Gilbert and Sullivan themselves are constantly facepalming.

The movie was born from the idea of one of it's lead actors, Ted Hamilton...

Meaning you just didn't have to be the guy who changed cop dramas to come up with awful things.

Bonus points if you remember the previous post.

...and got the go ahead to rush into production. And, boy howdy, do I mean rushed because around that time, the 1983 movie adaptation of the original play got the go ahead too. So, if some spots have holes, feel rushed, or just happen without explanation, it was all to beat a movie that made $694,497...which was due to theaters pissed off at Universal for releasing it also on two subscription TV services at the time, SelecTV and ONTV.

So, the movie opens with an impressive battle and, I gotta admit, a kick ass song (“Victory”) to start off the mov---and the words “The End” flash on the screen...

OK, THAT'S A REVIEW, STRIKE THE SITE, BREAK FOR LUNCH!

No, actually they showed a clip from a pirate movie as part of this pirate festival at...80's Beach...Austra...Amer...Somewhere, where we meet our leading lady, Mable (Kristy McNichol) as she's with her hot friends and she's...a plane Jane...

Yes, even the 80's had the hot nerd trope.

Well, turns out on the big boat this...beach somewhere...is holding a sword fighting demonstration, that her friends draft Mable to sign up for and work with the instructor (Christopher Atkins), who takes a linking to...uh...her...nerdy...nature...okay...I guess all it took to know somebody in the 80's was looking like an art student and teaching them how to use a sword.

Well, after her friends trick her out of the date to get the instructor to themselves, Mable gets the idea to rent a boat...but since she's never sailed before, she falls overboard and washes up on...beach no. 2 right before the dream sequence that will be most of the movie.

Ok, fine, this movie is mostly a dream, it's not like they're gonna open on what many would consider the first internet meme or anything.

So the movie/dream sequence popper starts with the trainer, known here as Frederick, ordering his shipmates to fight another ship and to prepare to be boarded by said ship's crew...ninjas...

*SLAP*

I'm sorry, I must've seen that wrong...let me watch again...

So the movie/dream sequence popper starts with the trainer, known here as Frederick, ordering his shipmates to fight another ship and to prepare to be boarded by said ship's crew...ninjas...

*SLAP*

...ow...

Yeah...predating the internet, Pirates Vs. Ninjas...I got nothing outside of asking if the fog machine was really making fog. Oh, and the cherry on top? The actual leader of the pirates (Ted Hamilton), known as the Pirate King...

STOP! NO! YOU! YOU WITH THE ANIME COLLECTION! YES, YOU WITH THE WANTED POSTERS AND A CERTAIN HAT! STOP RIGHT THERE! I'M TALKING TO YOU! YES! YOU! STOP THIS RIGHT NOW!

...makes a joke about “Ordering Chinese but this is rediculous.” Excuse me...

*HEADDESK*
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...oog...this just started and I'm already toing dhis.


*HEADDESK*

Doing this.

They capture the ninja captain...who's also an Irish Tenor...I...I..just roll with it...and then celebrate Frederic's birthday. I dunno, I would've just called it a day after that, I mean a Pirates Vs. Ninja party would've made for an AWESOME b-day party back in the day. Well, turn out this means he can join the group...except he remembers that pesky part about pirates killing his family, and, well, that puts a damper when he announces that he's gonna be a pirate hunter.

Kids, ya train 'em to loot and plunder and the next thing you know, they wanna do the right thing.

This causes him to be tricked off of the ship and into a tiny boat...but enough about that, let's jump to an island that has several women, including Mable, wanting a man to call their own. You can tell Mabel is the one that we're supposed to root for because the other women are dressed like the play while she's dressed in the 80's.

After the exposition saying they all want a dude to call their own, we jump back to Frederic's boat as the woman, Ruth (Maggie Kirkpatrick) tries to get in his pants, something she's been waiting to do for 21 years.

Huh..Frederic's turned 21 tod---

MOVING ON! MOVING THE FUCK ON! MOVING ON!

Frederic sees the isle of women and swims to it, where...we hear a knock off of the Jaws theme only for it to stop...then he just springs up slowly...WOW...easiest parody to do and you screw it right the hell up.

Naturally, this leads to the sappiest love song that ever sapped, “First Love” as Frederic and Mable sing about love at first site...with horses that just appeared and then vanish again...I feel like that loaner Crow from MST3K...



But the short sexy times, complete with an insta “Might wanna marry you...”

...meh, close enough.

...come to a stop when Frederic's pirate family pull up on to the island and go after Mabel's sisters, complete with the Pirate King seeing that his ship parked on the beach and remarked that he got pretty close to the curb.

Ok, that was funny.

This leads to a sword fight between the King and Mable...and of course, because she's an amateur, it's sloppy. But that's fine, it's just here until the movie gets to the play's most popular song, “Modern Major General...”

...with a (then) modern twist, as it includes the lyrics to inform us that the general (Bill Kerr) is older than the Beatles but younger than the Rolling Stones.

Pure Gilbert and Sullivan.

Yeah...I gotta be honest, THAT is cringe worthy. For the most part, they do a good job covering the song, right down to how absurd it's supposed to sound...then they throw the Beatles line in. I get it, it's supposed to be a parody...but the Pirates of Penzace is already a parody, it's a satire! It's supposed to be a knock/satire on operas, class rules, and all that stuffy...uh...stuff that Gilbert and Sullivan wanted to make fun of with this play.

This is like writing a parody of The Naked Gun movies.

Well, after the song, the General tells the King he's an orphan, and well, turns out they have a rule of not robbing or hurting orphans due to being ones themselves, so they go away. Which I'm sure they'll NEVER bother anybody again...and yes, they of course, anchored themselves outside the cove. But Mable uses this to her advantage, striking a deal with her dad because he doesn't want her to marry a poor boy: They steal the treasure on the ship, give it to Frederic, they get married. Thus, they plan on, later that night, to board the ship...while Frederic drools over her body, causing her to remark that the body's an eight but the brain's a 10.

...you agreed to be in this movie, you wanna re-think that?

They sneak on board, only for Frederic to reveal not only is the treasure burred somewhere, but the map is on the back of the Pirate King, thus we get a seduction bit loaded with bad jokes and puns, such as yes, that is a dagger in his pocket...

If I have to ask the question, ask your parents what a pick up line is.

...and after finding out the age of consent, saying he's old enough. This leads to even MORE shinagines from remarking he likes how a woman knows her place after saying she's a feminest...

Ha, ha, ha...ha, ha, ha?

...to trying to cover up Frederic damn near screwing up the plan by saying she's got goosebumps, leading to him staring at Mable's boobs and remarking push ups would fix that.



After tricking him into posing so Frederic can draw the map, Mable tricks the Pirate King into blindfolding himself...and Ruth just HAPPENS to walk on by, and uses the set up to her own advantage thus tricking...the King...to...

MOVING ON! MOVING ON! NOTHING TO SEE HERE! MOVING ON!

Frederic and Mable manage to sink the ship and take the map leading to the treasure, thus leading to the next day and Frederic under water finding the treasure while Mable pumps his helmet full of air, leading to the movie's most infamous musical number, “Pumping and Blowing.”

If I have to explain the context for you, might I recommend re-taking 3rd Grade Health without laughing after opening the book.

But...this does have me wondering...did the original play really need the 80's update? It's already a satire, time just changed what type it was. When Pirates of Penzance was created, it was a 'Take that' against the rules and systems of the day, as well as a parody of the type of opera and theater that was popular. Now, while it's viewed as the same kind of classic it's parodying, it's viewed more as a parody of old plays in a historical sense vs. pop culture.

This? This is just cramming as much modern and pop culture from the day they could so they can stay “Relevant” and rush it out to beat the actual parody. It'd be like if Hot Shots was a parody of Air America in response to Aces: Iron Eagle 3 coming out two years after it, it's not funny, it's more shouting “WE'RE RELEVANT, DAMN IT,” and...why do I get the feeling there's a modern equivalent t---



...aw crap...

Right, so, after that sequence, down to animated cartoon fish...I'm guessing drugs due to the 80's...they find the treasure, which turns out to be...the old treasure from Mable's family?

“HEY GUYS, ARE THERE THINGS THAT ARE HAPPENING!?”

Well, with the pirates 20 minutes away, Mable's dad tells Frederic to go and raise an army, which jumps to...Frederic falling off a horse?

“HEY GUYS, ARE THERE THINGS THAT ARE HAPPENING!?”

Well, this causes the Pirate King to ambush him and...take him to a room in the General's house that has a whole coffin?

“HEY GUYS, ARE THERE THINGS THAT ARE HAPPENING!?”

Was the deadline to beat the '83 adaptation REALLY this important!?

Apparently so, because at one point, the fight goes in fast forward...for just a minute as it's just a balancing act on a balcony...

Hey, if it gets this thing over faster, I'll be happy.

...only for Frederic to land in a library and have the Pirate King and Ruth corner him. Well, he's not going down without a fight, so they fight in the library and...are suddenly on the roof?

“HEY GUYS, ARE THERE THINGS THAT ARE HAPPENING!?”

RUSH! RUSH! RUSH! GOTTA BEAT THE '83 ADAPTATION!

There are a couple of funny bits though, them agreeing to move the fight to safer grounds when the Pirate King almost falls, taking a break to enjoy some booze, and the Pirate King seeing physics is not his friend as his sword just won't cut some candles down where as Frederic had no problems. Well, enough of the comedy, let's get back to the crap as Frederic gets the King into the coffin, and runs swords through it, only to reveal the King escaped on the grounds you know this magic trick already.

Eventually, the King gains the upper hand until...Frederic remembers the Force, turning his sword into a Light Saber before Force lifting it!?

“HEY GUYS, ARE THERE THINGS THAT ARE HAPPENING!?”

I swear, this movie is a perfect substitute for a frontal lobotomy.

They stop the fight when the King reveals the loophole to the whole “Freed at 21” thing. Turns out Frederic was born during a leap year, thus he wasn't freed at his 21st year, he was freed at his 21st BIRTHDAY, thus meaning he's technically 5.75, leading to another 80's music sequence about how he can't live without Mable, complete with that Gilbert & Sullivan staple...the Casio.

He tells Mable the whole story...this leading her to wonder if, due to this, the leather, and such, if he's really gay.

Sorry for ripping off the Nostalgia Critic with this line, but I'm going for two!

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Ooog...is it yver oet?


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Is it over yet?

They talk it out, and thus Frederic says he can't give up his sense of honor and will go back to the pirates...as he walks on water...only to fall in after a few feet!?

“HEY GUYS, ARE THERE THINGS THAT ARE HAPPENING!?”

HOW MUCH LONGER IS THIS!? 32 MINUTES!? GAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHH!

JUST HOW MANY TIMES CAN I SAY “THIS ISN'T FUNNY” ALREADY!?

We get another 80's song about love, blah, blah, blah. She eventually goes and tells the General what's happening and sees he's drunker than a dude bro on a beach, so she decides she's gonna form the army and lead the troops herself!

...can we go back to the drunk?

After seeing Mable ride off to get her army, we see...the Keystone Kops?

Pure Gilbert and Sull---

*SKREEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEECH*

Get this, after a quick google search, I found out that yes, some productions of The Pirates of Penzance, including the 1983 version that this was trying to beat at the box office, has the Keystone Kops IN the play. I can't honestly answer how adding them improved other adaptations or productions of the play, I've never seen the pre-Kops version of the original or the original source material that's giving us this rush job in general. But here, they sing “Tarantara” and...see Mable as Joan of Arc?

“HEY GUYS, ARE THERE THINGS THAT ARE HAPPENING!?”

She tells them it's time to fight or die, they choose to bail on the grounds that she's got girl parts. This has her yell she'll take it to their boss...Inspector Clouseau...

“HEY GUYS, ARE THERE THINGS THAT ARE HAPPENING!?”

Really? Just...just...REALLY!? I'd show a clip of Disaster Movie to elaborate just how stupid putting Inspector Clouseau in something called The Pirate Movie, but I already drove that point home once with a clip from Disaster Movie and, frankly, one clip from that movie is enough.

Where as one clip from this movie is one too many.

Anyway, they talk and...ugh...he keeps mispronouncing she keeps misunderstand---you know what, this makes Inspector Clouseau more fun to watch, so I'm gonna move on before I start actually recommending it and kick myself for doing so.

After a phallic joke involving the billy clubs and the Keystone Kops hearing the words “Cop killing...”

If I need to tell you the exact joke, I welcome you to life then want you to ask grandpa why grandma keeps smiling.

...we jump to the pirates...for a minute and then go back to the Kops being chicken then back to the pirates. Boy, both of those had a point. The pirates go to the gate and...suddenly it's time lapsing to night? Just how far away was that thing, anyway? So they get the battering ram and...use it to ring the doorbell and say “Avon calling!”




At least when I use the reference humor in this thing, it means something vs. “This was a thing” like this...uh...thing has!

So the Pirates start wrecking up the place while Frederic sees Mable hidden in one of the suits of armors. The two talk with him trying to convince her and everybody else to run, but Mable replies “Have you tried running in one of these things lately, it's a real bitch.”

Ok, that was funny.

The pirates, all the while the Kops try to hide, managed to get into the main study but Mable and her sisters were ready to...hit the pirates' climbing net but not exactly...cut...it...okay...she then pleads to Frederic to help...only for him to refuse due to his honor, thus leading the Keystone Kops to come in and...do nothing as the captain's baton suddenly flies and deflates like a cartoon balloon?

“HEY GUYS, ARE THERE THINGS THAT ARE HAPPENING!?”

I DON'T KNOW!

That's it! I've had all I can stanz, I can stanz no more! Let's wrap this up!

The fight goes into the General's home gym, where it becomes a melee via somebody pressing the fast forward button in some spots, the Keystone Kops beating up a pirate...while trying to block the camera from showing them beating up a pirate...

MOVE ON! MOVE ON! MOVING ON!

...Frederic trying to protect Mable, the dude with the sword from Radiers of the Lost Arc showing up only for Indiana Jones to shoot him again, a chef wheeling in cream pies only to reveal he's not gonna use them but use PIZZA pies instead...

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GAH! WON'T THIS SUCKING THING FTOP!


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Forget it! I'm not repeating it!

It eventually comes down to Frederic Vs. Mable, he kisses and she replies with a knee to the groin. The pirates then surround everybody and are ready to kill...uh...everybody, by starting with Mable and throwing her into the sea. Realizing this is her dream...

...and this movie has to beat the 1983 adaptation...

...she ups and stops it and demands a happy ending. At first, the dream world says 'Okay,' as the general knights Frederic and says marrying Mable gets his approval...only for the dream for SOME REASON to decide “Nah, gotta honor traditions” as it turns out she can't get married until her sisters do. The Pirate King reminds her it's a dream and everybody freezes while she plays match maker between the pirates and her sisters while the viewer goes for a very stiff drink.

Everybody winds up with somebody, including the Pirate King with Ruth because he wanted to be with that woman that he was with last night via Mable's trick...

Who knew tricking somebody into thinking they were another person was such a turn on?

...and the next day, we get a big wedding to “Give Me A Happy Ending,” thus ending the dream.

Oh, thank Christ it's o---wait...

(Sees there's 5 minutes left)




Yes, we have to go back to the real world where this all started as the pirate teacher from earlier, the one that inspired Frederic from the dream, kisses Mable on the lips...

Because sexual assaulting somebody you just met means love in the early 80's.

...and it finally, MERCUFULLY, ends sometime later with the two apparently married and walking to a reprise of “Give Me A Happy Ending,” while I sing “Give Me That Jager Bottle.”

As I said, this thing was a rush job to beat the 1983 The Pirates Of Penzance adaptation and boy, does it show in most spots, especially the climax. There's a reason I kept tossing out the “HEY GUYS...” quote in this thing, after all. Then there's some of the comedy like having Indiana Jones or Inspector Clouseau pop in and some of the more Juvenal humor like Ruth waiting 21 years to bed Frederic...who just turned 21...yeah...saying that's Juvenal's being nice.

Some of the songs are actually pretty good, the stand outs being “Victory” and “Give Me A Happy Ending,” and they do a pretty decent job with the songs from the original play...provided they don't throw pop culture into the mix.

But then comes the big problem...it's a parody...of a parody.

This, aside from it being a rush job, is probably why a lot of the jokes are pop culture related or really have nothing to do with the source material to begin with. The original play was a parody of the class system and standards back then, so what the heck was the point of making it a parody of itself? It could've worked just fine as a rock opera version of The Pirates Of Penzance, the original play is still viewed as a classic despite the elements it parodies being long gone, but as a parody of a parody? Yeah...

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FINAL VERDICT: For being a rush job, a parody of a parody, throwing in pop culture in songs that didn't need it, but bonus points for some good songs and A funny moment, this movie gets a SUPER ATOMIC B-MOVIE BOMB! Honestly, if you just got the soundtrack, you'd be a lot happier. Now, if you'll excuse me, I need something to recover from this thing so I'm gonna find a copy of Suicide Squad. Hey, this thing made me dumb enough to call Chevy Chase movies “Art,” what else would I use to recover from this movie?