Casting perpetually tanned
smoothie George Hamilton as a pasty-faced vampire was such a droll bit of comic
inspiration—and Hamilton’s ensuing performance was so unexpectedly
delightful—that it’s easy to savor fond memories of Love at First Bite if one encountered the movie during its original
release and avoided it thereafter. Alas, revisiting the film dispels those fond
memories quickly. Hamilton is indeed quite funny, and his costars pour on the
charm to infuse their thin characterizations with vitality, but the film’s
comedy is so broad (and, at times, so racist) that sensible viewers will cringe
as often as they chuckle. On top of insipid one-liners like “I’m going out for
a bite to drink,” the picture includes awful sequences with featured players
Sherman Hemsley and Isabel Sanford (better known as TV’s The Jeffersons) lampooning African-American patois.
Anyway, here’s
the good news: Hamilton, Richard Benjamin, Arte Johnson, and Susan Saint James
look like they’re having a blast delivering silly jokes, so their cheerfulness
makes long stretches of the movie palatable. The plot involves Count Dracula
(Hamilton) relocating to New York City with his psychotic henchman Renfield
(Johnson). Once in Manhattan, Dracula courts neurotic model Cindy Sondheim
(Saint James), who, of course, happens to be romantically entangled with shrink
Dr. Jeffrey Rosenberg (Benjamin), a descendant of Dracula’s old nemesis Abraham
Van Helsing. And so it goes from there: The vampire woos the model, the doctor
becomes a monster hunter, and Renfield eats bugs.
The tone of the picture is
set perfectly during the opening Transylvania scenes, because when Hamilton
makes his entrance in a spooky castle to the accompaniment of baying wolves, he
coos a funny twist on an old Bela Lugosi line: “Children of the night—shut up!”
The gimmick is that Dracula is tired of the same old routine, so he’s eager to try
new things like dancing in a disco; sure enough, the romantic boogie that
Hamilton and Saint James perform to Alicia Bridges’ slinky hit “I Love the
Night Life” is a highlight.
Had director Stan Dragoti and the film’s writers
been able to maintain a consistent balance of clever jokes and romance, Love at First Bite could have become an
offbeat gem. Instead, it’s a mixed bag of fun sequences and stupid discursions,
with the clunker gags outnumbering the successful zingers. Still, there’s a
reason this was among the few unqualified triumphs of Hamilton’s career—since
the actor conveys ironic self-awareness from start to finish, he’s impossible
to dislike even when the movie around him is very easy to dislike.
Love at First Bite: FUNKY
1 comment:
Saw this when it came out and Dracula disco-dancing to a song called "I Love the Night Life" was, to eight-year-old me, the height of horror movie self-aware hilariousness. Kinda still is.
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