Though it possesses many
of the qualities shared by the best oddball ’70s movies—brazen tonal shifts,
eccentric flourishes, offbeat characterizations—The Gravy Train runs off the tracks very quickly. Among other
problems, the film is primarily a comedy but it isn’t funny, and the picture’s
main attraction is the buddy-movie dynamic of two characters who aren’t colorful
enough to sustain interest, separately or together. So, while it’s very easy to
parse the film’s underwhelming content and discern how the material could have
been developed into something more worthwhile, the finished picture lacks emotional punch, narrative momentum, and wit; the only real virtues on display are competent technical execution and vigorous acting, but these aren’t enough to justify the chore of watching The Gravy Train.
Alternatively titled The Dion Brothers,
the movie is about—you guessed it—the Dion brothers, two schemers from West
Virginia mining country. Calvin (Stacy Keach) is a flashy chatterbox who has
gotten involved with big-city criminals, while Rut (Frederic Forrest) is a
slow-witted bumpkin back in the old hometown. When Calvin joins a crew
planning a big heist, he talks his employers into letting him bring Rut
aboard—but after the heist goes south and the brothers realize they’ve been
double-crossed, they seek out the gangster (Barry Primus) who betrayed them.
Along the way, the brothers pick up a screechy floozy (Margot Kidder), who
accompanies them through various adventures. Co-written by Terrence
Malick (under a pseudonym), The Gravy
Train is dull and plodding, from its underwhelming opening—Calvin stages
one of the lamest take-this-job-and-shove-it tantrums in movie history—to its
stupidly downbeat ending. Despite valiant efforts at creating enjoyable
characterizations, Forrest, Keach, and Kidder are undercut at every turn by
lackluster writing, and it says a lot that the most amusing moment in the picture
involves Keach using a live lobster as a weapon.
The Gravy Train: LAME
1 comment:
That opening scene is on YouTube... you ain't kiddin'.
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