Filled
with equal measures of sleazy sexual content and unpleasant violence, Dirty O’Neil offers the equivalent of
two atrocious movies for the price of one. Exploring the lurid life of a
small-town beat cop named Jimmy O’Neil (Morgan Paull), the picture devotes much
of its energy to depicting the way Jimmy uses his badge to get laid. He
exchanges protection for sex with the waitress who lives next door, cajoles
suspects into carnal situations while he’s on duty, nabs quickies from
compliant prostitutes, and nails his boss’ voluptuous wife while he’s supposed
to be on patrol. Yet the other half of the movie features straight-up police
action, complete with gore and nastiness—a victim gets shot in the face, a thug
gets taken down by a fork jabbed into his crotch, and so on. The tonal shifts
between the sex scenes and the violent scenes are enough to induce whiplash,
especially when a horrific rape is intercut with a jokey bedroom romp. Writer
and co-director Leon Capetanos, who subsequently helped write such credible
comedy movies as Greased Lightning
(1977) and Moscow on the Hudson
(1984), clearly wasn’t at his best while making this project, and one can only
presume that B-movie stalwart Lewis Teague got a co-directing credit because he
was brought in to juice the material Capetonis had acquired. Leading man Paull,
perhaps best known as the robot hunter who gets killed at the beginning of Blade Runner (1982), is completely
miscast for the role of a swinging stud, thanks to his everyman face and
stately bearing. In fact, it’s embarrassing to hear him intone idiotic voiceover
lines like this one: “A cop is usually underpaid, overworked, and
misunderstood, but he should never be horny.” (Dirty O’Neil features the kind of unfunny sex humor one usually
encounters in porno flicks.) Aside from the morbid fascination of watching a
movie that runs off the rails right from the beginning, about the only appeal
that Dirty O’Neil possesses is an
amazing amount of female nudity. The women in Jimmy’s life have terrific
bodies, and they’re not shy about displaying their physical gifts. However,
it’s difficult to recommend Dirty O’Neil
simply for its eye-candy quotient because the movie’s sexploitation elements
are juxtaposed with so much mean-spirited ugliness.
Dirty O’Neil: LAME
1 comment:
"Dirty O’Neil offers the equivalent of two atrocious movies for the price of one" LMAO!! Too funny...I've been going through a 70's schlock phase but I think I'll stay away from this one;-)
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