Having spent a couple of
years as a record-store employee, I can understand the impulse Hollywood
filmmakers had during the vinyl era to make movies about LP peddlers. So
far, however, only the 1995 release Empire
Records has come close to capturing the party vibe at a music store when
it’s buzzing with customers. More typical of Hollywood’s efforts to tart up the
retail life is this awful comedy from 1978, featuring such stellar talents as
Ruth Buzzi, Rick Dees, and Larry Storch. An ensemble story depicting the
musical and sexual adventures of clerks, customers, and visitors to a fictional
store, Record City is a slick but
tacky production featuring jokes at the expense of feminists, gays, nerds,
prostitutes, seniors, and swingers, among others. Tame and unfunny from start
to finish, Record City comprises a barrage of stupid gags. For
instance, real-life radio personality Dees plays a DJ named “Gordon Kong,” who
works a King Kong-influenced persona; wearing an animal-print cape and one arm
of a primate costume, Gordon arrives at Record City with an entourage of backup
singers to perform his novelty song “Get Down Gorilla,” in the vein of Dees’
real-life hit “Disco Duck.” Later, supporting player Ted Lange, of Love Boat fame, performs the disco jam
“Make Way for the Lover.” Surrounding these “highlights” are scenes featuring
Frank Gorshin as a robber who wears costumes including a nuns’ habit; various
vignettes of Michael Callan as the store’s horny owner, who gets annoyed when
employees play his “balling music” over loudspeakers; and a climactic sequence
in which a cleaning lady (Buzzi) inadvertently electrocutes half the people in
the store. Oh, and there’s a running gag of an angry feminist (Deborah White)
repeatedly kneeing a co-worker (Tim Thomerson) in the groin because she
mistakenly blames him every time someone else pinches her ass. To round out
your picture of Record City, the sole
music-industry cameo is provided by eccentric Texas troubadour Kinky Friedman,
who plays himself as a debauched putz—when he meets a young woman who bears a
passing resemblance to singer John Denver, he implies she used to be Denver and
then squeezers her breasts to compliment her new gender.
Record City: LAME
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