Although marred by murky
storytelling and a mediocre leading performance, Trick Baby offers a unique riff on the blaxploitation genre—one of
the two heroes is a white dude whose mother was black, so his lineage allows
him to bridge different racial communities. Based on a novel by the colorful
Iceberg Slim, a self-proclaimed pimp-turned-novelist, the picture takes place
in Philadelphia. Two pals, dark-skinned African-American veteran con man Blue
Howard (Mel Stuart) and his light-skinned mixed-race apprentice “White Folks”
(Kiel Martin), run scams on unsuspecting citizens, mostly collecting chump
change. One day, they score big by ripping off a man whom they later discover
is related to gangsters. After the victim suffers a heart attack, underworld
enforcers are tasked with identifying the culprits. Meanwhile, Blue and “White
Folks” lay the groundwork for their biggest rip-off yet, conniving a group of
rich white men into buying ghetto properties that aren’t really for sale. Given
this setup, the tension of the picture comes from multiple sources—including
friction between Blue, who senses it’s time to leave town before things take a
deadly turn, and “White Folks,” who gets so high off winning he can’t recognize
real danger.
The basic story of Trick
Baby is interesting, and the street-crime milieu is presented believably. Furthermore,
costar Stuart makes a great con man, all pretense and smiles when he’s working
a mark and all fuck-you attitude when he’s standing up to a corrupt cop or a
Mob enforcer. Had Stuart been matched with a costar of equal skill—and had
director/co-writer Larry Yust manifested stronger discipline as a storyteller—Trick Baby could have become a great little
crime picture. Alas, leading man Kiel Martin (who later found fame as a flashy
plainclothes detective on TV’s Hill
Street Blues) has the cockiness and good looks of a movie star, but not the
charisma or talent. He’s merely okay in a role that requires dramatic
fireworks. Partially as a result of Martin’s underwhelming presence and
partially as a result of Yust’s inability to build and sustain narrative
momentum, Trick Baby ends up feeling
slapdash. Having said that, the picture is refreshing inasmuch as it doesn’t
portray urban blacks exclusively as illiterate thugs in tacky polyester
outfits. Additionally, the movie spreads the wealth by depicting its
African-American hustlers as part of a vast and multiracial criminal universe.
Trick Baby:
FUNKY
Discovered this little gem around a decade ago. Loved it! Still like it much more than "The Sting". I never considered it a Blaxploitation film, just a film I wish more people knew about. I agree with your critique of Martin. He has the look but not the skills for this one. Didn't really see it that way until now.
ReplyDeleteInteresting film about 2 con men with a racial twist. Martin is fine, Dallas Edward Hayes is excellent and Stuart outstanding. The problem is the script. The last third of the film disappoints as too much time is spent with the Reverend Josephus. A recommended watch.
ReplyDelete