Occupying some queasy
transitional space between the nostalgic cars-and-kids milieu of 1973’s American Graffiti and the sleazy style of
’80s teen-sex comedies, Van Nuys Blvd.
offers an uninteresting ensemble story about young adults hooking up for sexual
misadventures in and around the San Fernando Valley during the disco era. The film’s
fleeting documentary-style shots of real Van Nuys Blvd. cruisers offer some
interest—simply because viewers can eyeball vintage cars and fashions—but
nearly everything else onscreen is beyond trite. The story begins when Bobby
(Bill Adler) leaves his life in a rural trailer park and heads for Van Nuys
Blvd. in his tricked-out van. Immediately after arriving in the Valley, he gets
laid with a carhop named Wanda (Tara Stroheimer). Then he becomes friends with
fellow small-town escapee Greg (Dennis Bowen). Eventually, Bobby dates perky blonde
Moon (Cynthia Moon), and Greg hooks up with wholesome brunette Camille (Melissa
Prophet). Meanwhile, the clique expands to include “Chooch” (David Hayward), an
older guy whose characterization represents the dangers of arrested development.
Rounding out the film’s principal characters is Officer Zass (Dana Gladstone),
a putz of a cop who hassles kids until he gets his comeuppance. Writer-director
William Sachs executes Van Nuys Blvd.
with technical competence and zero artistry. His characters are clichéd and
one-dimensional, his jokes aren’t funny, and his sex scenes are tacky. Sachs
relies on such tired devices as close-ups of would-be lovers licking their lips
in anticipation, and the closest thing Van
Nuys Blvd. has to a unique erotic moment is the scene in which Bobby and
Wanda slather each other with condiments while screwing. Worse, Van Nuys Blvd. is padded with lengthy scenes
of repetitive action (e.g., disco dancing, go-cart racing, etc.), and Sachs’
idea of humor involves misunderstandings like Camille’s father mistakenly
molesting Greg because he thinks he’s actually molesting one of Camille’s
female friends. The performers in Van
Nuys Blvd. strive mightily to generate sincerity, which suggests Sachs ran
a nurturing set, but after a while, watching these folks struggle to enliven
lifeless material becomes exhausting. So, even though Sachs’ movie is a bit less
exploitive than most ’70s movies preoccupied with teen sex, Van Nuys Blvd. is a dead end.
Van Nuys Blvd.: LAME
Whenever I see the Crown International logo at the bottom of the poster of the film you're reviewing, I skip the review and scroll to your rating, which is invariably "Lame." Which raises the question: Did Crown International ever release a good movie?
ReplyDeleteI've managed to find a couple of "Freakys" among Crown's fare, including the Mae West monstrosity "Sextette," but quality does not appear to be a major component of the company's business plan. (They're still around, and I periodically drive past their offices on Wilshire Blvd. in Beverly Hills.) If pressed, however, I must confess deep guilty-pleasure love for the 1981 Canadian film that Crown released in the US, a sci-fi romp called "The Last Chase," with Lee Majors (!), Burgess Meredith (!!), and Chris Makepeace. A fave to watch back in the early HBO/Cinemax days. But in general, Crown seems to emulate only the worst qualities of its more successful competitor, American International...
ReplyDeleteVery well put. I too have seen Crown's logo on a small office building on Wilshire Blvd. whenever I frequent my favorite Indian restaurant, Bombay Palace, which is very near to that office building.
ReplyDeleteSuch a schlock film. There is even the epic, gross out hamburger french kiss between Bill Adler and Tara Stromheimer. No wonder why Crown went under.
ReplyDeleteThis is a seriously underrated film. It seems some people just don't like to see young people have a good time.
ReplyDelete