Apparently, making a cheap
blaxploitation rip-off of the risqué Warren Beatty hit Shampoo (1975) was a more challenging endeavor than one might have
expected. To be fair, Shampoo is only
nominally about a straight hairdresser who lets other men think he’s gay so he
can discreetly screw his female clients, since the complex movie’s real themes
are related to ambition, male identity, and politics. Nonetheless, throwing the
word “black” in front of the previous film’s title would seem to give Black Shampoo cowriter-director Greydon
Clark license to tell a simple story about a black stud who wields a blow dryer
while servicing rich white ladies. And, for a while, it seems as if that’s
exactly the picture Clark is making. The first 30 minutes of Black Shampoo comprise pure softcore,
with abundant full-frontal nudity and many feeble attempts at raunchy humor. Muscular John Daniels stars as “Mr. Jonathan,” a black Beverly Hills
hairdresser who leaves his clients satisfied with more than their coiffures.
When
the movie’s “plot” kicks into gear, however, the tone of the picture abruptly
changes. Mr. Jonathan’s beautiful receptionist, Brenda (Tanya Boyd), used to be
romantically involved with a gangster, so the gangster sends thugs to Mr.
Jonathan’s shop and intimidates Brenda into returning to him. Yet Brenda
actually loves Mr. Jonathan, so she steals an incriminating ledger from the
gangster, sparking a war between the gangster and the hairdresser. (And if any
of this is meant to be satirical, the nuance got lost somewhere along the way.) By
the time the movie lurches to a
conclusion 83 sluggish minutes after it began, Black Shampoo has inexplicably transformed from a would-be sex
comedy to an ultraviolent action picture. During the finale, Mr. Jonathan
impales a dude with a chainsaw, skewers another fellow with a billiard cue, and
watches as one of his sidekicks takes out a villain with an axe to the chest.
Blood spurts as freely in these scenes as sudsy water does in the earlier
scenes. Oh, and in one particularly gruesome moment, a poor guy gets a red-hot
curling iron jammed up his—well, you get the idea.
Adding to the disjointed
nature of the picture is the fact that Clark’s directorial style seems to
completely shift midway through Black
Shampoo. The first half is borderline incompetent, with inept actors
fumbling through pointless scenes—there’s a long romantic montage filled with clichéd
images, as well as a long montage of Mr. Jonathan driving around Los Angeles
while he looks for Brenda, and the film periodically uses solarized
freeze-frames as transitions because Clark obviously forgot to shoot proper
in-camera edit points. Yet once the bullets start flying, Clark reveals a
minor skill for staging action, and flashes of real humor slip into the mix.
(For instance, a flamboyantly gay hairdresser rebounds from an injury by
wearing a chic scarf around his gigantic neck brace.) All of this is enough to
give any viewer whiplash, and the only reason Black Shampoo doesn’t feel like a fever dream of gore and nudity
and sex is that the movie’s pacing is laboriously slow.
Black Shampoo: FREAKY
1 comment:
This was a favorite for me and my friends to watch back in High School to mock and ridicule. I'm surprised it didn't get a LAME review, though I guess it does have it's certain charms for just how strangely bad it is. Funny, we'd rent it at Blockbuster which refused to have available the NC-17 version of Bad Lieutenant. It didn't offend me because I'm not gay, and I'm pretty desensitized (even back then), but I'd argue the homosexual being called a faggot, by a mobster, before getting the curling iron jammed up his tucass was far more offensive then anything in the Harvey Keitel flick.
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