Slick but wrongheaded,
this unlikely collaboration between family-friendly filmmaker Joe Camp and
sarcastic Saturday Night Live alum Chevy
Chase derailed the popular Benji
franchise. Turns out moviegoers weren’t eager to see scruffy little mutt Benji
associated with sex jokes and swearing. Shamelessly lifting concepts from Heaven Can Wait (1978), which was itself
a remake of a remake, Oh! Heavenly Dog takes place in London, where American B.J. Browning (Chase) works as a private
investigator. One day, shortly after a meet-cute with pretty Englishwoman
Jackie (Jane Seymour), B.J. is hired by a mystery man (Omar Sharif) to
protect a wealthy woman. When he reaches the lady’s flat, B.J. discovers that
she’s dead—and then B.J. gets killed with a butcher knife. Upon arriving in the
afterlife, B.J. learns that this admission to heaven is conditional on doing
one more good deed: solving his own murder. Since no human vessels are
available, B.J.’s soul is put inside a cute little dog, also named B.J.
(Benji).
That’s when Oh! Heavenly Dog starts to lose what little appeal it possessed beforehand. As in prior Benji movies, producer-director Camp and
his animal trainers lead their four-legged star through elaborate tricks,
simulating a “performance.” The twist this time is that Chase, in voiceover,
provides the dog’s inner thoughts—or, more accurately, B.J. the human’s inner
thoughts. As if to tell the audience right away that their beloved canine star
has left G-rated territory, the first line Chase speaks in dog mode is, “Oh,
shit, that was close!” Later, once Seymour’s character reenters the
story, the movie features a pair of scenes in which Benji and Seymour bathe
together, complete with bedroom eyes across the suds. These scenes are exactly
as icky as they sound.
The voiceover gimmick works for a while, and Chase lands
a number of lines well, but eventually viewer fatigue takes hold in a big way.
The last 40 minutes or so, during which Benji and the lovely but vapid Seymour
conduct the murder investigation together, are utterly lifeless. The presence
of dynamic costar Robert Morley only helps so much, and Sharif’s disdain for
the movie is plainly evident. While not an outright stinker (though it comes
close), Oh! Heavenly Dog is too
crude for children and too insipid for adults, but it’s interesting to see how
hard Camp tries to make the whole contrived enterprise take flight. Someone
even wrangled songs by Elton John and Paul McCartney for the soundtrack.
Oh! Heavenly Dog: FUNKY
2 comments:
I find Jane Seymour so unutterably lovely during this era that this might find its way into my Netflix queue no matter what...
How on Earth anyone believed this could work is beyond me. As an early twenty-something I had a major thing for Mr Chase's movies and had a huge thing for 'Foul Play' sadly this steaming pile of dodgy doggie poo negated all the good stuff in one foul blow.
Post a Comment