Released around the same
time that real-life graduates from film schools began finding purchase in
Hollywood, Cover Me Babe adroitly
captures several interesting things—the influence of European aesthetics on
young American directors, the insufferable quality of arrogant counterculture
dudes, and the tensions running through academia because of clashes between new
ideas and old-fashioned attitudes. The movie is ultimately somewhat less than
the sum of its parts, because watching leading man Robert Forster play a
heartless asshole for 90 minutes isn’t that much fun, and because the story
lacks momentum. Nonetheless, Cover Me
Babe evokes a specific time thanks to a tasty mixture of angst, art, and
erotica. Forster plays Tony Hall, a prize-winning student at a Southern
California film school. Best known for an experimental film peppered with
nudity and surrealism, Tony is nearing graduation and is considered the frontrunner
for another big award, which presumably will open the gates of Hollywood.
Yet
Tony resents everything connected with authority and convention, so over the
course of the film, he burns every bridge that he had previously built. Tony
destroys his relationship with a professor he sarcastically calls “Uncle Will”
(Robert Fields), because the professor has the temerity to demand that Tony
submit a script for his thesis project. Tony humiliates his sensitive
girlfriend, Melissa (Sondra Locke), by commencing an affair with busty coed
Sybil (Susanne Benton), and then Tony does a number on Sybil by asking her to
have sex, on-camera, with their mutual friend Ronnie (Floyd Mutrux), who is
ashamed of being gay and wants to make a go at heterosexual relations. While
all this is happening, Tony wanders through Los Angeles with his trusty 16mm camera,
stealing footage of strangers: a mother wailing in grief after her young son
drowns at the beach, a depressed man jumping off a building, and so on. Tony
also stages several shocking scenes, at one point hiring a female prostitute to
masturbate on-camera. Eventually, Tony assembles the footage into an abrasive
but pointtless montage that, he claims, illustrates the despair of life. (For
punctuation, Tony inserts stock footage of Lee Harvey Oswald getting shot by
Jack Ruby.)
Headstrong boundary-pushers of Tony’s ilk are staples of film
school, and many of them become interesting directors, so there’s a measure of
authenticity in George Wells’ script. Additionally, director Noel Black (who
peaked early with the fantastic 1968 teen noir Pretty Poison), approaches the material with artistry and
craftsmanship, applying lyrical touches to sex scenes, and two songs by
soft-rock band Bread give the picture unmistakable early-’70s atmosphere. In
the end, however, Cover Me Babe is
strangely uninvolving, which is partially attributable to Foster’s chilly
performance and partially attributable to the off-putting nature of the lead
character’s journey. Believable as the notion of a self-destructive diva may
be, it’s a challenge to stay engaged while Tony inflicts pointless psychological
wounds and recklessly squanders opportunities.
Cover Me Babe: FUNKY
Robert Forster seems too mature, too confident, and too self-reliant to be playing a film student. Forster was born in 1941. He comes off more like Charles Bronson lite than your typical 22-year-old graduate student, still coming of age and maturing.
ReplyDeleteThe film got buried and rightly so. Boring, artsy, pretentious. Noel Black the director of that small gem Pretty Poison(1968)lost his footing here.
ReplyDeleteAnother downbeat major studio film exploring the antics of a film student is 1970s' The Magic Garden of Stanley Sweetheart with Don Johnson. It might top Cover Me Babe for a depressing outlook on life. Almost impossible to find on DVD, this movie was shot in gritty, grimy Manhattan. It's also ripe for programming on TCM.
ReplyDeleteDespite this movie's horrible reputation I found it strangely compelling mostly because of the ideas captured and because I have a vested interest in filmmaking. I found Sondra Locke's character to be the most relatable and sympathetic and thought she was very good. This was her follow up to her debut in "The Heart is a Lonely Hunter". The original title of the film was "Run Shadow Run" which is precisely what Tony does at the end of the film after he has driven everyone away who wanted to help him.
ReplyDelete