With all due respect to Ed
Wood (if “respect” is the right word), a strong argument could be made that Al
Adamson is actually the worst director of all time. Working in the exploitation
realm from the mid-’60s to the early ’80s, he made consistently awful pictures that ripped off current box-office trends and were distinguished by incoherent
plotting, shoddy production values, and terrible acting. Take, for instance,
Adamson’s execrable biker flick Angels’
Wild Women, which comprises little more than 85 minutes of boobs, bikers,
and brawls, with a little bit of sensationalistic Charles Manson imagery thrown
in for no discernible reason. The movie starts with a violent rape, continues
with a vignette of Nazis slaughtering victims (the “Nazis” are actors
participating in a movie shoot), and later features such overused B-movie
tropes as a bad drug experience, a messianic cult leader, and a murderous crime spree. Said spree is committed
by curvaceous ladies who quit dating bikers in order to form their own outlaw outfit, but then get distracted from their activities every time
some young stud crosses their path. How tacky is Angels’ Wild Women? Adamson shot the scenes involving the cult
leader at Spahn’s Movie Ranch, the real-life hideout of the Manson Family. No
threshold of bad taste was too forbidden for Adamson to cross, and yet there’s
nothing truly rebellious or wild about his filmmaking. Throughout Angels’ Wild Women, he simply gathers counterculture
signifiers without any sense of how to contextualize or energize them. Worse,
Adamson can’t even make all the lurid garbage that he throws onscreen exciting.
As it grinds through an undercooked “plot,” Angels’
Wild Women slips almost immediately into nothigness, with interminable
dialogue scenes and laughably “artistic” love scenes pointlessly consuming
screen time.
Angels Wild Women: SQUARE
No comments:
Post a Comment