Neither exceptional nor terrible, The Christian Licorice Store is perhaps
most interesting as a compendium of New Hollywood affectations. Telling a
downbeat story about an egotist who becomes a self-destructive asshole, and
employing gimmicks ranging from self-referential material about cinema to stylized
visual distortions, the movie epitomizes the adventurous and indulgent
qualities shared by a whole generation of filmmakers. The picture celebrates its own artificiality even as it strives for heavy “realness.” Some
viewers may find this sort of stuff impossibly dated, but for devoted ’70s
fans, The Christian Licorice Store
contains many small pleasures. And if the sum is less than the parts, so what?
Beau Bridges stars as Franklin, a fast-rising professional tennis player who
enjoys the perks of his job—fat paychecks, a loose lifestyle, and plentiful
adoring women. At first, Franklin seems a bit lost but generally sincere,
learning life lessons from his coach, suave former tennis star Jonathan
(Gilbert Roland). Attending a painfully superficial Hollywood party one
evening, Franklin meets beautiful photographer Cynthia (Maud Adams), and they
travel to her house for a tryst. The evening blossoms into a relationship, even
though Franklin still has eyes for other women. Just when it seems everything’s
going well, however, Franklin suffers an existential crisis.
Written by Floyd
Mutrux—an iconoclast whose filmmography includes everything from the grungy
drug saga Dusty and Sweets McGee
(1971) to the insipid teen comedy The
Hollywood Knights (1980)—The
Christian Licorice Store is deliberately opaque. Among the film’s many
pretentious elements is the title, which is never explained, although
folksinger Tim Buckley appears in one scene and performs a song with lyrics
containing the odd title phrase. On a deeper level, Mutrux and director James
Frawley never illuminate what drives Franklin to excess, beyond the perfunctory
remarks that Franklin makes about a withholding father. As in many
I-gotta-be-me downers of the same vintage, the takeaway seems to be, “It’s the
’70s, man—just go with it.”
Within this constrained space, Bridges gives an
adequate performance, capturing something about Franklin’s toxic blend of narcissism
and self-loathing. Adams, largely decorative, shines during a party scene in
which she delivers a murderous put-down to a sleazy producer. Onetime “Latin
Lover” Roland was a peculiar casting choice, and it’s strange that legendary
French filmmaker Jean Renoir basically takes over the movie for several minutes
by playing himself, chatting up Adams’ character because she’s taken portraits
of him. What does it all mean, especially in the context of the grim ending?
It’s the ’70s, man. Just go with it.
The
Christian Licorice Store: FUNKY
Wow Jeff really got the aging well gene didn't he?
ReplyDeleteThe only thing I remember about the movie is the party scene, mainly because of how the Cinema Center Films logo and the title of the movie don't appear until they start to show a movie at said party.
ReplyDelete