The slavery saga Black Snake represents the end of skin-flick titan Russ Meyer’s
brief flirtation with the mainstream. Following the notorious sexcapade Beyond the Valley of the Dolls (1970)
and the turgid melodrama The Seven
Minutes (1971), both of which were made for 20th Century-Fox, Meyer returned
to his independent roots to cowrite, produce, and direct Black Snake, which has some aspects of blaxploitation cinema but
doesn’t really belong to that genre. Set in the West Indies circa 1835, the
film concerns a European fellow who arrives at a Caribbean plantation posing as a new
accountant while he searches for his missing brother. The blaxploitaiton elements
surface in a subplot about black slaves rebelling against their oppressors, and the
title refers to the whips that plantation bosses use against slaves. As for
the film’s sexual content, it’s fairly tame. The gay overseer who digs S&M
is a kinky character, and Meyer presents ample footage of leading lady Anouska
Hempel in various states of undress, but Black
Snake lacks Meyer’s usual horndog glee. Whereas Meyer’s sex flicks boast a
special blend of chaos, excess, and insanity, Black Snake is comparatively methodical and rational. As happened
with The Seven Minutes, the absence of
over-the-top gimmickry reveals Meyer to be a mediocre and undisciplined
storyteller.
Bland he-man David Warbeck stars as Sir Charles Walker, the latest
arrival at Blackmoor, a plantation run by the cruel Lady Susan Walker (Hempel)
and her vicious overseers. While observing various injustices (and availing
himself of a slave concubine), Charles looks for his brother. Things get
complicated when Susan demands that Charles provide her with sexual services.
Meanwhile, slaves become more and more bold in their revolutionary activities,
and the whole combustible situation explodes with a violent uprising. Working
with veteran Hollywood cinematographer Arthur Ornitz, Meyer conjures one
attractive widescreen image after another, exploiting the potential of tropical
locations. Yet the shots splice together poorly, resulting in choppy pacing
both between and during scenes. Meyer also displays zero control over tone,
with nearly every scene pitched at the same level of intensity. At his worst,
Meyer films beatings and rapes as if they’re exciting action scenes, then
amplifies the inappropriate vibe by setting these scenes to bouncy music; it’s
as if he thinks he’s making another one of his signature sexualized
comedy/thriller hybrids, instead of a quasi-legitimate melodrama. By the time
Meyer ends the film with a ridiculously moralistic epilogue, it’s plain that he
is not where he belongs, cinematically speaking.
Black
Snake: FUNKY
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