Before vapid leading man Gil Gerard found his
signature role in the campy TV series Buck
Rogers in the 25th Century (1979-1981), he appeared in a handful of movies
and TV shows, none of which did much to elevate his stardom or to establish
Gerard as a talent worthy of serious attention. Nonetheless, his productivity
earned Gerard sufficient stature to claim behind-the-scenes involvement in some
of his projects, such as the flavorless and plodding moonshine saga Hooch, for which Gerard served as
cowriter and coproducer in addition to playing the starring role. A dull
recitation of redneck-cinema clichés that’s populated by one-dimensional
stereotypes instead of characters, Hooch
is as bereft of entertainment value as it is of original ideas. It’s also
poorly made, with anemic character introductions, shoddy transitions, and an
undernourished musical score. More than anything, Hooch suffers from a lack of urgency, with the pacing of the movie
feeling as laid-back as Gerard’s screen persona. The most that one can say is
that Hooch is tolerable, but even
mustering that much praise requires effort. It's all just so empty and trite.
Gerard plays Eddie Joe, a moonshiner mired in competition with beardy and
corpulent Old Bill (William T. Hicks). Eddie Joe juggles relationships with two
women, one of whom is Bill's daughter, so we’re meant to perceive him as an irresistible
charmer who enjoys living dangerously. The fun-and-games period of Eddie Joe's
life ends when New York City gangster Tony (Danny Aiello) arrives as a lead man
for crooks seeking to enter the moonshine business. Intrigue of a dimwitted
sort ensues. So, too, do unnecessary scenes like the bit of Gerard and costar
Melody Rogers performing a country song onstage at a hoedown. Aiello, appearing
fairly early in his long career, keeps things lively during his scenes by
rendering an over-the-top caricature of a goodfella. Reason enough to watch the
flick? Not hardly.
Hooch:
LAME
No comments:
Post a Comment