A mess of a story combining
blaxploitation attitude, glamorous travelogues, I-am-woman defiance,
international intrigue, and weird comic relief stemming from the
presence of a ne’er-do-well stoner, Honeybaby,
Honeybaby makes for a bewildering viewing experience. Although glimmers of
professionalism occasionally peek through the amateurish sludge of disjointed
scenes and nonsensical plot elements, the passable aspects aren’t reason enough
to trudge through all 89 slow-moving minutes. The only consistent bright spot is
the presence of leading lady Diana Sands, who died after this film was shot but
before it was released, and seemed on the verge of becoming a star; despite the
poor quality of Honeybaby, Honeybaby,
Sands conveys intelligence, strength, and warmth. Anyway, here’s the loopy
plot. Laura (Sands) is a UN interpreter living in Harlem. She wins a newspaper
contest, and the prize is a trip for two to Beirut. Laura selects her idiot
cousin, Skiggy (J. Eric Bell), as her traveling companion. Upon Laura’s arrival
in the Middle East, a mystery woman secretly plants on Laura’s person a
microdot containing the formula for preserving the body of a recently deceased
African leader. Yes, you read that right. Various people stalk Laura, including
the suave Liv (Calvin Lockhart), who seems to be a hybrid of a mercenary, a
secret agent, and a smuggler. The narrative approaches incoherence at regular
intervals, and it’s tiresome to watch insipid scenes like the one in which
Lockhart and Sands feed marshmallows to guard dogs while invading a private
estate. Viewed only for passages of the appealing Lockhart and Sands
exchanging flirtatious dialogue, this picture is borderline acceptable. Beyond
that, the movie is aimless, choppy, and dull.
Honeybaby, Honeybaby: LAME
1 comment:
This was actually shot before WILLIE DYNAMITE as well, and had some well-documented troubles in post-production. It was Sands' second and last Kelly-Jordan production (she starred in GEORGIA, GEORGIA for them in 1972). She was set to star in CLAUDINE when she was diagnosed with terminal cancer; no doubt that role would have raised her film profile. Diahann Carroll (a close friend of Sands') stepped in and received her only Oscar nomination.
Post a Comment