Calling the supernatural
comedy Petey Wheatstraw the best of
Rudy Ray Moore’s ’70s films requires more than a few qualifiers. First, all of
Moore’s ’70s movies are terrible, suffering from amateurish production, bad
acting, excessive crudeness, and general stupidity. Second, Moore’s appeal
lives in his over-the-top vulgarity, and Petey
Wheatstraw is comparatively tame. Third, the sole reason why Petey Wheatstraw surpasses other Moore
pictures is that Petey Wheatstraw
tells a somewhat coherent story in a manner that vaguely resembles conventional
entertainment. So perhaps it’s more accurate to say that this flick is a good
entry point for those unfamiliar with Moore’s singular screen presence. A
cult-favorite standup whose routine included boasting, rhyming, smut, trash
talk, and pimptastic fashion, Moore was an early architect of elements that
later embedded themselves into hiphop culture. That’s why his pictures are
considered significant touchstones within the blaxploitation genre. In Petey Wheatstraw, Moore stars as a
comedian named Petey, who is murdered by a competitor and then approached in
the afterlife by Lucipher (G. Tito Shaw) with a proposition. If Petey agrees to
marry Lucipher’s ugly daughter, Petey will be resurrected with special powers
so he can avenge himself. Hence the film’s unofficial full title, Petey Wheatstraw, the Devil’s Son-in-Law. After accepting Lucipher’s offer, Petey returns to Earth armed with the devil’s
enchanted pimp cane and smites various bad guys. Then he decides to renege on
his bargain, leading to a showdown with the Lord of the Underworld.
Every frame of Petey Wheatstraw is ridiculous. During a prologue depicting Petey’s birth, his mother delivers a watermelon before she delivers the baby, who emerges as a five-year-old boy eager to smack everyone in sight. As a teenager, Petey endures abuse from bullies until he encounters an old man who teaches him kung fu. Lucipher entices Petey by providing a harem full of demon women with horns on their heads, all of whom Petey exhausts with his remarkable stamina. And yet the most absurd scene is probably the one that's meant to be tragic—after a little boy is caught in the crossfire of a drive-by shooting, much wailing and weeping ensues. What the hell does a cheap ploy for audience sympathy have to do with a rhyming super-stud turning Satan into a chump? As with all of Moore’s atrocious movies, it’s best to just go along for the rambunctious ride and marvel at the sheer idiocy onscreen.
Every frame of Petey Wheatstraw is ridiculous. During a prologue depicting Petey’s birth, his mother delivers a watermelon before she delivers the baby, who emerges as a five-year-old boy eager to smack everyone in sight. As a teenager, Petey endures abuse from bullies until he encounters an old man who teaches him kung fu. Lucipher entices Petey by providing a harem full of demon women with horns on their heads, all of whom Petey exhausts with his remarkable stamina. And yet the most absurd scene is probably the one that's meant to be tragic—after a little boy is caught in the crossfire of a drive-by shooting, much wailing and weeping ensues. What the hell does a cheap ploy for audience sympathy have to do with a rhyming super-stud turning Satan into a chump? As with all of Moore’s atrocious movies, it’s best to just go along for the rambunctious ride and marvel at the sheer idiocy onscreen.
Petey Wheatsraw: LAME
No comments:
Post a Comment