If nothing else, Last of the Mobile Hot Shots has an
impressive pedigree: Based on Tennessee Williams’ play The Seven Descents of Myrtle, the picture was written by Gore Vidal
and directed by Sidney Lumet. (The on-camera talent is not quite as luminous,
since James Coburn shares the screen with Robert Hooks and a hopelessly miscast
Lynn Redgrave.) Pretentions, seedy, and talky, the film seems more like an
over-the-top recitation of tropes from previous Williams plays than a serious
drama. The metaphors are obvious (the characters occupy a decaying mansion
while awaiting a flood), the sexual material is lurid (incest, impotence,
miscegenation, prostitution), and the rhapsodic speeches about the good old
days of the antebellum South feel trite. While everyone involved works at a
high level of skill, the only moment that feels fresh is the scene spoofing TV
game shows, which is somewhat peripheral to the overall storyline. In sum, Last of the Mobile Hotshots is a
straight shot of Williams’ boozy and hateful debauchery, with a pinch of
Vidal’s signature bitchiness for extra spice.
After sloppy drunk Jeb Thornton
(Coburn) gets ejected from a bar in New Orleans, he staggers to a nearby TV
studio, where folks are lined up to get inside. Jeb watches a taping of a
redneck game show, and when the host asks for volunteers to marry onstage,
total stranger Myrtle Kane (Redgrave) grabs Jeb and drags him before the
cameras as her betrothed. Soon enough, the two are newlyweds, trekking back to
Jeb’s family estate with the carload of appliances they won on the TV show.
Upon arriving at the estate—a wreck of a place covered in filth from the last
devastating flood—Myrtle meets Jeb’s half-brother, an African-American laborer
nicknamed Chicken (Hooks). Turns out Jeb married Myrtle in order to produce an
heir, thereby absconding with Chicken’s inheritance—but Jeb didn’t account for
his own dire health issues.
None of this is remotely believable, no matter how
many scenes feature monologues about wild dreams of glory and wealth. Adding to
the artificiality of the piece are dreamlike flashbacks and a recurring trope in which Lumet changes the lighting to blood-red while Jeb
lurks in a wheelchair and contemplates his situation.
Yet Last of the Mobile Hot Shots is periodically interesting. Coburn
fares best here, since he has a full arsenal of actor’s gimmicks at his
disposal—in addition to an accent, he gets to play several maladies at once
while giving monologues about betrayal and pride. He’s quite arresting, even if
his character is nothing more than a flight of fancy. Hooks is fairly strong as
well, playing a character who’s equal parts opportunist and sadist. Redgrave is
the weak link, because she murders dialogue by speaking in high-pitched,
high-speed volleys, and her character seems insane instead of eccentric. Worst
of all, the picture appears to be a misguided attempt at dark comedy, especially
during the ridiculous finale. Oh, and for no discernible reason except perhaps
for the general tawdriness of the themes, Last
of the Mobile Hot Shots carried an X-rating during its original release.
Last of the Mobile Hot Shots: FUNKY
Where did you see this?
ReplyDeleteWarner Archive released this as a DVD-R about four years ago, so it's more easily available than before.
ReplyDeleteI recall seeing snatches of it on cable years ago, and even though the film was only shot 1.85 (Lumet never shot in 2.35), the print that was aired had an anamorphic squeeze to it - maybe it was a 16mm "adapted scope" print that was being sourced. Anyhow, just made the movie look extra bizarre.
Peter, I caught it on TCM, but as Marc noted, it's available on DVD-R, as well.
ReplyDelete