A batshit-crazy conspiracy thriller that’s also
a character drama and a broad comedy and a political drama and a travelogue—and
probably several other incompatible things—The
Yin and the Yang of Mr. Go is about as much of a mess as you’ll ever
encounter in the realm of movies involving brand-name Hollywood talent. The
only theatrical feature that famed actor Burgess Meredith directed alone, this
head-scratcher stars Broderick Crawford, Jack MacGowran, James Mason, and, in
his first big-screen role, Jeff Bridges. Naturally, Meredith plays a part, as
well. He and Mason portray Asians, complete with stereotypical makeup. Bridges
plays a draft-dodger/wannabe playwright descended from James Joyce. These
characters become embroiled in a wackadoodle plot about a high-tech laser
cannon over which various criminals and governments seek to gain control.
The
title stems from a fantasy element, because the film suggests that Buddha, as in the actual deity, decides
every 50 years to shoot humanity with a magic beam. The notion is that Buddha finds amusement by transforming
one individual’s nature from his or her yin (e.g., good or bad) to his or her
yang (the opposite of the preceding). As should be apparent by now, The Yin and the Yang of Mr. Go is
befuddling, incoherent, and random from its first frame to the last. Whereas
some WTF movies bewitch viewers by functioning as windows into other planes
of consciousness, The Yin and the Yang of Mr.
Go is merely a compendium of bad ideas that didn’t merit exploration. To
wit, consider this monologue that Bridges delivers about two-thirds of the way
through the picture: “I managed to
split from the goddamned army, get shacked up good and safe with Ha Ling here—no
sweat. I’m just writing, playing my music. Then you come along. My chick is
thrown in jail, I start rough-trading faggots, blackmailing scientists,
whipping around the air in helicopters, being chased by the CIA, super-macing
Japanese bank presidents, getting slugged by a lesbian, spear-gunning a Chinese
boogeyman!”
In keeping with the film’s discombobulated style, the monologue trails off to nothing and the story moves onto the next pointless thing.
In keeping with the film’s discombobulated style, the monologue trails off to nothing and the story moves onto the next pointless thing.
Every aspect of The Yin
and the Yang of Mr. Go is wrong. The music is upbeat, even when the
accompanying images depict murder and treachery. Many scenes look as if they
were shot with synchronized dialogue, but the dialogue is absent from the
soundtrack. Characters break the fourth wall by saying things like, “All
Chinese villains offer tea and cakes before applying torture.” Every so often
someone drops a lame joke, as when a joint is offered with the suggestion, “Puff—the
magic dragon!” Homophobia and racism permeate the dialogue, while grungy nude
scenes present Asian bit players as the human equivalent of set dressing.
Through it all, Meredith exhibits no directorial vision whatsoever, seemingly
trying a different camera style in every scene.
The
Yin and the Yang of Mr. Go: FREAKY
3 comments:
It's my understanding that Meredith's Malibu neighbor Larry Hagman had turned Burgess on to LSD around this time. That would explain a lot about this flick.
Some of the pleasure of this project is in reading these descriptions and then looking them up on youtube to delight in all there horribleness. Can't wait to watch this one!
Sounds crazy enough to be a lot of fun.
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