Hard as this might be to
imagine, Ruby combines elements from The Exorcist (1973) and Sunset Blvd. (1950) with a seedy
Floridian milieu to create a bizarre horror/melodrama hybrid. Oh, and
tuxedo-clad 1930s gangsters find their way into the mix, as well. The end
result is a mess. The movie is too silly to be scary, too strange to have
emotional resonance, and too overstuffed to cohere. Much of what happens
onscreen is nonsensical, and not in an enjoyably disorienting sort of way. Ruby begins with an overwrought
prologue. In 1935 Florida, a gangster and his redheaded moll, Ruby (Piper
Laurie), visit a remote lake at night. Then other gangsters show up and murder
the boyfriend—at which point Ruby, whom the audience didn’t realize was
pregnant, suddenly goes into labor. Sixteen years later, Ruby is a woman stuck
in time, reliving her glory days as a radio singer and wannabe movie star while
operating a drive-in theater. Her daughter, Leslie (Janit Baldwin), is a
deaf-mute with emotional problems. For no apparent reason, weird supernatural
shit starts happening at the drive-in, leading to several bloody deaths. Then
Leslie starts speaking—in the voice of her long-dead father, Ruby’s gangster
boyfriend. Apparitions appear, paranormal investigators are summoned, and
director Curtis Harrington shamelessly steals from The Exorcist with shots of Leslie doing acrobatic contortions on her
bed while spewing obscenities and vomit. Yet somehow the focus of the film is
Ruby, a Norma Desmond type who can’t accept that the past is the past. Laurie,
looking quite glamorous in all-red costumes, gives a loopy performance that’s a
long way from the believable but creepy dementia of her work in Carrie (1976), and the movie around her
is just as undisciplined as Laurie’s acting.
Ruby:
LAME
1 comment:
Carrie meets The Exorcist meets Sunset Boulevard meets The Godfather meets ...
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