Hollywood also-ran Tom Stern must have made a lot
of friends or a lot of money, if not both, during the early years of his career
as an actor and occasional director—because calling in favors or writing checks
seem like the only means by which Stern could have cajoled Burgess Meredith,
Telly Savalas, and Robert Vaughan into appearing in Stern’s misbegotten magnum
opus, Clay Pigeon. A sloppily
constructed story about a dude roped into a convoluted sting operation by government agents, the picture attempts to connect themes related to drugs, hippie culture,
police corruption, and Vietnam. Abstract artists and exotic dancers are involved,
as well. Even the main character, whom Stern portrays, is confusing: He’s a
Vietnam veteran turned flower child, and yet he’s also periodically described
as an ex-cop, and he may or may not be a drug addict. (Between the rotten
storytelling and the intrusion of trippy drug sequences, it’s hard to tell
what’s happening throughout most of the picture.) Stern, who codirected Clay Pigeon with Lane Slate, seems
perplexed about what sort of movie he’s trying to make. At various times, Clay Pigeon is an action picture, a
heavy drama, and a sexy thriller replete with abundant female nudity. At other
times, the movie stops dead for interminable and meaningless discursions, as if
Stern felt obligated to use every frame of film he shot. For example, consider
the very long scene of Stern and Meredith riding a dune buggy through sandy
hills while police vehicles follow, culminating in a slow-mo shot of a police
car tumbling down a hill. The shot lingers onscreen so long that it almost
qualifies as a subplot. Elsewhere in the movie, Savalas delivers this
head-scratcher of a speech: “Quite by accident, we
stumbled upon a ding-a-ling with a great deal of ability. I want to use that
ability. I want to rouse the conscience of this freakout in order to succeed
where you and I have failed, and that's to arrest a malignancy.”
Clay
Pigeon: LAME
When Sherwood Price, Robert Vaughn's partner in his Ferdporqui Productions, was asked by Vaughn had signed on to do "The Protectors," Price replied "Baby, the money's good!" Which would explain.
ReplyDelete, several of his credits (and Telly Savalas'). And Burgess Meredith's (like "Golden Rendezvous" with Richard Harris and David Janssen, a possible future posting?).