A misguided black comedy
that bounces between crude farce and silly satire, Hammersmith Is Out loosely retells the legend of Faust, which
concerns a man who sells his soul to the devil in exchange for success. As
ineptly written by Stanford Whitmore and clumsily directed by Peter Ustinov, Hammersmith Is Out concerns an ignorant
slob named Billy Breedlove (Beau Bridges), who works as an orderly in a mental
hospital. Billy agrees to free a psychotic patient named Hammersmith (Richard
Burton), who in turn agrees to kill people on Billy’s behalf, thereby imbuing
Billy with the victims’ money and power. Along for the ride is greasy-spoon
waitress Jimmie Jean Jackson (Elizabeth Taylor), whom Billy enjoys screwing
until her vapidity becomes annoying. The narrative of Hammersmith Is Out moves at awkward rhythms, sometimes lingering on
scenes as if they’re pieces of theater, and sometimes rushing through important
ones by way of perfunctory voiceover. The tone of the picture is inconsistent,
complementing sly verbal jokes with a crass gag about flatulence. Bridges gives
an exaggerated turn playing an irredeemable scumbag, and Burton dubiously opts
for icy restraint, which makes him seem bored. Taylor is awful—all cartoonish
artifice—though in her defense, she’s grossly miscast as a salt-of-the-earth
type. Given these wholly unsympathetic characters, it’s a drag to watch Hammersmith Is Out, because the flick is
a would-be laugh riot about killing and maiming people for no reason other than
greed. Furthermore, it’s hard to cut the movie slack as a spoof of 1972-era
society, seeing as how Ustinov’s idea of a witty joke is showing an all-female
rock band called “The Tits” performing topless. By the time the movie stops
dead so La Liz can deliver an interminable monologue, gifting her character
with previously unknown soulfulness, Hammersmith
Is Out has degraded into pointless sludge.
Hammersmith Is Out: LAME
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