One of a handful of ’70s
features that began as film-school thesis projects, writer-director Alan
Gadney’s Moonchild is ambitious to a
fault. Not only did Gadney secure impressive locations and the participation of Hollywood actors, but he also attempted to tell an intricately allegorical
story about existential and metaphysical subjects. Had Gadney been able to pull
this one off, it would have been such a miraculous achievement that we’d still
be talking about his audacity today, because Moonchild would have launched a singular filmmaking career. Alas,
Gadney botched things so badly that Moonchild
was his last directorial endeavor as well as his first. The murky storyline
goes something like this: A young artist (Mark Travis) realizes that he’s been
reincarnated in some otherworldly realm, where supernatural figures including
the Maitre’D (Victor Buono) battle for control of his soul while an impartial
observer called Mr. Walker (John Carradine) both comments upon and observes the
momentous events. At first, the scenario unfolds like the setup for a horror
movie, with the leading character trapped inside a weird playground for godlike
lunatics. Later, once Gadney indulges himself with religious imagery, the story
veers into a kangaroo-court situation with spiritual implications. (“If death is a dream," Buono coos, "then what is life? Is life
God or Man?”) Some of what happens in Moonchild
is borderline interesting, but the movie’s style is insufferable,
particularly the hyperactive editing. Worse, the blurring of hallucinations and reality creates long stretches of incoherence. Eventually, it’s all
way too much, so the viewer’s inevitable reaction is best summarized by an
exclamation the protagonist makes somewhere around the 33-minute mark: “What is
this? What are you people talking about?” Exactly.
Moonchild:
LAME
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