This low-rent Floridian
exploitation flick presents an offbeat pastiche of crime, gore,
melodrama, and same-sex relational dynamics. Yet Sometimes Aunt Martha Does Dreadful Things
isn’t quite as weird a viewing experience as you might imagine. Instead, it’s
alternately droll and tedious and unpleasant. Scenes of two male criminals
bickering at each other like an old married couple approach camp, even though
the conflict between a repressed psychopath and a slovenly thug is quite grim;
drab sequences of cops searching for clues chew up screen time without adding
much; and bloody murder vignettes, often tweaked with
solarization effects, repulse in typical grindhouse fashion. Cheap production
values, some shoddy performances, and ugly cinematography add to the
generalized sleaziness of the piece. While Sometimes
Aunt Martha Does Dreadful Things tells the creepy story of a dysfunctional
relationship triggering a string of murders, it’s exaggerating to say there’s a
real movie in here somewhere. Nonetheless, the filmmakers exhibit a small measure
of curiosity and imagination, even if they lack skill.
Paul (Abe
Zwick) and Stanley (Wayne Crawford) killed someone up north and fled to
Florida, where Paul put on women’s clothes and assumed the identity of Stanley’s
“Aunt Martha.” The idea is to create the illusion of a quiet suburban existence
until they can slip back into society as themselves, but problems emerge. A
pesky neighbor tries to make friends with the reclusive Martha, and Stanley is too undisciplined to maintain the
ruse. He refuses to cut his hair or ditch his counterculture wardrobe, he slips
out of the house on a regular basis to chase local chicks, and he treats
Paul/Martha like a nagging spouse. Stanley’s sex life is of particular
interest, since the filmmakers make a point of showing his inability to go all
the way with compliant lovelies, and they also show him in bed with
Paul/Martha. Therefore, the dreadful things of the title come across as
manifestations of Paul’s jealous rage. Things get extreme during
the climax, which involves a C-section, sadomasochism, and a van covered with
pastel-colored peace signs.
Is Sometimes
Aunt Martha Does Dreadful Things yet another wrongheaded movie presenting
the stereotype of gays as deviants? Yes and no. Somehow, the picture is simultaneously
a misguided attempt at telling a serious story, an unfunny pass at comic
material, a transgressive spin on familiar B-movie tropes, and a vulgar blast
of sex and violence. As such, it’s uncommon without actually being special.
Sometimes
Aunt Martha Does Dreadful Things: FUNKY
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