Race-relations melodrama Honky is an indie production with all
the slickness of a Hollywood feature, including a sprightly score by Quincy
Jones. The movie starts out innocently enough, tenderly depicting the
unexpected romance between a white high-school athlete, Wayne (John Neilson),
and his sexy black classmate, Sheila (Brenda Sykes). Very quickly, however,
Will Chaney’s script—adapted from a novel by Gunard Solberg—takes a weird left
turn. Eager to make quick cash dealing grass, Sheila announces to her new
boyfriend that she needs money to buy a supply of weed. In a long scene that’s
staged like the climax of a heist movie, Wayne uses a forged signature to get
the money from his small trust account at a local bank. More crimes follow,
including breaking and entering and grand theft auto, so eventually the couple
decides to leave their small New Jersey town for California. During their
travels, they become victims of crime instead of perpetrators. By the time it’s
over, Honky peppers its dubious
storyline with stereotypical portrayals of blacks, conservatives, gays, and
transvestites. Try finding another picture that features a gentle interracial
love scene, violent rednecks, and the startling vision of future Happy Days mom Marion Ross complaining
about “coons.”
Like so many clumsy pictures about race from the ’60s and ’70s, Honky tries so hard to convey progressive
attitudes that it ends up becoming inadvertently offensive. It’s defeated by
its own aspirations to significance. The way the movie derails is a shame,
because in many ways, Honky is
impressive. Director William A. Graham and his collaborators give the picture a
glossy look and, when the plot isn’t wandering off on pointless detours, a
zippy pace. Leading lady Sykes is beguiling, though she was already in her 20s
when she made the picture. Supporting players including John Fiedler, Lincoln
Kilpatrick, and William Marshall deliver strong work in tiny roles, while Matt
Clark lends his reliable brand of rural villainy to the climax. What’s more,
that Jones music is pretty sweet. Alas, the central relationship stretches
credibility just as much as the plot does, a problem exacerbated by the
filmmakers’ tenuous grasp on with-it lingo. For example, Honky contains the following exchange. “Don’t get hung up on my
hangup.” “I’m getting caught in your hangup?” “Your ego is.” Wow. Honky is alternately exciting,
involving, and sexy, but, seeing as how the crux of the picture involves a
white guy learning about the black experience, it’s hard to reconcile the
film’s meritorious elements with the filmmakers’ backwards-looking portrayal of
African-American characters as criminals, freaks, Uncle Toms, victims, and
vixens.
Honky:
LAME
That tag line never made a damn bit of sense to me. "A love story of hate"?!?
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