After making a
pair of entertaining drive-in pictures about the American south,
actor-turned-director Max Baer Jr., of The
Beverly Hillbillies fame, inexplicably jumped onto the ’50s-nostalgia
bandwagon by making a crude ripoff of George Lucas’ American Graffiti (1973), even though several copycat pictures had
already been released. Baer’s contribution to this disreputable tradition, Hometown U.S.A., starts off innocuously enough,
shamelessly replicating scenes of teenagers getting into mischief while
cruising down Main Street in hot cars. Then the movie degrades into idiotic sex
farce, to the point where the climax seems as if belongs in an entirely
different film. Nonetheless, some viewers might find the first hour of the
picture more or less tolerable as an homage to Lucas’ nostalgic hit. Set in
1957, Hometown U.S.A. tracks the
exploits of three teenagers—nerdy Rodney “The Rodent” Duckworth (Gary
Springer), smooth T.J. Swackhammer (Brian Kerwin), and tough Recil Calhoun
(David Wilson). Also woven into the mix is a blonde dreamgirl named Marilyn
(Pat Delaney), whom Rodney sees driving around town at regular intervals. Is
this almost exactly the same premise as American
Graffiti? See the use of the word “shamelessly” above. Yet while Lucas’
movie is family-friendly, treating adult themes in such a restrained manner
that American Graffiti was rated PG,
Baer takes the crude route, earning his movie’s R-rating with vulgar
sexcapades. Rodney has dreams in which his classmates cheer while he screws
Marilyn. Rodney steals a car and adopts the name “Rod Heartbender,” then squires
an awkward girl who turns out to be a freak with a thing for public exposure
and taunting bikers. And that’s atop the usual vignettes of juvenile
delinquency, with kids pranking cops and stealing hubcaps, all to the
accompaniment of beloved ’50s pop songs. Hometown
U.S.A. follows a sad spiral from harmlessly stupid to painfully stupid,
degrading women and destroying viewers’ brain cells as it slinks along from one
derivative and/or dopey scene to the next.
Hometown U.S.A.: LAME
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