Though he
later become synonymous with inspirational movies, thanks to his success with Rocky (1976) and The Karate Kid (1984), director John G. Avildsen dabbled in edgy
sex comedies during the early ’70s, making this offbeat picture and the heinous
Cry Uncle! (1971). Combining
mockumentary and narrative elements, Guess
What We Learned in School Today? ostensibly explores the impact of
progressive sex education on the hypocritical residents of an uptight bedroom
community. It’s the old satirical notion that folks who complain about sex are
actually freaks at home. On some level, this sloppy and uneven movie’s politics
are in the right place, since Avildsen and his collaborators portray
open-minded intellectuals as forces for positive social change, while depicting
hateful censors as villains who need their attitudes adjusted. The problem is
how Avildsen and his collaborators express these ideas. Much of Guess What We Learned in School Today?
comprises naughty vignettes with nudity and simulated sex, so there’s more than
a little sensationalism sprinkled into the mix, and scenes of right-wingers
getting their jollies are so perverse as to be cruel. Plus, it’s difficult to
justify elements including the sexy, grown-up babysitter who nurtures a teenage
boy’s nascent sexuality by reading him pornography while giving him handjobs.
One suspects the filmmakers were trying to be outrageous, but more often than
not, Guess What We Learned in School
Today? is simply vulgar.
The all-over-the-place storyline mostly follows
three people. Roger (Richard Carballo) is a creepy cop who entraps women for
solicitation arrests. Lance (Zachary Hains) is an insane ex-Marine who crusades
against sex education, calling it a communist plot. And Dr. Lily Whitehorn
(Yvonne McCall) is a sex educator with a clothing-optional institute. As
various episodes unfold, Lily directly addresses the camera with remarks about
the need for people to overcome inhibitions, while Lance and Roger engage in
crazed antics. Lance has trouble getting it on with his wife until they
convince a family friend to service their teenage son, at which point Lance
mounts his wife from behind and drives her to climax while she watches her son
have sex and moans her son’s name. Similarly, Roger seems averse to sex until a
black transvestite goes down on him. You get the idea. Some of this is mildly
interesting, but most of the camerawork is garish and ugly, the physical-comedy
bits fall flat, and the satire is painfully obvious. Yet somehow, the picture
develops a cumulative effect. The actors playing the rational characters are
appealing (including a pair of attractive blondes who frequently appear topless),
and, every so often, a throwaway scene gets the picture’s point across without
lurid excess. The vignette of Lydia explaining the word “fuck” to schoolchildren
accomplishes more than all the movie’s over-the-top carnal encounters put
together.
Guess What We Learned in School Today?: FUNKY
ReplyDeleteRocky's 1976 Oscar ruined him. Even with Brando, Scott, Gielgud, and Belushi in his later films, he lost something vital in himself that never returned.