Apparently
conceived as a sequel to the 1967 hit What’s
New, Pussycat? (starring Peter Sellers and written by Woody Allen), this
dreadful sex comedy lost nearly all connection to the earlier film during the
development process—and it must have lost many other things, as well, presuming
they were ever there. Among other shortcomings, Pussycat, Pussycat, I Love You lacks appealing characters, a
tangible plot, and viable jokes. Loud, stupid, and tacky, the flick is a
pointless compendium of situations leading nowhere, held together by the
presence of a borderline repugnant protagonist and infused with such idiotic
running gags as a dude in a gorilla suit whose presence causes the protagonist
to experience a weird form of gay panic. Set in Rome, the picture stars Ian
McShane—a fine dramatic actor unfit for light comedy—as Fred C. Dobbs, an
American living in Italy. Never mind that McShane is British, and never mind
that his character is pointlessly named after Humphrey Bogart’s role in The Treasure of the Sierra Madre (1948).
After a truly filthy opening song (“I wanna move and groove and fill you with
my love”), the picture explores Fred’s sexual exploits and hangups. He sleeps
with seemingly every woman he meets, then complains that life with multiple lovers
is too complicated. He also suffers recurring nightmares about a horny gorilla.
Various desperate attempts at jokes include the use of the theme song for Mission: Impossible, a would-be farcical
visit to the set of a spaghetti Western (where extras dressed as Indians eat
plates of spaghetti), and a hideous subplot featuring offbeat character actor
Severn Darden in a bizarre red wig. At one point, an onscreen title reads,
“This is a time lapse.” Enervated and sluggish despite posh production values, Pussycat, Pussycat, I Love You is so formless
and misguided and vulgar that it drains the viewer’s will to live.
Pussycat, Pussycat, I Love You: LAME
1 comment:
This plays now like a parody of a '60's '"With-it" comedy. Just painful.
For spaghetti western nerds, you do get a great look at the Cinecitta western village, though.
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