So here’s a bad idea for a
movie—make a sexy action thriller about curvy babes who team up to battle drug
dealers, cast it with beauties who can’t act, reconfigure the piece as a comedy
even though nobody involved with the project knows how to construct or deliver
a joke, and produce the movie as a PG-rated release, thereby eliminating possibilities
for lurid content. Such is the sad state of affairs in Angel’s Brigade, a stunningly awful escapist romp from
schlock-cinema stalwart Greydon Clark, who produced, co-wrote, and directed
this shameless riff on Charlie’s Angels.
Presented very much like a cartoon, with comical supporting characters, goofy
optical transitions, and stylized uniforms for the heroines, the movie feels wrong
from its first frames. To the accompaniment of a messy score that includes
everything from disco to orchestral music, teenager Bobby Wilson (Mike
Gugliotta) rips off small-time dealer Sticks (Darby Hinton), provoking the ire
of Sticks’ boss, Mike Farrell (Jack Palance). Bobby gets his ass kicked, and
word of the beating reaches his older sister, Michelle Wilson (Susan Kiger), an
up-and-coming pop singer. Hold on tight, because here’s where it gets weird.
Bobby’s schoolteacher, April Thomas (Jacqueline Cole), approaches Michelle with
a plan to attack and destroy a drug-processing plant, which should be no
problem because—yes, this is really the reason she gives—Michelle has a song on
the pop charts. The duo then recruits five more ladies, including a karate
expert and a stunt driver, for their commando mission. Michelle’s income—again,
from one pop song—pays for the whole
enterprise. Overnight, the ladies become highly skilled soldiers in matching
skintight jumpsuits. Clark tries for a light touch throughout most of the
picture (watch for appearances by Gilligan’s
Island costars Jim Backus and Alan Hale), then inexplicably ditches the
jokes for “serious” scenes featuring villains played by Palance and Peter
Lawford. The tone is all over the place, and the acting by the leading ladies
is ghastly. Plus, it’s not as if Clark meant to deter the male gaze, because he
frequently puts the curvaceous women into lingerie and low-cut gowns and
swimsuits. There’s virtually nothing so disheartening as sleaze without the
courage of its convictions, because what’s the point? Also known as Angels Revenge and Seven from Heaven, this dud is to be avoided by everyone except
those who thrive on schadefreude.
Angels Brigade: LAME
But they have a cool custom van, so..there's that?
ReplyDeleteTo be avoided at all costs...unless you watch it on 'Mystery Science 3000.' One of the funnier episodes of the series imo.
ReplyDelete