By definition,
the purpose of criticism involves identifying strengths and weaknesses in creative endeavors. Often that leads to positive results, with appraisers
lavishing artists with compliments. Sometimes it goes the other way. And every
so often, a critic lands in the unfortunate position of having to remark on
something like Philomena Nowlin’s performance in the blaxploitation-themed
showbiz saga Miss Melody Jones, also known
as Ebony Dreams. Before we travel
down that path, let’s set the scene. Shot on a meager budget and made with
an equally meager amount of imagination, Miss
Melody Jones tells the story of an upbeat young woman who makes a living as
a stripper in a Los Angeles nightclub while trudging through one humiliating
audition after another in search of stardom. She gets comfort and support from
her gay roommate and, eventually, a warmhearted paramour with his own cinematic
ambitions, but life is unkind to Miss Melody Jones. At her lowest, she takes an
acting role as a gang-rape victim in a nudie flick. There’s nothing here
viewers haven’t seen a zillion times before, except for the inimitable
Philomena Nowlin. A shockingly inept actress, Nowlin screams nearly every line,
and she does so in one of the most dissonant voices you will ever encounter.
Imagine the sound of a cat that just inhaled helium. Even Fran Drescher would
cringe. Yet for some reason, Nowlin was given one long monologue after
another, so a good 15 percent of the movie comprises nothing but a bug-eyed,
hand-flailing Nowlin screeching at top volume. Overall, Miss Melody Jones is innocuous, if a bit threadbare from a narrative perspective. But with regard to the film’s singular leading performance, spare yourself if you value your eardrums and
your sanity.
Miss Melody Jones: LAME
Missing an "i" in if in the last sentence, but it works anyway.
ReplyDeleteI tracked down a snippet of this and you're right. That voice is insane.
ReplyDelete