Christine and
Jamie have some issues. She’s an attractive divorcée open to embarking on a new
romantic adventure. He’s her imaginative and precocious 10-year-old son, prone
to sarcasm and startling sexual references. When Christine meets Peter, a
motor-mouthed eccentric who wants to marry her, she worries so much about
whether he’ll have chemistry with Jamie that she prevents the two males in her
life from meeting for an extended period. Good call. Once Jamie realizes how important
Peter has become to his mother, he decides to take action. How far he goes to
prevent Peter from becoming part of the family defines the weird storyline of Rivals. Written and directed by
Indian-born filmmaker Krishna Shah, Rivals is a deeply
strange movie that bounces between domestic drama, psychological darkness,
romantic whimsy, and shocking extremes. In one scene, Jamie persuades his
16-year-old babysitter to practice carnal maneuvers that he learned by watching
through a keyhole as Peter and his mother had rough sex; this leads to the
startling image of the babysitter nearly raping her underage friend while his
Super-8 camera records every illicit bump and grind.
Yet Rivals also contains almost laughably innocent scenes, such as
romantic montages featuring Christine and Peter gallivanting around New York
City to the accompaniment of fruity pop songs. Very little in Rivals echoes recognizable human
reality, but as a moderately demented flight of fancy, it’s an interesting
viewing experience.
At the beginning of the picture, Christine (Joan Hackett)
and Jamie (Scott Jacoby) both seem fairly normal, if a bit high-strung and
overeducated—Shah’s exaggerated version of neurotic New Yorkers. Then Peter (Robert
Klein) comes along. He’s one of those only-in-the-movies weirdos, the type who
spews poetic bullshit while driving a tour van around Manhattan. (Signature
moment: He leaves a busload of tourists trapped in the stifling van while he
courts Christine, then talks his way out of trouble by dazzling cops with a lie
about intentionally quarantining the tourists.) As the relationship between
Christine and Peter advances, they both reveal unsavory extremes—she’s
maddeningly fickle, and he date-rapes her after she withholds sex.
Eventually,
Peter decides that Christine is just as hung up on her kid as the kid is with
Christine: “The way to your heart is through your nipples!” (Separately, she
tells a friend that giving birth to Jamie felt like an orgasm.) Meanwhile,
Jamie’s a ticking time bomb, psychologically speaking, at one point
hallucinating a hippy-dippy orgy in which Christine and Peter are participants.
The preposterous climax takes things even deeper into the heart of psychosexual
darkness, though it’s anybody’s guess whether Shah’s sorta-arty, sorta-pulpy storytelling
serves a larger theme. If nothing else, Rivals
is notable as the first of several films in which Jacoby poignantly depicts
youthful insanity. Others include Baxter!
(1973) and the made-for-TV Bad Ronald
(1974).
Rivals: FUNKY
Was always curious to see this since I first heard Klein in one of his standup routines refer to his appearance here (he mentions Hackett). Watched it last year. It's weird, for sure, and all of the leads aren't people you'd necessarily want to hang out with. Self-consciously odd as he is in this movie, I warmed to Klein's character, though I do like Joan Hackett as an actress in general.
ReplyDeleteTo its credit, this film isn't afraid to follow through to its inevitably tragic end. No false happy endings or outs here, and thoroughly twisted in sensibility.
Oh my God! Krishna Shah! I worked for this guy twenty years ago when he ran a film distribution company. They had to change the name because the name they had was so weighed down by lawsuits. The filmmakers who ended up with their crappy, crappy movies in his company all hated him for some very good reasons. He was actually a really nice guy personally, but in business he was completely two-faced. He eventually was forced to sell the assets and I ended up working for a dwarf with a really mean temper. Not the brightest chapter of my "career".
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