Some bad
movies curry favor because the incompetence of the filmmaking is endearing, and
others win cult followings because the content is so extreme as to be hypnotic.
And then there are bad movies on the order of Stigma, which fascinate because the storytelling is profoundly
misguided. At various points during its 93 strange minutes, Stigma is a blaxploitation melodrama, a
medical thriller, a sexualized psychodrama, and an uptight message movie. Very
often, Stigma is just plain weird, as
during a meaningless scene of a small-town merchant leading a band practice
inside his store by using a plunger as a baton. Throughout, the movie suffers
from glaring technical flaws, so even though some scenes are passably rendered,
others feature grubby photography and audio that was clumsily added during
post-production. Capping the project’s peculiarity is the presence of Philip
Michael Thomas in the leading role. Best known for the ’80s series Miami Vice, he’s among the worst actors
to earn significant Hollywood careers. Watching Thomas play this mess of a
movie straight sends Stigma into the
realm of unintentional humor.
The story takes place on an island off the
California coast. Dr. Calvin Crosse (Thomas), recently released from prison
after serving a term for performing illegal abortions, arrives in town at the
invitation of his mentor. Calvin encounters racism from small-mined locals
until reaching his mentor’s house, where he finds the man dead. The mentor was
investigating some sort of public-health epidemic, and Calvin discovers an
instructional film (!) about STDs. (Nonsensically, the film is hosted by
beloved New York City radio personality “Cousin Brucie” Morrow.) Soon Calvin
resumes his mentor’s work of alerting locals to the dangers of a disease that’s
working its way through the island’s bedrooms. Hence the time Calvin spends at
the local whorehouse. Eventually, the good doctor identifies patient zero, thereby
opening up a new storyline with incestuous overtones—and this somehow leads to
the film’s bizarre two-part climax. First Calvin encounters a group of hippies
prepping for a seaside orgy and lays down a heavy rap about STDs, complete with
facts and figures. Then a confrontation occurs between patient zero and someone
else (no spoilers here), resulting in a wild death scene right out of a horror
movie.
Attempting to determine how the different pieces of this flick fit
together would be a threat to anyone’s sanity, because, for instance, the
earnestness of the “Cousin Bruce” sequence clashes mightily with the “comedy”
of the whorehouse scene. It should also be noted that
somewhere amid the muck of the storyline, a minor character shouts this immortal
line: “I don’t want to be venereal!” Stigma
isn’t one of those quintessential ’70s head-trip movies that makes viewers feel
as if they’ve ingested controlled substances, and neither is it one of those
bad-taste extravaganzas that leaves viewers slack-jacked at the insensitivity
of the filmmakers. It’s a hot mess that arose from
what might have been good intentions.
Stigma: FREAKY
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