With its strange mixture of crime, drugs, and music, Cocaine Cowboys
has just enough weirdness to claim a small cult following. The picture was mostly shot in and around Andy Warhol’s beach house in Long
Island, and Warhol plays himself in a few scenes. What’s more, the premise is a
kick—under the leadership of a tough-guy manager, played by Jack Palance, the
members of a rock band moonlight as drug smugglers. Had the filmmakers played
up the connections between drugs and music, perhaps from a satirical
perspective, this idea could have led somewhere. Alas, cowriter-director Ulli
Lommel, who later became a prolific horror-movie hack, was not up to the task,
so Cocaine Cowboys is clumsy, meandering,
and shallow. At times, it’s only possible to tell characters apart based on
what instrument they play or what pocket of the storyline they occupy. Briefly,
the plot goes like this—after agreeing to complete one last job before ditching
the drug trade forever, the band arranges for an air drop of $2 million worth
of cocaine, then somehow loses the dope, triggering violent revenge from suppliers. Instead of creating tension, this set of circumstances has
very little effect. The musicians hang out, record music, and shoot the breeze
with Warhol, who prattles monotonously and snaps Polaroids. In the weirdest
scene, one of the band’s associates woos a sexy maid into a tryst by claiming
he knows the whereabouts of the cocaine, then compels the maid to service his
fetish for being showered with baking powder. If you’re wondering about the
title, the band (lead by real-life singer-songwriter Tom Sullivan) performs a
downbeat number lamenting their status as “Cocaine Cowboys,” and some of the
characters ride horses. Adventurous viewers might be able to tolerate long
stretches of tedium in exchange for flashes of strangeness, but most folks will
find Cocaine Cowboys irredeemably
confusing and dull.
Cocaine
Cowboys: LAME
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