Things get
weird fast in The Sporting Club, a
wildly undisciplined adaptation of a novel by Thomas McGuane, who later became
a screenwriter of offbeat films with Western themes. Here, the theme is
actually Midwestern, though The Sporting
Club certainly has enough eccentrics and iconoclasts to resonate with other
films bearing McGuane’s name. The basic story is relatively simple. Rich white
people gather at the Centennial Club, a hunting lodge in the Great Lakes region,
for a drunken revel celebrating the club’s hundredth birthday. One of the
club’s youngest members, an unhinged trust-fund brat named Vernur Stanton
(Robert Fields), has a scheme to destroy the club from within while making a
grand statement about class divisions in American society. Vernur fires the
club’s longtime groundskeeper and hires a volatile blue-collar thug as a
replacement, injecting a dope-smoking X-factor into the uptight culture of the
Centennial Club. Yet the plot is only the slender thread holding the
movie together. More intriguing and more prominent are myriad subplots, as well
as bizarre satirical scenes featuring the aging members of the Centennial Club
devolving into savagery.
If it’s possible to imagine a quintessentially
American film that should have been directed by British maniac Ken Russell, The Sporting Club is that movie. Like
one of Russell’s perverse freakouts, The
Sporting Club puts a funhouse mirror to polite society, revealing all the
grotesque aspects that are normally hidden from view. And like many of
Russell’s films, The Sporting Club
spirals out of control at regular intervals.
Here’s a relatively innocuous example. Early in the
picture, Vernur and his best friend, James Quinn (Nicolas Coster), wander from
the Centennial Club to a nearby dam, where the (unidentified) president of the
United States makes a public appearance. Vernur and James sneak onto a tour bus
left empty by Shriners watching the president, then trash the bus and
commandeer it for a presidential drive-by during which Vernur moons the
commander-in-chief. The scene raises but does not answer many questions related
to character motivation and logistics. And so it goes throughout The Sporting Club. Outrageous things
happen, but it’s anybody’s guess what makes the people in this movie tick or
even, sometimes, how one event relates to the next. Very often, it seems is if
connective tissue is missing. In some scenes, James makes passes at Vernur’s
girlfriend, and in other scenes, he’s involved with the local hottie sent to
clean his lodge. Huh? And we haven’t even gotten to Vernur’s fetish for vintage
dueling pistols, the time capsule containing century-old pornography, or the
climactic scene involving a machine gun and an orgy.
As directed by journeyman
Larry Peerce and written by versatile wit Lorenzo Semple Jr., The Sporting Club has several deeply
interesting scenes and a few vivid performances. Coster, familiar to ’70s fans
as a character actor, does subtle work in the film’s quiet scenes, even
though the nature of his overall role is elusive. Conversely, the great Jack
Warden is compelling to watch as the replacement groundskeeper, even though
he’s spectacularly miscast—more appropriate casting would have been Kris
Kristofferson, who plays a similar role in the equally bizarre Vigilante Force (1976). The lively ensemble also includes Richard Dysart, Jo Ann Harris, James Noble, and Ralph Waite.
There’s a seed of something provocative hidden inside the bewildering action of
The Sporting Club, and one imagines
the folks behind the movie envisioned a provocative generation-gap farce. What
they actually made is a disjointed oddity with lots of drinking, sex,
violence, and pretentious speechifying.
The Sporting Club: FREAKY
I'm curious after this read.
ReplyDeleteThis was the still unknown Linda Blair's second movie.
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