Sometimes the only way to
begin a conversation about an insane movie is to describe the plot. Snakes, alternately known by Fangs and other titles, is set in
small-town Texas. “Snakey” Bender (Les Tremanyne) lives alone on a run-down property
owned by his buddy, Burt (Richard Kennedy), who long ago moved into town.
“Snakey,” a slovenly geezer who always wears greasy overalls and drives a
broken-down car missing the truck hood, earned his nickname by assembling a
huge collection of serpents. Every Wednesday, “Snakey” drives into town and collects
mice local schoolchildren have gathered as food for his reptiles, in exchange
for letting the kids gawk at the slithering creatures. After that, “Snakey”
hooks up with Burt for weekly “concerts,” which involve them getting drunk and
marching half-naked through Burt’s living room while listening to John Philips
Sousa marches on Burt’s stereo. Then “Snakey” concludes his Wednesday rituals
by visiting schoolteacher Cynthia (Bebe Kelly), the patron behind his supply of
mice. What’s her angle? Every Wednesday night, “Snakey” lets Cynthia pleasure
herself with Lucifer, the largest serpent in his menagerie.
But what—there’s
more! The weekly routine gets thrown off-kilter when Burt marries an exotic
dancer named Ivy (Janet Wood). Concurrently, portly shopkeeper Bud (Bruce
Kimball) and his rotund lesbian sister, Sis (Alice Nunn), become preoccupied
with getting Cynthia into a threesome—even as slippery local preacher Brother
Joy (Marvin Kaplan) endeavors to expose Cynthia’s unholy arrangement with
“Snakey.”
After taking forever to set up these bizarre plot threads,
cowriter/director Arthur A. Names pulls things together with contrivances that
turn “Snakey” against the people in his life. One by one, he lures them to his
place and subjects them to torture involving snakes. All but Cynthia, of
course, who—well, let’s just say she dies doing what she loves, and it’s quite
a thing to see. Although Snakes is
fairly tame in terms of gore and sex, notwithstanding Ivy’s lengthy striptease
number, everything about the plot is so perverse that the movie has a certain
forbidden-fruit appeal. Accentuating this quality is the presence of Tremayne
in the leading role, since nerds of a certain age will recognize him as
“Mentor” from the old Saturday-morning TV show Shazam! (1974–1977). Watching this movie makes it difficult to reconcile innocent
memories of him driving around the countryside in a Winnebago with a little boy
who magically turns into a muscular stud when the need arises.
Like so many
other oddities from the cinematic fringe, Snakes
benefits (if that's the right word) from crude execution. The lack of technical
polish adds to the sense of this picture being a transmission from the outer
edges of the human experience. How else can one describe a film with the
following running joke? After each murder, “Snakey” loads the body into a car,
pushes the car off the cliff, and struts home to the accompaniment of yet
another Sousa march. Plus we haven’t even gotten to the bit when “Snakey”
forces a captive Brother Joy to rub a fish all over his body, or the scene in
which “Snakey” suspends Sis on a swing over barrels, or . . .
Snakes:
FREAKY
3 comments:
That's it, I'm legally changing my name to Snakey Bender.
Bender?! I hardly KNOW her!
Where has this film been all my life?!!
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