A brief description makes
counterculture comedy Keep Off My Grass!
sound promising, since Micky Dolenz (of the Monkees) plays a sweet hippie kid searching
for a place where he can nurture his little marijuana plant in peace.
Unfortunately, that’s only one piece of a simultaneously overstuffed and
underwhelming movie. Keep Off My Grass!
begins with retailers on the main drag of a small city upset about hippies
loitering in front of their stores. The retailers buy a small abandoned town
and give it to the kids, who build their own society from scratch. Predictably,
the hippies replicate the same Establishment hang-ups against which they once
rebelled: capitalism, law and order, etc.
Done right, this movie could have become an essential satire of its
period. Instead, Keep Off My Grass!
is drab, shapeless, tonally inconsistent, and visually unimaginative. One subplot
concerns a hippie guy who gets possessive about his lady. Another revolves
around a young man who upsets his Jewish parents by shacking up with a hippie
chick. And the Dolenz material mostly sidelines the endearing pot-plant angle
for dreary vignettes of Dolenz’s character trying to lose his virginity.
There’s also a needlessly dark subplot about folks living in the small town
adjoining the hippie community taking extreme measures to drive the hippies
away. Dolenz’s goofy charm isn’t nearly sufficient to make this stuff
interesting to watch, especially since he only plays a supporting role, despite
marketing materials implying he’s the star. FYI, Keep Off My Grass! features an early screen appearance by future TV
star Gerald McRaney, whose casting as the rebellious Jewish kid is a bit of a
stretch, and this was the only movie that comedian Shelley Berman ever
directed. He did not miss his calling.
Keep Off My Grass!: LAME
Was hoping this was a feature-length extension of "The Frodis Caper".
ReplyDeleteYou find the craziest movies
ReplyDelete@top_cat_james:
ReplyDeleteNoted and appreciated!
TCJ is referencing an episode of 'The Monkees' series co-written/directed by Mickey Dolenz.