It’s difficult
to actively dislike an amiable regional production like Slick Silver, since one gets a sense of enterprising filmmakers
doing their best to emulate tropes they’ve seen in “real” movies while also
sharing something of their local idioms with the world. Nonetheless, a dull
viewing experience is a dull viewing experience, and Slick Silver never builds much in the way of empathy or momentum. A
gentleman named R. Terrell Reagan, who also wrote and executive-produced this
project but never made another film, stars as Slick Silver, a fast-talking
schemer roaming through Texas and thereabouts. Early in the movie, he befriends
a guitar-slinging hitchhiker named Leroy (Hal Fletcher), whom Slick nicknames
“Strummer Goldenstring.” Flim-flam ensues. The guys pose as public-health
officials and convince a farmer to hand over several chickens by convincing her
the birds are victims of a hemorrhoid outbreak. They encounter a traveling
preacher, then steal his clothes and leave him tied to a tree while they try to
fleece the congregation that was awaiting the preacher’s arrival. They persuade
a black guy to pose as their chauffeur so they can run a number on women in a
rich neighborhood. And so on. Although most of the actors in the film render
generic work, Reagan does a passable con-artist routine, and some of the scams
are mildly imaginative. Unfortunately, there’s zero depth of character and the
story goes nowhere, so after the first 15 minutes or so, you’ve seen everything
Slick Silver has to offer—that is,
unless the pie-fight sequence toward the end counts as novelty.
Slick Silver: LAME
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