Despite
marketing materials suggesting similarities to The Groove Tube (1974), Boogievision is actually a counterculture
story about independent filmmaking, although it does features a few fake commercials. Struggling director Mick (Michael Laibson) discovers that his
girlfriend’s dad, Burt (Bert Belant), is a producer, so Mick submits a script.
Turns out Burt makes porn, so he hires the young filmmaker to crank out a skin flick. Mick rebelliously spends Burt’s money to make a politicized sci-fi
freakout (with lots of nudie shots) called Lizard
Women from Outer Space, and Burt is aghast when he
discovers what happened. There’s no use fretting that Boogievision writer-director James Bryan botched his main story,
which could have worked if it had fleshed-out characters, because delivering a
straightforward narrative is clearly not what Bryan was after. Echoing the
behavior of his main character, Bryan was all about, like, doing his own thing,
man. Thus Boogievision meanders
through pointless discursions and shapeless conversations, gradually drifting
more and more toward unhinged druggy nonsense, only occasionally reverting
to linear plotting. As for the caliber of the Bryan’s comedy, fake commercials in Boogievision include a trailer for The Excrementists, a scatological riff
on The Exorcist (1973), and the
film-within-a-film features political rhetoric from “The Radical Feminoids” as
well as a chat with a lizard woman (meaning a topless starlet wearing a
cheap-looking mask), who is upset about the commercialization of reptile hides.
Viewed in tandem with the right controlled substances, maybe this stuff was amusing
back in the day. Viewed sober in 2018, not so much.
Boogievision: LAME
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