If
you’re willing to overlook a huge problem—the absence of a real story—then you
might be able to groove on the silly pleasures of How Come Nobody’s On Our Side? A wannabe farcical comedy about two
bikers who try to score bread by running drugs across the Mexican border, the picture
stars two veterans of ’60s/’70s biker flicks, Larry Bishop and Adam Roarke.
Here, they work in the mode of classic comedy duos: Hope and Crosby, Martin and
Lewis, etc. Although Bishop and Roarke put forth mighty efforts, the jokes aren’t
strong enough to sustain interest, and their characters aren’t sufficiently
differentiated to create strong friction. Worse, the plot lacks forward
momentum until the climax, which resorts to that dullest of clichés, a madcap
chase scene. It’s fitting that the movie features a scene of our heroes
escaping trouble in a hot-air balloon, because from start to finish, this whole
thing runs on fumes.
After Brandy (Bishop) and Person (Roarke) quit a job
playing bikers in a low-budget movie, they hit the road looking for new
opportunities. Enter Brigitte (Alexandra Hay), Person’s freethinking sister.
For some reason she has a groovy house on the beach in Los Angeles, so the
bikers hang out there for a while. Eventually someone has the bright idea to run
dope, triggering complicated schemes—Brigitte seduces a cop to get the use of
his uniform so Brandy, posing as a policeman, can squeeze information from a
border guard, and so on. Some of the schemes are mildly amusing, and the film’s
banter is periodically entertaining, but the lack of narrative focus grows more
and more frustrating as the picture drags on. Plus, some bits just don’t work,
like the vignette of the bikers buying drugs from a couple played by Penny
Marshall and Rob Reiner.
Apparently filmed in 1972 but shelved until 1975, How Come Nobody’s on Our Side? is a
missed opportunity, because Bishop and Roarke render such an appealingly cranky
buddy-picture vibe that better material might have resulted in success. But in
addition to constructing a flabby plot, writer Leigh Chapman shows a weakness
for sitcom-style jokes. The aforementioned balloon scene involves the bikers
begging a little person for a ride before resorting to physical threats. At
that point, the little person exclaims: “Why didn’t you say that in the first
place? Look at all the time you wasted trying to reason with me!” As with so
much of How Come Nobody’s on Our Side?,
it’s enough to make you almost laugh.
How Come Nobody’s On Our Side?: FUNKY
2 comments:
A wacky biker flick? Well, I guess there was 'The Pink Angels'.
I really love both Bishop and Roarke, so I desperately wanted this to be a home run. As you mentioned though, it is amusing from time to time and both main characters really try to do their best with what they were given.
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