Live Flesh. When art movies are this much naughty fun, who
needs the mainstream? Pedro Almodovar's smashing new thriller kicks off
with a prostitute going into labor on a public bus in Franco-oppressed
Madrid; 20 years later, her now grown son falls for an alluring junkie and
tracks her down at her apartment. In one fateful instant, a cop lies
bleeding on the floor and the boy is packed off to prison--only to return
six years later to find the cop and the reformed junkie married.
The plotting comes from a Ruth Rendell novel, but its voyeurism, vivid
sexuality, and pulpy fatalism are ideally suited to Almodovar's mischievous
hothouse wit. The director responds with the most dynamic, indulgence-free
staging of his career: The rococo Douglas Sirk flourishes have been
replaced by a Don Siegel-style bluntness, augmented by the most voluptuous
camera glides this side of primo De Palma. And hot? When the
gorgeous leads, Liberto Rabal and Francesca Neri, merely stand in close
proximity, they reduce the heavy-breathing cast of Wild Things to
snuffling warthogs. Live Flesh reminds you what's been missing from
all those pallid American neo-noir items glutting the market: the heat of
deranging erotic obsession--i.e., live flesh.
The Players Club. Retro-nuevo blaxploitation from first-time
writer-director Ice Cube, who has some flair for raunchy comedy. Too bad
this is a drama. In this soggy old-school grindhouse flick, a single mom
(newcomer LisaRaye) works her way through college doffing her duds at The
Players Club, a third-rate strip joint. As written and acted, the women
characters might as well be cardboard cutouts--except cardboard has more
depth than the movie's conniving rape-bait cousin and the obligatory ELP
(Evil Lesbian Predator). And somebody oughta tell Mr. Cube that
heavy-mitted moralizing doesn't mix with pole dances.
But the club itself has its moments. It's a tawdry milieu out of
inner-city folklore, populated with enough sleazy hustlers to stoke a Rudy
Ray Moore slab, and the movie's pretty entertaining when it's hanging with
the playas--especially the mushmouthed Staggerlee-wannabe owner (Bernie
Mac) and his supercilious sidekick (A.J. Johnson). Whenever they're not
onscreen, the movie plays like an afterschool special that sternly cautions
against ho'ing--even as it fixes its beady eyes on the merchandise.
Species II. The lunkheaded original concerned a slithery alien
whatsit that disguised itself as a butt-nekkid centerfold cutie so that it
could mate (and mate and mate) with horny Earthlings--the sort of
blatant strokebook premise that virtually guaranteed you'd bump into your
minister while trying to sneak out. The twice-as-lunkheaded sequel offers
more sex, more gore, and more aliens, here led by a male astronaut who gets
infected coming back from Mars. This time around, the crassness of serving
a second helping of such shamefaced drek humiliates everyone involved.
The original alien, Natasha Henstridge, is back: Where previously her
lust was so undiscriminating that even Alfred Molina saw bareback action,
her libido has now been extinguished by, I kid you not, force-fed reruns of
The Dukes of Hazzard. (That'd do it for me.) Also back is
troubleshooter Michael Madsen, whose performance is rather defiant in its
couldn't-give-a-crap laziness.
Almost everything else wrong with the movie can be blamed on
screenwriter Chris Brancato. Not only does Brancato have an African
American astronaut (poor Mykelti Williamson) speaking in nonstop Def Comedy
Jam warm-up patter, he then somehow makes a hero of sickle-cell anemia.
(Apparently the last line of defense against racially pure villains is a
black man's tainted blood.) It's junk like this that gives mindless sexist
trash a bad name.