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Cecil B. Demented (2000)
Whether you call it guerrilla filmmaking, outlaw cinema or the
underground movie scene, there is no doubt that John Waters is one of the heroes of the
pioneering movement that led to the current independent film boom. Displaying an
unparalleled knack for exuberant shock humor, Waters made his reputation in the 1970's
with midnight movie classics like Desperate Living, Female Trouble, and the immortal Pink Flamingoes.
Most of the biggest laughs in these no-budget efforts were of the squeamish, "I can't
believe what I'm seeing" variety, and it was only natural that this spirit would
eventually filter into the mainstream, as the latest wave of gross-out comedies (Me, Myself and Irene, Scary
Movie) proves.
With Cecil B. Demented, Waters is simultaneously paying tribute
to and sending up the anarchic school of filmmaking he helped create - and presenting a
sort of self-homage in the process (an early review of Waters' work tagged him with the
"Cecil B. Demented" nickname). It's an idea that might have had some bite
fifteen or twenty years ago. Unfortunately, Waters has had a second career that has now
lasted as long as his string of cheerfully offensive cult hits. Beginning with Hairspray in 1988, audiences were introduced to the
kinder, gentler John Waters. Hairspray worked (due in no small part to a final
appearance by Waters' late muse, Divine); most of the follow-ups (Serial Mom, Pecker) have not. Waters has become more like a
lovably eccentric but essentially harmless uncle; he makes a great talk show guest, but
his movies are increasingly flaccid and tame - and worst of all, often not very funny.
Cecil is no exception. Melanie Griffith stars as Honey Whitlock,
a Melanie Griffith-esque movie star making a personal appearance at the Baltimore premiere
of her latest film. Whitlock is a demanding, pampered Hollywood goddess who makes life
hell for her personal assistant (Ricki Lake), complaining about everything right down to
the color of her limousine. At the premiere, a band of terrorists known as the Sprocket
Holes, under the leadership of zealous indie filmmaker Cecil B. Demented (Steven Dorff),
kidnap Whitlock and spirit her away to their warehouse/studio compound. Whitlock is forced
at gunpoint to star in Demented's magnum opus, a broadside against bad Hollywood movies.
Gradually Whitlock comes to believe in Cecil's cause and becomes a willing participant in
their escalating campaign of terror.
After shooting several scripted scenes, Demented announces that the
rest of his revolutionary manifesto will be shot in full reality - on the streets with
real people. This is just one indication of how out-of-touch with the times Cecil feels;
the notion of filmed reality as edgy, underground fare is almost quaint in this summer of Survivor.
The whole concept of a band of cinema terrorists feels even more outdated; their
kidnapping and brainwashing of Whitlock is obviously inspired by the Patricia Hearst story
(Hearst, a Waters regular, appears here as the mother of one the Sprocket Holes). This is
not exactly timely satire, nor is the Sprocket Holes final assault on the set of Gump
Again (starring Kevin Nealon as Forrest Gump - huh?). There's no room for nuance in
this screeching, painfully unfunny offering, no indication that Waters is aware that
Hollywood occasionally makes a great movie or that independent filmmakers quite often make
terrible ones.
Perhaps the most remarkable thing about Waters as a director is how
little he has progressed; after thirty years, his movie-making is as amateurish as ever.
He elicits the same sort of bellowing, one-note performance from Steven Dorff he used to
get from his gang of non-professionals in the early days; the difference is, Divine and
crew invested their histrionics with genuine fervor, and Waters provided them with
inspired over-the-top soliloquies of filth and outrageousness. Here, ninety percent of
Dorff's dialogue is empty sloganeering: "I am a prophet against profit."
"We are the ultimate bad review." "Celibate for celluloid." And
Griffith is hopeless; she's so out of place, it wouldn't be surprising to learn that she
really did deliver her lines at gunpoint. Even a talent as vibrant as Alicia Witt is
flattened by Waters' stale technique (although she does have the only dialogue that evokes
the Waters of old, her description of a very unusual family Christmas around the tree) .
John Waters' place in the history of independent film is secure, but
like fellow aging funnymen Albert Brooks and Woody Allen, he appears content to churn out
watered-down trifles. His movie's tagline may be "demented forever," but at this
point, it sounds like an empty threat.
- Scott Von
Doviak