
///
home
| art & architecture | books & cds | dance
| destinations | film | opera | television | theater | archives
..
Reefer Madness:
The Movie Musical (2005)
Showtime
|
||
|
||
|
||
|
Based on the stage play inspired by the 1936 cult classic
anti-marijuana propaganda film, Reefer Madness: The
Movie Musical goes through its paces as the (re-)made-for-premium-cable network
production it is. Screenplay writers Kevin Murphy (also lyricist) and Dan Studney (also
composer) succeed best when adapting their play, originally staged as live productions in
New York and Los Angeles, to cinematic space. It is visually stunning, cinematically
complex, populated with hammy acting, a Tarantino-like catalog of cinematic quotes, and,
alas, some rather insipid songs and overwrought plotting.
A mysterious
lecturer (with vague federal credentials) arrives to give a public talk on the evils of
demon marijuana. The black-and-white townsfolk sit in wooden folding chairs in the local
high school auditorium. They are accosted alternately by the demagoguery of the lecturer
(played by Alan Cumming, who later appears as the Goat-Man in a hallucinated orgy scene,
and later still as a wheelchair-bound FDR) and his Technicolor film (this is supposed to
be 1936-ish), the story-within-the-story of ill-fated young lovers, in a Pleasantville
meets Rocky Horror sort of way.
The squeaky-clean chaste lovers, Jimmy Harper (Christian Campbell) and
Mary Lane (Kristen Bell) are reading Shakespeares Romeo and Juliet for the first time, imagining a
happily-ever-after for themselves. Foolishly, they have failed to read the play to the end
and so have no idea what fate lies in store for either couple. Brad and Janet and the
Criminologist (from Rocky Horror) haunt this
camp contrivance.
First Jimmy, then Mary is seduced by Jack Stone (Steven Weber), a
zoot-suited, tap-dancing, girlfriend-beating, dope-peddling pied piper, the pivotal figure
who propels the plot, from one absurdity to the next visual fantasy, from one dance quote
(a full-color Busby Berkley tribute) to another (Michael Jacksons dance troupe of Thriller in a backyard hemp garden, where
dancing dope fiends morph into zombies). The primary story line takes an occasional break,
to delve into life at Jacks house, with his loyal, long-suffering moll Mae Coleman
(Ana Gasteyer gives the best performance of this production), blond bombshell Amy Spanger
(Sally DeBains),who is saddled with an unwanted basket full of crying baby, and Animal House-like social parasite sidekick Ralph
Wiley (John Kassir). Soon Saturday Night Live
humor meets South Park ethos. Even though Jimmy is wooed
and wowed by naked dancing Jesus (Robert Torti) in Las Vegas heaven, it is not enough to
persuade the young Romeo to give up drugs. This is evil weed indeed.
Much of the films camp derives from the original exploitative
shock elements, the historical con artistry of Dwain Esper (parodied by Cummings
Lecturer) and other circumstances surrounding the original 1936 film. A red-baited
Polish-American John citizen and a suddenly frightened Chinese-American woman in the
school auditorium audience serve as deconstructed stereotypes. An extensive body of
original documents and historical background material on the companion web site explicate the xenophobic panic
of the 1930s. The film suggests a subtext of political commentary on today. Las Vegas
Jesus (echoing Monty Python), references to
FDR as an enemy of the state, and fundamentalist shilling fast-forward the audience to
today Gee, maybe America in 2005 is not all that different from 1935
(wink, wink, nudge, nudge).
Reefer Madness: The Movie Musical is cinematically flashy, witty,
fast-paced, and completely over the top. Like a low-carb banana sundae, it is
pure entertainment, to be enjoyed with or without the guilt.
- Les Wright