The Phoenix Network:
 
 
About  |  Advertise
Adult  |  Moonsigns  |  Band Guide  |  Blogs  |  In Pictures
 
Features  |  Reviews
FIND MOVIES
Find a Movie
Movie List
Loading ...
or
Find Theaters and Movie Times
or
Search Movies

Dirty politics

By PETER KEOUGH  |  October 27, 2008

Or maybe the overall turmoil stifled the make-believe version. Audiences didn’t need riots on the screen when they had them in the streets. When the SDS took over the president’s office at Columbia University, or Yippies nominated a pig for president, the youth revolution of Wild in the Streets (1968) seemed anticlimactic.

Instead, perhaps noting Dr. Strangelove’s advice about mineshafts, many of those most alienated from their times headed underground. John Waters, scion of a middle-class Baltimore family and raised as a Catholic, had been making movies since he was 17, in 1964. They included Hag in a Black Leather Jacket and Eat Your Makeup, in which Waters’s future superstar, the 300-pound transvestite Divine, plays Jackie Kennedy.

In his first sound feature, Multiple Maniacs, Waters developed his basic themes, which — in addition to coprophagy, cannibalism, transvestism, incest, inter-species rape (seven-foot-tall lobster on 300-pound transvestite), and other taboo violations — are oddly conservative (violent SDS-like protesters are among those skewered). He believes in family, but not the traditional middle-class, monogamous, heterosexual family rife with intolerance, hypocrisy, and greed. Rather, he favors the kind of family embodied in his biggest underground hit, Pink Flamingos (1972), in which Divine plays a matriarch living in a trailer with her senile, egg-sucking mother and her son, who gets it on with chickens when he’s not getting blow-jobs from mom. Divine challenges a rival couple, the hatefully snobby, venal, bourgeois, serial-killing Marbles, to a contest to determine who are the “filthiest people in the world.” With the film’s infamous poodle-pooping finale, the filthiest family has won.

After two more exercises in such bad taste, Waters was ready for a change. In his 1981 book Shock Value, he lamented that the only way he could outdo himself at that point was to show mental patients eating colostomy bags. Ah, the perils of genius. In other words, he was ready for the mainstream, beginning with Polyester (1981), in which he cast Tab Hunter and got an R rating. His subsequent films have been more polished, expensive, and bland, though still, in their way, radical. Even in its current family-friendly format, Hairspray advocates integration, a once-again controversial concept given the recent Supreme Court decision that virtually overturned the precedent of Brown v. Board of Education.

Waters may have moved to the mainstream, but the mainstream also moved to Waters. His lovably perverse, socially marginalized, and fun-loving protagonists spurred a new sub-genre, a certain kind of crude, outrageous comedy, starting with counter-culture doper comics Cheech and Chong’s Up in Smoke (1978), and the National Lampoon’s Animal House (1978). The concept spawned one of the most resilient and lucrative genres in Hollywood history, continuing through Caddyshack (1980), Porky’s (1982), and their sequels, and up to such recent hits as Old School, Anchor Man, Accepted, ad nauseam. From the $6,000 origins of Waters’s anarchic assaults against the status quo, his legacy of gross-out comedies pitting degenerate rebels against the smug and privileged has grossed, appropriately enough, more than a billion dollars over the past three decades.

< prev  1  |  2  |  3  |  4  |  5  |   next >
Related: Media misfits, Review: The Lollipop Generation, Review: Gentlemen Broncos, More more >
  Topics: Features , Mitt Romney, Celebrity News, Cheech and Chong,  More more >
  • Share:
  • Share this entry with Facebook
  • Share this entry with Digg
  • Share this entry with Delicious
  • RSS feed
  • Email this article to a friend
  • Print this article
Comments
Dirty politics
So you're saying that something can only be worthwile if it conforms exactly to your personal politics? Oh, and did you actually watch Team America? To call that movie 'fascist' is like calling Dr. Strangelove 'jingoistic'. You didn't get the joke.
By Fallingdown66 on 07/26/2007 at 8:41:56
Dirty politics
keough is on the money, as always. more!
By rain king on 07/27/2007 at 12:17:55
Dirty politics
So we should expect an article from Peter Keough on how the left has hijacked the documentary genre.
By Trent on 07/30/2007 at 9:43:56
Dirty politics
Wow, did you even watch Team America? Way to completely miss the point of the "patriotic" elements of the movie. As for Borat, the whole point of the movie was to show the underlying racism, sexism and homophobia that exists in America. That seems to have soared right over your head as well. I'm still trying to figure out why Knocked Up is a "right wing" movie. You might be reading a little much into it.
By Keith on 07/30/2007 at 12:03:34
Dirty politics
What a ridiculous article! Who said the left owned the kind of humor you are referencing to begin with? There are a lot of nonsensical points in this article, but let me focus on the most important. Now that the baby boomers, the former hippies, are old enough to have amassed power, the left IS the establishment. Please don't pretend that because George Bush is president that the left is powerless now. Please don't pretend that they don't control the media, and the slant of almost every news story. The days where democrats were rebels are long, long gone. In the Boston area in particular, how long can you go spouting 100% doctrine leftist politics (as Keough does) before anyone at all disagrees with you? A very long time. Not very edgy. Please don't pretend that hypocrisy is the exclusive province of the right. The left IS the establishment, the rich, the powerful, just as much as the right, if not more. That is why the jokesters now point their fingers at you on occasion. The South Park guys are Libertarians. That means that no, they are not the right, they are not the left, they just think things through for themselves without swallowing either major party's BS. It's about time the left was called on it's nonsense by even the young and hip. Stop whining about it! You sound like a spoiled 8-year-old girl.
By Uncle Julie on 08/16/2007 at 12:36:45
Dirty politics
If the "right wing" has hijacked raunch, it is quid pro quo for socialists calling themselves "progressive" as if the rest of us would have stayed in the caves. Mr. Keough, I grew up in Boston, and having an interest in the arts, I have read you, on occasion, since I was a kid. I have always known, since that first review, that you were a self important shill for the left (sorry, the "progressives"), but I never thought of you as obtuse until now. I am SHOCKED at the way you so painfully missed the point of Team America. Anyway, it's fun to watch you wring your hands like your parents generation did about yours. Oh- and are you not aware of how "fascist" YOU sound? Apparently not. "Meet the new boss....he's the same as the old boss." -The Who (I thought I'd use a reference you'd be comfortable with at your age. *smirk*)
By MikeyV on 08/18/2007 at 5:39:08

ARTICLES BY PETER KEOUGH
Share this entry with Delicious
  •   REVIEW: UP IN THE AIR  |  December 02, 2009
    No director pulls off the bait-and-switch as craftily as Jason Reitman. He gets you thinking that you're watching a hip, caustic comedy subverting the status quo, but by the end, he's vindicated all the platitudes he seemed to scorn.
  •   REVIEW: Z (1969)  |  December 01, 2009
    John F. Kennedy wasn't the only political leader murdered in 1963. On May 22 of that year, Gregoris Lambrakis, a left-leaning, pacifist member of the Greek parliament and an aspiring presidential candidate seeking to replace the reigning right-wing government, was assaulted after a peace rally in Thessaloniki. He died five days later.
  •   REVIEW: JULIA  |  December 02, 2009
    When the once-æthereal muse of the late Derek Jarman wiped sweat from her armpits in Michael Clayton , a new persona was born.
  •   REVIEW: THE STRIP  |  December 02, 2009
    In lieu of Steve Carell’s hopelessly inept and earnest manager, we have his creepier duplicate, Glenn. Instead of the boorish brown-noser played by Rainn Wilson, there’s the more obnoxious Rick.
  •   REVIEW: BAD LIEUTENANT: PORT OF CALL NEW ORLEANS  |  November 24, 2009
    Nicolas Cage is at his best in Bad Lieutenant

 See all articles by: PETER KEOUGH

MOST POPULAR
RSS Feed of for the most popular articles
 Most Viewed   Most Emailed 



  |  Sign In  |  Register
 
thePhoenix.com:
Phoenix Media/Communications Group:
TODAY'S FEATURED ADVERTISERS
Copyright © 2009 The Phoenix Media/Communications Group