|
The Aloha Bobby and Rose vehicle cruising Graffiti style in 1974 |
When
we learn at the close of AMERICAN GRAFFITI that a
drunk driver would kill John Milner, the cocky motorhead played by Paul LeMat, a deep pang of depression occurs…
After
all, Milner’s the type of guy you’d want cruising the boulevard forever,
and this was his chance to return, in some form...
And might be back in the
specific form of Bobby, a freespirited
mechanic who drives a ’68 Camaro, drag racing the L.A. streets and even
crashes a bonafide drag race, wherein the first fifteen minutes of
ALOHA BOBBY AND ROSE are fully-loaded with rip-roaring potential: Bobby
hangs with his pal Moxey (Robert Carradine) and the night is their own
frolicking playground...
|
Dianne Hull as Rose in Aloha Bobby and Rose RATES: **1/2 |
Sounds great so far, but after Bobby loses a
pool game to a group of “Chicanos” (led by Edward James Olmos),
and our troubled hero, bridled with debt and threats, meets a helpless
and hopelessly gloomy single mother named Rose, portrayed forlornly by girl-next-door
pretty Diane Hull, the energetic ride turns into a dull journey of two
people mismatched to begin with.
On the plus
side are a few great songs… Elton John’s TINY DANCER and BENNY
AND THE JETS groove sporadically to pick up the pace... and one
game-changing scene has Bobby and Rose falsely accused of murder,
thrusting the breezy mainline into a shocking burst of violence
befitting exploitation road flicks like EASY RIDER and DIRTY MARY CRAZY LARRY before and RACE
WITH THE DEVIL after...
|
Paul LeMat taking a seventies selfie in Aloha Bobby & Rose |
Now "on the run," the doomed duo hang out with affable Texan Tim McIntire, keeping obscured within the shadows of
shadowy Los Angeles and dreaming of an escape to Hawaii. Here's where things go
downhill, and yet there are fantastic shots of Sunset Strip with billboards including movies and albums.
For a postcard reverie of the early 1970's, this will really hit the
spot.
Who knows, perhaps ALOHA BOBBY AND ROSE is the kind of motion
picture to view with no sound; the direction and editing flow
beautifully, so much so you'll think it's a great movie playing. Too bad
all the tedious despair and pointless melodramatic dialogue makes for a
really bland soup: A damn shame since the ingredients seemed so
infallible to begin with.
|
Aloha Bobby and Rose was filmed in 1973 when The Stones' Goat's Head Soup came out |
|
Edward James Olmos signed this Aloha Bobby and Rose DVD with a shock and grin |
No comments:
Post a Comment
Note: Only a member of this blog may post a comment.