Clue (1985)

Screened at Luna Cinemas Leederville as part of the Trash Classics season programmed by VHS Tracking.

“Imagine seeing Clue (1985) when it came out with the three different endings, and NOT seeing the one with Madeline Khan talking about the flames on her face!” a woman remarked to me after the screening. She also talked about having the film on VHS, and on DVD, and that it was something her kids continually rewatched.

The last time I watched Clue, I was at home alone and thinking about it for a future Trash Classics program. Seeing it on the big screen, and with a full audience in Cinema 1, was definitely a greater way to experience it and the best time I’ve had watching it (out of the four or five times I’ve seen it in my life!). Enjoying every actor’s expressions and reaction shots, such as Eileen Brennan around the dining table. Hearing the continual laughter throughout the movie. A screening like that can really reveal what makes a movie have a shelf life, attendees ranging across the generations. Director Jonathan Lynn aiming for screwball comedy pace, but also carrying the 1980s-era’s taste for loudness equals comedy, people running around and bumping into each other, one-liners and verbal routines. There’s irony in a movie being adapted from a board-game and the murder mystery cliches, but there’s also a full-blown commitment to farce. If the long rumoured remake ever eventuated, could it even match the level of commitment? Of Tim Curry hot-stepping around like a mansion like maniac and repeating the whole plot of the movie to the characters across the climax? 

For the screening, there was a Murder Mystery costume competition and thanks to those who dressed up, including a French maid, a Mrs White, a Miss Scarlett, a combined Butler, a Columbo and someone who made their own t-shirt with the “flames on the side of my face” quote, which was amazing!

Black Moon Rising (1986)

Black Moon Rising (1986) had a video cover that was always in my mind’s eye and even though it was scripted by one of my favourite directors, John Carpenter, took me a very long time to actually see what it was all about. Turns out that it’s a great Eighties super-car B-movie that has everything you could ever want – Tommy Lee Jones and Linda Hamilton being cool as cucumber thieves at cross purposes, car chases at night, saxophone for the love scenes, a scene in a New Wave club, a Lalo Schrifin score, the lead singer of FEAR as a henchman (Lee Ving), and did I mention Tommy Lee Jones being very cocky in black denim jeans? While definitely of the time in being part of the wave of advanced vehicle movies and shows like Blue Thunder and Airwolf, but you know, a car. As a B-movie though, it does feel like the prototype for what Nicolas Winding Refn would aesthetically fetishise in Drive. An underrated action flick. Recommended.

Get Crazy (1983)

I’ve always wanted to see Get Crazy (1983) after hearing that Malcolm McDowell plays a Mick Jagger parody named Reggie Wanker. Someone put it all up onto YouTube and it’s a live action rock n roll cartoon (from Allan Arkush, director of Rock n Roll High School) that makes fun of hippies, rock, punk, new wave, all the while paying tribute to the days of the Filmore East. Stars a young Daniel Stern as the stage manager trying to keep it all together, Lee Ving from FEAR as the chained up punker “Piggy”, and Lou Reed wryly funny as the reclusive rock poet legend named “Auden”. Crammed full of silly gags and great energetic performances. Recommended.