Thursday, September 5, 2024

CAPTAIN MILKSHAKE (1970)

Title: CAPTAIN MILKSHAKE

Year of Release: 1970

Director: Richard Crawford

Genre: Drama, War

Synopsis: A young Marine on leave from the Vietnam War falls for a young woman, and is caught up in a number of antiwar, and counterculture events at this time.

Within a film history contextThere were quite a few movies made in the late 1960s, and early 1970s, which explored Vietnam veterans, and their return to American society. The vast majority were exploitation films in character, with some occasional forays into more thoughtful territory. One of the first was Russ Meyer's MOTORPSYCHO! (1965). A film with revenge and murder themes, the Vietnam veteran of the piece was a psychologically tormented man capable of anything. The Vietnam veteran protagonist of THE BORN LOSERS (1967), Billy Jack, was a man more morally upright than other variations on the theme, helping to keep a sense of law and order in a small town, namely protecting the young women from harm. Such was the popularity of this film, directed by actor Tom Laughlin, that it led to four sequels over the course of almost twenty years. 

Nick Millard's ODDO (1967), was different in nature, with a veteran emotionally spent, and finding fault with anyone who crossed him. Another Vietnam veteran with psychological problems played out in Bruce Kessler's ANGELS FROM HELL (1968). The veteran on this occasion was an ex-biker returning to build a new biker gang, seeking to take on the police at their own game. Many of these films, and other examples from the 1960s, were action-oriented in nature, with little, if no, time for reflection. The 1970s also had its mix of exploitation and more conventional narratives, the mental fragility of Vietnam veterans the main accelerator of action.

A most infamous depiction of a Vietnam veteran was THE RAVAGER (1970), directed by Charles Nizet. Notorious for its violent content, it was about a veteran returning home to become a killer and rapist, as he experienced in Vietnam. Rated X in 1970, it is notable for its sheer reveling in sex and violence, something later movies also capitalized on. More comic in intent was Brian De Palma's HI, MOM! (1970). Without violence but with more comedy asides, it was the seventh film of Robert De Niro as a veteran living in an apartment block, and his experiences with the other people there. Burt Topper's THE HARD RIDE (1971), featured bikers similar to others in the genre, but this time around, the plot concentrated upon a man promising his Vietnam friend to carry out a deed, but finding this demanding to deliver. 

One of the most expressive, impressive films about veterans returning home was Richard Compton's WELCOME HOME SOLDIER BOYS (1971). A carefully plotted film that builds to an unexpected, plausible climax, it was one of the best films in this genre. Similarly, MY OLD MAN'S PLACE (1971), directed by Edwin Sherwin, was a more character-driven piece than action focused in scope. Two veterans join another on a farm, where tensions between them spill over. On the other hand, Gunther Collins' JUD (1971), was an independent film which followed a Vietnam veteran, and charted his return to society in a most thoughtful manner. Different in scope and character, SKYJACKED (1972), directed by John Guillermin, showcased a veteran as an airplane hijacker. Trading more in suspense than violence, it was one of the most restrained examples of the genre. In comparison to these films, CAPTAIN MILKSHAKE again surveyed a Vietnam veteran, but diverted in many ways from previous entries.

In surveying the other movies in the genre, it is refreshing that CAPTAIN MILKSHAKE has a Vietnam veteran who is basically well-adjusted psychologically. This was evident also in THE BORN LOSERS, with its mentally-sound lead character, and in JUD, where he managed to maintain a sense of himself, despite being in some stressful situations. Many of the other movies capitalized on the respective veteran's mental instability, such as in MOTORPSYCHO!, ODDO, THE RAVAGER, and WELCOME HOME SOLDIER BOYS. This was mainly employed for visual purposes, whereby violent passages occur with a veteran losing his grip on reality, and turning against those who he feels have wronged him, with innocent people in the firing line in some instances. This was particularly evident in WELCOME HOME SOLDIER BOYS, but the difference with the former films is that it had a well-developed storyline which explored why the veterans wreaked havoc on a small town and its inhabitants. None of this appears in CAPTAIN MILKSHAKE, which gives it a point of difference from the other slam-bang movies.

In CAPTAIN MILKSHAKE, Paul silently ponders his life while having flashbacks of his tour of duty in Vietnam. Viewers are given first-hand knowledge of Paul's thought processes, instead of him exploding for inexplicable reasons, which does stifle the realism of MOTORPSYCHO!, ODDO, and THE RAVAGER. Paul actually enunciates his experiences in Vietnam to other people, setting up a debate on the issue in which the audience can participate. In addition, CAPTAIN MILKSHAKE is also notable for its anti-war sequences featured throughout the movie. This is something that the other movies did not contain as they were straight narratives in comparison to CAPTAIN MILKSHAKE. The segments are slanted toward peace, and anti-Vietnam war sentiments, but, nevertheless, are important as a movie which takes a strong position on war and its aftermath. The scene with the mother of a Vietnam soldier who died in conflict is one of the best scenes in the film, moving in its execution. One of the best of the pictures about Vietnam war veterans, CAPTAIN MILKSHAKE is a candid movie.

Overview: Richard Crawford is an American director with only CAPTAIN MILKSHAKE to his credit. In addition to helming the movie, he also was responsible for the writing, and producing capacities. As he only made a single movie in his career, naturally the overview will concentrate on Mr Crawford's contribution to CAPTAIN MILKSHAKE.

With CAPTAIN MILKSHAKE, Richard Crawford has crafted a thought-provoking and daring motion picture. Taking as its subject a Vietnam veteran who has returned to his hometown on leave, and the many challenges he faces, it is both entertaining but also, an emotional movie experience. Mr Crawford has successfully juxtaposed a number of elements in his film, with the exploration of the lead character and his psychological makeup, late 1960s/early 1970s counterculture, romance, and anti-war sentiments. In general, these mesh well during the course of the movie, and keep things fresh and always evolving. The film is at its height particularly when examining the leisurely romance between carefree, hippy Melissa, and pensive returning veteran Paul, their family interactions, and the various anti-war set pieces the picture features. Story events unfold in a manner which is pleasing to witness, in keeping with the film's measured tone. There are, though, a number of aspects which unfortunately do go against the movie's grain as a whole.

While CAPTAIN MILKSHAKE is observant as a movie in terms of its milieu and characters, it does feel sometimes that it is too keen-eyed in certain instances. These do take up time which could have been better served in more emotional set pieces, a strength of the movie. Several examples come to mind. Paul and his friend visiting the bar with the topless waitress does nothing to further the story, only providing the film with a cheesy, exploitative feel. The scene where Melissa skinny dips in the pool with her friends, likewise where she and Paul do the same in the ocean, are needless, and only offer superficial titillation, but nothing more. Sequences where drugs are featured also seem to drag the film's pace. It could be said that these were representative of the picture's time period, but in retrospect, feel dated. CAPTAIN MILKSHAKE would have done well by looking at Melissa's relationship with her mother, and Paul's with his mother. This would have given them even more background, and a useful back story. In spite of these weaknesses, some things can be said about CAPTAIN MILKSHAKE. It is a sincere movie which convinces viewers of its anti-war stance with style, and in an edifying manner.

Acting: There are six performances in CAPTAIN MILKSHAKE which deserve praise. In the lead role of Marine Paul Fredericks, on leave from Vietnam, Geoff Gage is excellent. With his clean-cut looks and thoughtful manner, Mr Gage leaves one to ponder the absence of a talented actor to cinema. Paul's ladylove, the restless but sensitive Melissa, is played with jazzy appeal by Andrea Cagan. Her subtle anti-establishment leaning, and dislike for niceties, makes Melissa a nice match for Paul. As Paul's mother Mrs Fredericks, Belle Greer is another understated acting interpretation. Her comforting ways, and lack of pretension, steer her to the role of best mother in the movie. Three other actors contribute great work in CAPTAIN MILKSHAKE.

As Thesp, one of Melissa and Paul's friends, and a major instigator of the anti-war movement, David Korn offers yet another distinctive portrayal to CAPTAIN MILKSHAKE. Mr Korn's unique presence lends a visual counterpart to Paul and the other male characters, as a warrior in the picture. Melissa's upwardly mobile mother, Mrs Hamilton, is a small but telling role for Darlene Conley. Her singular presence is rewarding to witness, as it assists in explaining Melissa's reticence for refinement, and is entertaining in and of itself. The final acting of note was by Joanne Moore Jordan as Mrs Randolph, a woman in the anti-war peace rally who has lost her son in Vietnam. Miss Jordan makes clear her stance for the audience, appearing to become emotional at any time, but keeping her composure, ensuring that Mrs Randolph is one of the most telling characters in CAPTAIN MILKSHAKE.

Soundtrack: Despite being a picture of the early 1970s, CAPTAIN MILKSHAKE is pleasingly light-handed in its approach to its soundtrack. The movie could have been weighed down by a frenetic soundtrack, but thankfully is not of this orientation. There are a number of songs played at various moments in the narrative, with some diegetic uses of these. The most prominent is 'Untitled Protest', performed by Country Joe and the Fish. With its clear but no-nonsense take on the topic of war, it is a perfect summing up of the futility of war, adding a foreboding atmosphere to the film's end.

Mise-en-scene: Visually, CAPTAIN MILKSHAKE has much to recommend it. Cinematography by Robert Sherry is beautiful, particularly the beach scenes which the picture utilizes throughout its running time. The contrast between black and white, and colour photography also works well, and provides the film with a stimulating bridge between different scenes. The visual effects by Reggie Hager, Joe Purcell, and Harry Woolman, especially at the movie's conclusion, are also effective, lending it a pathos, and starkness, which haunts the senses.

Notable Acting Performances: Geoff Gage, Andrea Cagan, Belle Greer, David Korn, Darlene Conley, Joanne Moore Jordan.

Suitability for young viewers: No. Infrequent coarse language, male nudity, female nudity, adult themes, medium-level violence.

Overall Grade: B

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Sunday, September 1, 2024

THE REVOLUTIONARY (1970)

Title: THE REVOLUTIONARY

Year of Release: 1970

Director: Paul Williams

Genre: Drama

Synopsis: A young male student rebels against his university association, believing that strong action has to be taken for reform of their activities.

Within a film history context: Movies about revolutionary figures were quite common in European and world cinema, with various examples found in American film history. The silent screen had several American and Russian pictures with a revolutionist central character, many of which are considered lost. One of the first movies to deal with a revolutionary was Josef von Sternberg's silent THE LAST COMMAND (1928). A Hollywood film director, previously a radical in Imperial Russia, seeks the services of a former Russian general to star in a picture about the Russian Revolution, an event which affected them both heartily. Into the sound era, comedy CRACKED NUTS (1931), directed by Edward Cline, was completely contrary. The machinations of a man who wishes to win a woman's favour, and move closer to her niece, by arranging for the overthrow of a country's king, was an early pre-Code movie. With Reinhold Schunzel's BALALAIKA (1939), an officer in the Russian army falls for a singer, who is in fact a covert revolutionary, but their union is complicated by the backdrop of turmoil during World War I in this romance. TORRID ZONE (1940), directed by William Keighley, spotlighted a plantation owner in South America whose livelihood was threatened by a revolutionary, whose influence on the workers there causes nothing but problems. In Robert Z. Leonard's musical NEW MOON (1940), a nobleman masquerading as an indentured servant leads his cohorts to rebel against their ship's captain. 

WE WERE STRANGERS (1949), directed by John Huston, had as its focus a man, and a woman, who worked together with associates to overthrow the despotic president of Cuba in the early 1930s. Elia Kazan's VIVA ZAPATA! (1952), was the stirring biopic of Mexican revolutionary Emiliano Zapata, and his efforts to topple corrupt government regimes. With Marlon Brando in the lead, Anthony Quinn and Jean Peters in support, it was a memorable picture. THE ROOTS OF HEAVEN (1958), directed by John Huston, had an ecologist at its fore, whose aim was to protect endangered African elephants from extinction. He attained the assistance of several people, but with detractors from his point of view in this drama. The life and adventures of Scottish sea captain John Paul Jones were dissected in John Farrow's aptly titled JOHN PAUL JONES (1959). From his early life on ships, journey to America, and exploits in Russia defending Empress Catherine the Great, it starred Robert Stack in the eponymous role. In contrast, THE DAY THEY ROBBED THE BANK OF ENGLAND (1960), directed by John Guillermin, also had characters as revolutionaries in the narrative. At the turn of the twentieth century, several IRA members plan to rob the Bank of England, but the execution of this is not as simple as first envisioned. Basil Dearden's KHARTOUM (1966), followed the efforts of a British general to protect the city from a religious zealot who will do anything to wrest control of it. 

In western VILLA RIDES (1968), directed by Buzz Kulik, Mexican revolutionary Pancho Villa teams up with an American aviator to bring about change in the country. The life and times of influential American dancer and choreographer Isadora Duncan was the premise for Karel Reisz's ISADORA (1968). With her lack of inhibitions, and commitment to her artistry, she blazed a trail in her time, this deftly conveyed by Vanessa Redgrave in the lead role. On the other hand, Lindsay Anderson's IF... (1968), observed an uprising by students at a boy's boarding school, headed by a number of pupils whose vehemence against the establishment reaches its zenith. 100 RIFLES (1969), directed by Tom Gries, revolved around a Mexican revolutionary seeking to free his people of a dictatorial regime. He joins forces with a Mexican woman, and an American lawman, to fulfil his quest. Richard Fleischer's CHE! (1969), was an account of the life of Argentine revolutionary Ernesto Guevera, more commonly known as Che, his involvement with Fidel Castro in Cuba, political problems there, and in Bolivia. THE REVOLUTIONARY was a movie which was dramatic in its orientation, as were the majority of films in this category, but distinguished itself from these in its own way.

Many of the films of this kind were based around characters caught up in political unrest in a respective country, such as THE LAST COMMAND, CRACKED NUTS, WE WERE STRANGERS, VIVA ZAPATA!, KHARTOUM, VILLA RIDES, CHE!, and 100 RIFLES. Generally, it was a strong male character going against corrupt regimes, and in quite a few instances, paying the price for their loyalty with their lives. There was support from other male protagonists, and, in rare instances such as WE WERE STRANGERS and 100 RIFLES, female characters. On this count, a female revolutionist could be found in BALALAIKA and ISADORA, but this was the exception rather than the rule. In comparison to those pictures which spotlighted turmoil in a particular country, the other examples had a less worldly view of events, with character being both revolutionaries, and activists for a cause. In NEW MOON, the lead had a concern for the rights of his fellow ship mates, and in ROOTS OF HEAVEN, the conservation of elephants was the burning issue. Other features of these films in comparison to THE REVOLUTIONARY are worthy of dissection.

Decidedly villainous depictions of revolutionaries were found in TORRID ZONE, IF...and THE DAY THEY ROBBED THE BANK OF ENGLAND. The people in these caused more mayhem than any real good by their actions. In IF...the bloodshed does not further anything positive, just a rebellion for the sake of one in the school. THE REVOLUTIONARY was along the lines of those radicals, as in the other films, who wanted to see a change for the better. In this case, the revolutionist strived for improvements both in university, and employment arenas, but was not able to achieve this aim. Where THE REVOLUTIONARY diverts from other entries is in its much quieter presentation of events. There is no melodrama in this movie, which marked WE WERE STRANGERS, VIVA ZAPAPA!, and KHARTOUM. Instead of this, the mood is slow and thoughtful, in keeping with the flavour of early 1970s New Hollywood cinema. The use of the main female romantic lead is also interesting, as she does not become caught up in her boyfriend's activities, but is mostly there in support. There is some minor suspense when she is meeting him in secret, but that is the extent of her role in the movie. An uncommon view of a revolutionist, THE REVOLUTIONARY is notable for its take on this type of character.

Overview: Paul Williams is an American director who has made eight motion pictures over a period of thirty-three years. His films consisted of dramas, comedies, and thrillers. Mr Williams' first movie, OUT OF IT (1969), juxtaposed two very different men, and their interactions with women, with one a bookworm, the other, a ladies' man in this comedy. DEALING: OR THE BERKELEY-TO-BOSTON FORTY-BRICK LOST-BAG BLUES (1972) was another comedy. The transportation of drugs from one city to another takes a wrong turn for a university law student, in that his girlfriend is arrested for the second cache, and seeks to get both the stash, and his love, back. With NUNZIO (1978), matters were of an entirely different nature. A grown man with mental issues believes he is Superman, but his life takes unexpected twists and turns in this touching drama. In MISS RIGHT (1985), a central male protagonist is at its center, with a Lothario journalist busily hopping from one woman to the other, but finding difficulty in extricating himself from these liaisons. A move into thrillers for Paul Williams resulted in MIRAGE (1995). Trouble starts when a man enlists a detective to tail his wife, who has emotional troubles, namely a personality disorder, causing the private eye's world to turn upside down. THE REVOLUTIONARY was Paul Williams' second movie, but not a sterling achievement.

Paul Williams has attempted to create a thoughtful motion picture with THE REVOLUTIONARY, but has come up short in its execution. The tribulations of a university student whose dissatisfaction with his college leads him on a quest to change the system, albeit unsuccessfully, it is a dispiriting movie experience. While there are some fleeting scenes which give momentary hope to the spectator that a sense of excitement will prevail, these are in vain. It is a film which does have a certain mood and feel, but it is too slow-paced, and listless, to maintain one's attention span. This happens, that happens, but there is never a sense of urgency, or emotional attachment, which emerges out of this. It is as if THE REVOLUTIONARY is a stylistic exercise which does not unravel as it should. On paper, it might have seemed better, but the reality is opposite to this. The conclusion is also problematic, and the fallout from this makes the viewer feel cheated, as it just ends with a freeze frame. A sincere but misguided attempt at building a portrait of a revolutionary, THE REVOLUTIONARY makes one consider how much better it would have been with surer handling, and a more gripping presentation.

Acting: There is a trio of acting performances which are of note in THE REVOLUTIONARY. As A, the student revolutionary, Jon Voight offers yet another incisive acting interpretation. An actor with a wide portfolio of roles over many years, he had a knack for portraying people on the fringes of society in his younger years, and this part suits him. He is well-paired with the radiant Helen, played with earnestness by Jennifer Salt. With her gracious and lively demeanor, Miss Salt provides an ethereal glow to the movie that alleviates its duller stretches. The final acting of merit in THE REVOLUTIONARY is by Seymour Cassel as Leonard, one of A's friends and accomplices. Mr Cassel always knows how to light up the proceedings, and this is no exception. Leonard's relaxed defiance is a nice contrast to A's more stony-faced reactions to events, making Leonard another memorable character in THE REVOLUTIONARY.

Soundtrack: In terms of its soundtrack, Michael Small has been careful to not overload the movie, despite a heady concentration on its subject matter. Music is most discernible during the opening credits sequence, with its background of photographs depicting revolutionaries, and in the closing segment. The soundtrack appears sporadically throughout THE REVOLUTIONARY, only at the most urgent of moments, which works well for it overall.

Mise-en-scene: In a visual sense, work has gone into THE REVOLUTIONARY to make it a convincing experience for the spectator. Brian Probyn's colour photography is perfect without being overly bright, making sense for an intense movie about revolutionaries, and their harried lives. Both interiors, and exteriors, have been carefully selected, representing the locales of a small town well. The introductory credits are also impressive, utilizing photographs of past revolutionary events, and figures, to place the incidents in the movie into perspective for viewers, by charting their development over time.

Notable Acting Performances: Jon Voight, Jennifer Salt, Seymour Cassel.

Suitability for young viewers: No. Infrequent coarse language, male nudity, female nudity, adult themes.

Overall Grade: D

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