
The seemingly uncomplimentary worlds of feminine fascism, organized lesbianism, and hippie nudism clash like they've never clashed before in the uproarious
Desperate Living, John Waters' genteel ode to societal decay and the problems that can arise while trying to muff dive in a dystopian morass of your own making. Taking the borderline distasteful banquet of tainted meat and deformed potatoes the demented writer-director severed us in his previous ventures, Baltimore's most uncontaminated resident has dipped his latest cinematic nugget in a steaming cauldron of rabid bat pus, and sprinkled it with a hint rat urine. On the threshold of engaging in a full-on giddy fit on a number of occasions, this has to be one of the funniest movies I have ever seen. Sure, the characters that populate the world of Mortville, a dilapidated refuge for murders, nondescript scumbags, well-kept nudists, pie merchants, and lesbian wrestlers with excess facial moles, aren't exactly the most pleasant people to spend ninety minutes with. However, in my well-balanced mind, they represented the best and brightest the humanity have to offer.

The words and sentences these folks utter at the top of their lungs had me fumbling to retrieve the lacy contents my niminy-piminy lingerie collection and caused me to repeatedly roll around in a slimy heap of uncooked shellfish in an odd, yet rational celebration of its sheer wrongness. Yep, it was
that funny. I mean, self-castration has never been rendered this humourous before.

The story of
Desperate Living follows the on the lam adventures of professional neurotic Peggy Gravel and her alcoholic, Tampax-shielding housemaid Grizelda Brown after they kill Peggy's husband (Peggy knocks him unconscious, Grizelda asphyxiates him with her extremely large ass).
After a vexing run-in with a perverted motorcycle cop (the sight of the randy policeman writhing on the leafy ground while wearing both Peggy's and Grizelda's incompatible panties–along with his own panties–was strangely relatable), the fugitives find themselves in the aforementioned town of Mortville. Where they end up rooming with Mole, a surly dyke, and her bosomy girlfriend, Muffy (
Liz Renay), and living under the tyrannical rule of one Queen Carlotta.

Protected by her platoon of gay bikers not on acid (leather-clad sycophants who give her sexual gratification at the drop of a hat), the pudgy monarch (played to the hilt of madness by
Edith Massey) is randomly cruel and has a tight grip on the town. Nevertheless, there are signs of weakness. Specifically in the form of Princess Coo-Coo (a sexy, even with rabies,
Mary Vivian Pearce), who's dating of a garbage man/nudist causes the Queen much anguish. Now, I'm no pundit, but this bit of family strife could start a revolution in Mortville.

The film is slathered in wonderfully diseased dialogue from start to finish, and who better to recite this dialogue than
Mink Stole. I mean, I can't think of anyone I would rather watch go completely berserk over the simplest thing than Miss Mink. Her brazen turn as the mentally askew Peggy Gravel solidifies my opinion that she is the most accomplished actress in the history of cinematic filthiness.

Sporting an unexplained leg brace (which I constantly pictured resting atop my right shoulder as I gingerly defiled her aura) and her trademark gorgeousness (she looked like a catalogue model with stringy hair), Mink circumnavigates the bawdy and disgusting realm of Mortville with a breathtaking ease.

Seriously, the transition she makes from a puritanical housewife who hates nature to a hydrophobia producing fascist brought little bits of yellow matter custard to my eyes. Breathtaking ease aside, it was actually her pre-Mortville tirade that impressed me the most; as it's a thing of unhinged beauty.

Coming in second in the diseased dialogue department is the fearless
Susan Lowe as Mole McHenry (a.k.a. Rastlin' Rita). Covered in moles and boasting an unflattering haircut (even by raging butch standards), Miss Lowe chews up Waters' unbalanced prose and spits it all over the place. An inspiration not only to tempestuous dykes the world over, but an inspiration to us all. If only everyone shared her headstrong approach to life. So here's to Mole McHenry: Trailblazing visionary with a festering Barbie-doll crotch.
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