Tucked away amidst a vast field of downy feathers, the reproductive organs of your average cigar-chomping duck from the far reaches of the cosmos are just waiting to be provoked by the right kind of visual stimuli. And to think, I was originally gonna start this paragraph off with a frightfully pedantic bit on how to avoid using duck-related wordplay when talking about Howard the Duck, a wonderfully plumose film that will soothe your inner mallard. If you were a heterosexual drake from outer space (a "drake," by the way, is what people who abuse thesauruses call a male duck), what kind of female Earth creature would you want to rescue from the unguiculated clutches of the dark overlord of the universe? You're absolutely right, it couldn't be just any old female Earth creature. Certainly not V.I.C.I. (Voice Input Child Identicant) from Small Wonder, or its Indian counterpart, Karishma Ka Karishma, that would be creepy as all get out. No, I think most people will agree that they would have to be pretty darned special to justify the amount grief the anthropomorphic space duck in this cinematic lark has to endure on a daily basis. What I would like all the male's out there to do is stop thinking about Sandra Bernhard in a zebra-print negligée for five seconds and try to imagine what actress Lea Thompson would look like in a pair of pink tights. Oh, and don't worry, that slight tingle you just felt in the lumpy area near your groin after I finished writing the word "tights" is completely natural (feel free to adjust yourself if need be). Okay, now try to imagine Lea, while still thinking about her shapely legs crammed into a pair of pink tights, with crimped hair. Don't be alarmed, the moist sensation you're currently experiencing is not being caused by urine, no, you just ejaculated sperm, my friend, and it was achieved without any physical manipulation on my part.
Check this out, by simply telling you to picture Lea Thompson (it actually didn't matter what her legs were sheathed in or how wavy her hair was), I was able to extract a robust dollop of your precious jizz. Pretty radical, huh? Now what do you think would happen to the cock of a well-travelled duck if the first human female they came in contact with looked like Lea Thompson circa 1986? You know exactly what would happen, the feather displacement alone would be devastating.
In no way, shape, or form does it promote bestialty (Howard's a duck from another planet, and not a local duck), Howard the Duck is about love and acceptance, not crimped hair drenched in space spunk. Of course, I've made it seem that way–you know, with all my talk of duck erections and pink tights. But then again, can you blame me? Not to blow on a metaphorical horn that represents my greatness, but my ability to induce guys into discharging their semen is legendary.
Bursting out of the gate with more duck puns than any other film in history, Howard the Duck, based on the comic book created by writer Steve Gerber and artist Val Mayerik, starts off on a planet located in an unknown region of space. Sure, it looks like Earth, but upon further inspection, it's obvious that the planet is populated entirely by talking ducks. Plopping down in his chair after long day at work, Howard T. Duck (Ed Gale) can be seen flipping through channel after channel of duck-related programming on his television (my favourite was an ad for a product that promised to "eliminate feather fungus even in the most active of crotches"), when suddenly, well, first he checks out the centrefold ("hello, my airbrushed beauty") in the latest issue of Playduck magazine, but then suddenly, he's sucked out of his apartment and sent hurdling through space.
Floating through space, as the sound of Thomas Dolby's superb score twinkles on the soundtrack, Howard eventually crash lands in a magical place called Cleveland. Containing more punk and new wave cred in its first five minutes than most movies that are purportedly about punk and new wave, the wayward duck seems strangely at home in this kooky universe. However, despite it being replete with tough chicks who wear lingerie as outerwear, lesbian bikers (Satan's Sluts), and, not to mention, John Fleck in a leather jacket, Howard finds Cleveland a tad overwhelming (he's tossed around like a chew toy by a group of drunk punks).
Deciding to lay low in a trash can, Howard hears a bit of a kerfuffle going on outside (it sounds like two punks are picking on someone). Poking his head out to see what all the commotion is about, Howard lays eyes on Beverly Switzler (Lea Thompson) for the very first time (call me somewhat deluded, but the duck seemed to savour every saw-toothed inch of her jagged mane). Anyway, after he's done savouring her hair, Howard gives the punks a taste of what he likes to call "quack-fu" (okay, I'll admit, even I groaned at that one), which, to no one's surprise, causes Beverly's attackers to beat a hasty retreat.
Asking what Beverly what planet he is on (she thinks it's called "Earth"), it's right then and there that Howard finds out that he is in fact in Cleveland (he puts an emphasis on the space between "cleve" and "land" whenever he pronounces the city's name). Feeling sorry for the displaced water fowl, Beverly invites Howard to stay at her place. While doing her best impression of Soledad Miranda from Eugénie de Sade (she hugs her own legs while sitting on her window sill), Beverly watches her new feathered friend fall asleep. Which, of course, gives her the opportunity to poke through Howard's wallet without him knowing (paper money that was issued in the United States of Anatidae, a duck prophylactic, and a Bloomingducks credit card).
As is the case with most pop singers with crispy bangs–did I mention that Beverly fronts a new wave band (think Jem and the Holograms meets the Bangles) called Cherry Bomb? No? Well, she does, and her rendition of "Hunger City" rocks–Beverly knows a research scientist who works at the city's museum. The plan is to ask a twitchy fella named Phil Blumburtt (Tim Robbins) to help them figure how Howard ended up in Cleveland. Unfortunately, it turns out Phil is merely a lab assistant, which, for some reason, causes Howard and Beverly to get into an argument adjacent to a water fountain (the pinkness of Lea's pink tights really shine through during this scene).
Stomping off in a huff, Beverly leaves Howard to fend for himself on the cruel streets of Cleveland. Realizing that Earth ain't exactly the most duck-friendly planet in the galaxy, Howard quits his job at a massage parlour/spa and winds up back where he started, at one of Cherry Bomb's gigs. Employing his quack-fu on the corrupt management that oversee the financial well-being of Beverly's band (they were pocking their earnings all for themselves - after all... it's a competitive world), Howard apologizes for being such an ungrateful duck and takes over as their manager.
Meanwhile, back at Beverly's apartment, the sleazoids in the audience need to prepare themselves, because the infamous "pink panties/bed crawl" scene is about to commence. While the angle writer-director Willard Huyack ends up going with could have been more perverse, the end result (no pun intended) is still a terrific example of unforeseen titillation. Tormenting Howard with the minute smallness of her unwrinkled pink panties, Beverly causes the feathers on top of his head to become erect. Seeing this as a sign that Howard is ready to engage in a raucous session of interspecies loving-making, Beverly thrusts her taut, soon-to-be quivering body in the general direction of the demure space duck.
If you haven't finished masturbating by the time the pink panties/bed crawl scene comes along, I'm afraid you're... actually, I don't know whether to congratulate or ridicule you (the former for managing to thwart your orgasm this long, the latter because, well, duh, you're pleasuring yourself to Howard the Duck). Seriously, though, you better hurry up because the film quickly morphs into an action-packed thrill ride once Jeffrey Jones shows up as Dr. Jenning, a scientist at Dynatechnics who gives Howard the skinny on how he arrived in Cleveland. An exhaustive chase scene involving an ultralight aircraft (a sequence where a handcuffed Tim Robbins hams up a storm) and a chaotic laser cannon duel between Howard and a monstrous crab-like alien (a.k.a. the dark overlord of the universe) are the film's primary focus once Beverly covers her pink panties with a bed sheet.
I did, however, enjoy the post-pink panties/bed crawl scene at Joe Roma's, Cleveland's best Cajun sushi house. What I liked about this part of the movie, besides the fact that Howard tries to look up Beverly's skirt, the sinister nature of Jeffrey Jones's demon voice (the way he says, "give me the code key," was so '80s - code keys were all the rage during the Reagan Administration), and the phrase "hostility is like a psychic boomerang" is employed, was that all the waitstaff wore hachimakis. I don't know, there's something oddly appealing/off-putting about white people who embrace Japanese culture, especially cute white people like, Jorli McLain, who plays a waitress named Crystal (she also utters the psychic boomerang line).
Just for the record, the extremely raffish-looking shirt Lea Thompson wears during the diner section of the movie is definitely something I want to add to my nonexistent collection of movie wardrobe oddities.
Speaking of wardrobe oddities, the film's costume designer, Joe I. Tompkins, was definitely working at the top of his stylistic game in Howard the Duck. Take, for example, the character of Beverly Switzler, her outfits were off the charts in terms of creativity and playfulness. The seemingly erratic combination of fingerless opera gloves, black nylons, pink polka dot scarfs, brown coats, red high heel boots paired with purple socks, pink tights, tricked-out letterman jackets (the Keith Haring-esque sleeves were to die for), short tartan skirts with modest slits in the front, and jean jackets covered in metallic holes all screamed thrift store chic. Sure, from a slob's perspective, it appears that her many looks were simply thrown together in a haphazard manner. But if you look closely, and I mean really closely, you'll start to see a weird brand symmetry transuding from her mingle-mangle-inspired ensembles.
While the action scenes do drag on a bit during the film's final third, we do get to see Lea Thompson tied up twice. Yeah, that's right bondage fans, the leggy actress is bound in the back of a truck (the more she struggles, the tighter the ropes seem to dig into her flesh) and on a metal lab table (one equipped with built-in straps to prevent damsels from causing their captors any unnecessary distress).
The Paris Hilton of intergalactic duck movies, Howard the Duck is a prime example of decentralized decision making run amok. The negative ripple that washed over this movie upon its initial release was insurmountable. Yet none of its many detractors seem to bother mentioning Lea Thompson's legs, or her crimped hair, or even her penchant for fingerless gloves whilst stabbing it to death with their critical knives. Which is something that always struck me as rather odd. Could it be that their hatred of the upright duck has clouded their ability to watch filmed entertainment in a rationale manner? Part of me can see how the film might test the spiritual resolve of the fowl averse sitting in the audience, but everyone else should be busy basking in the new wave glow that radiated off Lea Thompson as she fell head over heels with a duck named Howard. Cringe if you must, especially when the duck is spouting lines like, "no more Mr. Nice Duck, but don't belittle a film that is, at its core, a love story for the ages.
Well-oiled drum machines pump out their righteous beats with a disjointed nonchalance, a rhinestone prosthesis is secretly acquired under the cover of darkness, and, while in the middle of a performing song on stage, a musically inclined vampire orders Chinese food; these are just a mere pittance of the colossal awesomeness on display in the uproariously funny Rockula, a film that spoke to me on a number of unwell levels. Seemingly lost in the pitiless void that is cinematic indifference, the physical act of discovering this headphone thumping rock masterpiece was a minor miracle. Yet another in a long line of entertainment slabs that have been gestating in an obscure funk just waiting for me to come along and overly bask in their nutritious glow. Bold and audacious at every turn, filmmaker Luca Bercovici has somehow managed to not only create the world's lone rock and roll vampire comedy starring Toni Basil and Thomas Dolby, but he has somehow managed to create the world's greatest rock and roll vampire comedy starring Toni Basil and Thomas Dolby. Replete with lavishly modest musical numbers that come and go with a delightful randomness, mirror-based tomfoolery, comical funeral advertisements, strange swords fights that employ even stranger swords, and the most clean shaven protagonist in the stubbled history of onscreen grooming, the film is a bizarre mishmash of things that shouldn't be mashed together. However, it all inexplicably commingles with one another like a first-class stew.
Making one long for that kooky period of time when the 1980s were starting to run out of gas, Rockula reeks of a decade on its last legs. It's this desperation that gives the batty opus its nonrepresentational sense of urgency. It is obvious that the powers that be will not be allowing so-called "creative types" to make musicals about virginal vampires who must save their true love every twenty-two years from a ham bone wielding pirate in the near future. So the time for action is now, and boy, did they ever act. The amount of sheer wrongness that takes place in this film is baffling. Nevertheless, this wrongness is always counterbalanced through the double-dyed commitment to excellence of the cast and crew. Which is important, because a movie like this doesn't make itself, it needs to be nurtured by the hands of skilled craftsmen.
Funny in a self-deprecating sort of way, Dean Cameron and his first-rate eyebrows shine bright as the Ralph LaVie, the world's lamest vampire. Cursed to see Mona, the love of his life, repeatedly killed by a pirate over the past three hundred years (it's a complicated curse), the lonesome vamp decides enough is enough, and tries to save Mona this time around by thwarting the murderous buccaneer through the power of rock.
The sarcastic Dean injects a witty charm into proceedings as the lovelorn bloodsucker, and has a terrific rapport with the more confident version of himself that lives inside reflective surfaces. He is also solid when comes to being romantic and junk with the lithesome Tawny Fere (Angel III: The Final Chapter) and belting out the rocking songs that are featured throughout the film (the nocturnal duet with Tawny blew me away and the Elvis tinged number was glorious).
He even shows off his rapping skills on, you guessed it, "Rapula." Sure, there's a mild cringe-like sensation at first, but when he sincerely raps the line "He's the DJ, I'm the vampire," but that cringe quickly turns to genuine laughter. Oh, and having the always amazing Susan Tyrrell (sporting a blonde bowl cut) manning the wheels of steel and Bo Diddley rocking the spandex didn't exactly hurt, either. Speaking of spinning wax, the attractive Nancye Ferguson mans the switchboard for Tawny's erotic number, "Turn Me Loose."
An absolutely scrumptious Toni Basil opens up a major can of fabulousness as the divine Phoebe LaVie, Ralph's animated mother. Putting the likes of Christian Death, Aqua, Bauhaus and The Sisters of Mercy to shame, the incomparable Miss Basil manages to out-goth them with a breathtaking ease while performing "The Night," a self-choreographed showstopper that renders all previous attempts at coquettishness inert and extremely flabby. Similar to the feeling one gets after being dipped a carnival dunk tank full of pure, undiluted sexiness, the act of watching Toni dance, cavort, and camp it up in this movie was beyond heavenly.
The misguided sense of privilege I felt as I watched Rockula unfold and hurtle headfirst toward that inevitable moment where the evil Stanley (a hilarious Thomas Dolby) receives his comeuppance was unfathomable. This movie needs to be savoured, not shunned. Like I said, at first glance, it may appear to be seeped in wrongheadedness, but deep down beats a heart that is truly awesome.