$1.00
"Strip:" The process of removing one's clothes. Sometimes a process which can
be used to seduce, entice or titillate. Sometimes a process in which clothing
is removed just because it has to be.
"Tease:" The act of making a person think he/she is going to get more than
they actually are going to.
"Striptease:" A motion picture whose inferred promise, a sexy comedy with a
naked Demi Moore, and other women in various states of undress is better
summed up by the second definition above, and the second part of the first.
As always, Cranky makes no comparison with the source material, in this case
the novel by Carl Hiaasen.
The night it opened, actor Ving Rhames made the David Letterman audience stand
up and shout "'Striptease' is not no damn 'Showgirl'" at the top of their
lungs. Well, it isn't. It's worse. "Showgirls" was the utmost in bad acting
on top of a bad script. "Striptease" is well acted on top of a script that
has no idea what it wants the movie to be.
Erin Grant (Demi Moore) is a beautiful young woman who has lost custody of her
7-year-old daughter to a pill popping, wheelchair stealing, piece of white
trash ex-husband. The convoluted reasoning is that she is unemployed and thus
cannot care for the kid. She is unemployed because White Trash was an
informant for the vice squad. His unseemly lifestyle got Erin's security
clearance and job as a secretary for the FBI, nixed.
To raise the fifteen grand for her legal appeal, Erin takes a job as a
stripper at a very upscale club called the "Eager Beaver." The name is an
oxymoron. The women neither lap-dance nor hook; they don't even touch the
clientele. Those in the audience who
try to do anything more than slip a twenty dollar bill into a garter are
summarily removed by the bouncer, Shad (Rhames), who spends his time trying to
dream up legal lawsuit scams against big corporations and thus get out of the
sleazy business.
Thing is, Erin is a pretty damned good stripper. Working the runway to the
pounding beat of songs by Annie Lennox, she has developed a coterie of fans,
including a nerd named Jerry and a truly warped Congressman named David
Dilbeck (Burt Reynolds).
One gets murdered. The other does unspeakable things with clothes-dryer lint
and the rest of the story pushes absurdity to the limit by including the Cuban
Mafia, sugar price supports, crooked lawyers, and a straight arrow cop (Armand
Assante) in the mix.
It's all terribly absurd. Emphasis on terrible. And that's a disappointment
because writer/director Andrew Bergman has more than once shown his ability
to take absurd stories and make them hysterically funny. "Honeymoon in Vegas"
and "The Freshman" come to mind. But in "Striptease," absurd is replaced by
bizarre, and bizarre just ain't funny. It could have been a gritty drama,
laced with sex and murder. It could have been a sex farce, with murder and
cover-up motivating more and more sex jokes. It could
have been funny, but it is so only when Shad the Bouncer (Ving Rhames) dryly
comments on the actions at hand. He steals the show.
On average, a first run movie ticket will run you Eight Bucks. Were Cranky
able to set his own price to "Striptease," he would have paid...
$1.00
For Ving Rhames' performance.
The Cranky Critic (tm) and (c) 1996 Chuck Schwartz. All Rights Reserved.