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Often
one of the biggest problems a film faces is having a hook
that will grab people in based on premise alone. Not so with
Don Coscarelli's Bubba Ho-tep. Elvis is alive and living in
a retirement home. One of his roommates: John F. Kennedy who
is also alive but now he's black. Together they have to roam
the halls and catch a soul-sucking mummy. Oh, yeah, Bruce
Campbell (Evil Dead) is Elvis. I was game the moment
I first heard of it. And while the premise is better on paper
than it actually plays out, Bubba Ho-tep is original
and quirky enough to still be worth watching.
Apparently
Elvis never died. Instead he retired from show business and
handed his legacy over to some schmuck impersonator á
la "The Prince and the Pauper" and went on living
a simpler life. Now he's lounging about alone in a Texas senior's
complex watching those around him die while pondering his
own mortality. He knows his life is coming to an end and wondering
what it would be like if his wife and daughter knew he was
still alive.
But
just when depression and complete loneliness are setting in,
the King meets a very much breathing JFK (Ossie Davis), who
has been in hiding for more than 40 years as a part of a CIA
cover-up. It seems that fateful day in Dallas where his brains
were splattered all over Jackie's pretty dress was a set up
for a power grab by Lyndon Johnson. So they took out a part
of his brain, dyed his skin and sent him off into a life of
hiding.
Together
Elvis and JFK become a geriatric Scooby Gang and set off to
solve the mystery of an Egyptian mummy who's been haunting
the hallways of their decrepit senior's home and sucking the
souls out of other abandoned residents.
Bubba
Ho-tep has all the makings of a midnight classic: odd
yet intriguing premise, pop culture icons in a new light and
Bruce Campbell. But Coscarelli goes beyond the traditional
cult status, opting for something that is fun and deep. At
least there's times where it's like that.
If
Bubba Ho-tep suffers anywhere, it's in the pacing department.
It ranges anywhere from playful and witty to tedious and,
dare I say, boring. To counter Campbell's masterful Elvis,
the mummy needed to be something special. That way both would
have come out stronger. Instead it's overshadowed by Campbell's
charisma and chin presence. The mummy spends much of the time
lurking in shadows, which if done effectively would have built
the suspense. But there really is none. Pardon the pun, but
the mummy is lifeless, a relic from an upscale episode of
the Power Rangers. And because of it, Bubba Ho-tep
struggles to live up to its cult film pedigree.
So
what? Maybe there was never the intent of making the film
a perennial midnighter. There's ample evidence that suggests
Coscarelli and company were aiming for something bigger, something
deeper. How many cult films ponder anything, let alone the
meanings of existence? Most tend to focus on classic one-liners
and creative violence. Bubba Ho-tep certainly has both,
but it goes beyond that. The film is ultimately a meditation
on living a life worth living, doing something meaningful,
feeling proud about yourself and not caring if anyone else
recognizes your accomplishments because it's better to die
proud and alone than just alone.
And
Bruce Campbell is Elvis.
©Movie
Views; March 5, 2004
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