■ fio you DARE VENTURE INTO... 01 By Lane Van Ham Staff Reporter I’ve mostly analyzed older mov - ies in this space, so I thought it was time to look at something a little bit more recent. There aren’t a lot of really neat Video Vault type fea tures coming out these days, for a variety of reasons, but one guy has done a brilliant job of consistently making incredible (though not well known) movies in this dec ade. Geoff Gones started making movies in 1978 with “The Gore Hookers” and continued on into the ’80s with such titles as “Blonde Nazi Goes Hawaiian” and the in credible “Teeth” (advertised as: “Ripping! Biting! Gripping! This In cities across America, one pizza’s been chosen the best. Pizza Hut* Pan Pizza. Try one bite of its deep, golden crust, two layers of cheese, and toppings galore and your taste buds Pl29gl will choose it their unanimous favorite too. Award yourself with -Hut onetoda>’- Makin’it great!* C 1989 Pizza Hut. Inc * indicates registered trademark of Pizza Large Meat Lovers'Pizza . $9.99! Available on Pan, IHand-Tbssed and Thin ’n Crispy* pizza. 9 Please mention coupon when ordering * One coupon per party per visit. NOT valid I at all Pizza Hut * restaurants. NOT valid in combination with any other Pizza Hut® ■ offer. ® designates a registered trademark of Pizza Hut, Inc. Offer expires May 20, 1989 ^P9Lk. I CODE 45/27/17 PlZZSl ©1989 Piiw Hut. Inc. llgjf edit redemption value • Hut. Inc 2 Medium Cheese Pan Pizzas $9.99! Tbppings available at an additional charge. Also available on Hand-Tbssed and Thin 'n Crispy® pizza. Please mention coupon when ordering One coupon per party per visit. NOT valid at all Pizza Hut® restaurants. NOT valid in combination with any other Pizza Hut® offer. Thin n Crispy is a - registered trademark of Pizza Hut, Inc. Offer expires May 20. 1989. _ M989 Pizu Hut. Inc. JUn if 1/20 cent redemption value. 2 Large Cheese Pan Pizzas i • $13.99! Toppings available at Ian additional charge. Also available on Hand-Tossed I and Thin 'n Crispy® pizza. Please mention coupon when ordering. I One coupon per party per visit. NOT valid ■ at all Pizza Hut4 restaurants. NOT valid in H combination with any other Pizza Hut® *" I offer. Thin 'n Crispy is a registered trademark of Pizza Hut, Inc. Offer _ expires May 20. 1989. ■ ©1989 Pirn Hut. Inc. .11. . j 1/20 cent redemption value. Si IU& • film is so exciting it cannot be described without combusting this poster!”). The movie I want to talk about, however, is his 1983 classic “The Switchblade Van Band.” The basic idea behind “Switchblade Van Band” is as follows: 12 kids, just out of high school, decide to buy a van and drive around until all of them are arrested and put in jail. What’s interesting is that little or no reason is given for this rash deci sion-making. The closest we come to an ex planation is when the group leaves a gas station and a woman there exclaims, “Crazy kids . . . But why go to college anyway?” Gones came out of what might be called “The Ray Dennis Sleekier School of Moviemaking." Sleekier made “The Incredibly Strange Creatures Who Stopped Living and Became Mixed Up Zombies, and held the philosophy of improvis ing set and script as the movie shooting progressed. “I never saw a complete script for ‘Switchblade Van Band,”’ said cast member Katherine Slam in “Film Zone.” Geon just had us make it up in places where he couldn’t think of anything to do, and sometimes it worked and sometimes it didn’t.” Slam played “Gorilla,” the leader of the van group. As the movie opens, Gorilla is getting stoned with her friends while the rest of their high school class is graduating. She suggests they all nop into ner dad’s van and drive around until they all get thrown in jail for one reason or another. Everyone piles in, and our adven ture begins. Before long we’re introduced to an amazing cast of characters which Gones later claimed to be representative of the twelve dis ciples. There’s Monte, a calm but moderately insane guy who hasn’t washed his hair for five months because he’s “mad at the world” and insists on playing the same tape (The Greatest Hits of 1963) over and over again in the van. Then there’s Carlos, who goes pleasantly insane as the movie progresses laughing for increas ingly long periods of time without bemg able to stop. Gorilla is a sort of musical phi losopher revolutionary, munching on cucumbers throughout the movie and muttering lines like “Off the pigs,” and “I hate ballads, espe cially when they’re by Joan Jett.” It takes a while, but after a little effort, the gang finds half of their members arrested in Wyoming for attempted bank robbery. What’s interesting is that while it would seem easy enough to get arrested if you’re trying to do so, the van band seems entirely inept. Monte, for example, declares that he’s going to get arrested for assault and attempted robbery and then proceeds to hurl frozen burri tos at customers in a 7-11 store. Nothing happens. At one point the gang members who haven’t been arrested become excited because the state patrol pulls them over - only to find it’s because their tail lights aren’t working. One of the most mysterious developments in the movie is the sudden appearance of a narrator when the movie is three fourths over. Presumably this was done to bridge gaps where Gones’ script and the actor’s improvisation failed. The narrator explains “Unable to get arrested, the group made their way to the lonely town of Potato Hope, knowing that it was their destiny to form a rock ‘n’ roll combo that would shake the world.” All but two of the group get arrested in Potato I fope for stealing musical equipment, and low on gas, the remaining two (Gorilla and Barney) drive out of town. The closing moments of the movie are dedicated to a conversation be tween the two. Gorilla: “Well ... I think I’ll certainly remember this.” Barney: “Yeah, like I remember a toothache... do you have a knife I can borrow?” Gorilla: “Sure.” (pulls out a knife) Barney: “Thanks, sister, you'll back,” (stabs himself in the ). Without a doubt, “The Switch blade Van Band" is a poorly made movie. At two points the camera suddenly tilts in mid-scene, and remains so for the rest of the cut, at several points characters seem to have forgotten lines, and there is no discernible reason why the characters behave as they do. But it is a great example of spontaneity captured on film, and what I guess could be considered the punk rock equivalent of mov ies, which is to say, someone could see it and say “I could do that!” and go out and make a movie. “The Switchblade Van Band” and other Geoff Gones features can be investigated by curious parties by writing to CCBB Produc tions, P.O. Box 143, Mesa, Arizona, 84011. t i