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10 Essential Cinematic AntiheroesLike a Corman movie itself, 'Corman's World' starts small and unimpressively, with some behind-the-scenes footage and interviews from a recent Corman joint, the Syfy Channel original "Dinoshark." Everything is pintsized and ill equipped; one cast member admits that the crew, on location in some pitiful Mexican tourist trap, thought that there was something interfering with the walkie-talkies they use to communicate, until they realized Corman had just bought children's walkie-talkies. But everything has a charmingly sleazy low-budget feel, including the guy with the foamy Dinoshark puppet, chomping on some helpless bimbo in a bikini while blood shoots into the water through a clear plastic tube. After literally hundreds of movies, Roger Corman's mentality remains the same: cheap movies, made quickly, that make tons of money (even if they're on the basic cable back-channels).
Interspersed throughout the biographical timeline,are interviews with many of the filmmakers and stars that Corman either worked with or greatly inspired. And this could have been really dull, but Stapleton has made an uncanny decision to shoot each interviewee in a different location and scenario – we watch Bruce Dern talk about "The Wild Angels" while getting his hair cut; Jonathan Demme speaks about starting out with Roger while riding in the back of a town car (he's wearing a TV On The Radio sweatshirt, of course); Ron Howard is strolling around his posh Connecticut neighborhood as he bemoans his measly 3% ownership of "Grand Theft Auto." What's striking is how heartfelt each of these interviews is. Many of them have to pause to collect themselves; Jack Nicholson, never one for showing much emotion, actually breaks down into tears. It's one of 2011's most profoundly touching moments. "I hope he knows this is not all hot air," Nicholson says, choking back tears. "Other people also love him."

Against a bouncy, bubbly score by Air, we watch fantastical bits of films here and there, movies that might have been made for next-to-nothing but hold up impressively well today ("Death Race 2000" is just as gripping and hilarious and profane as it's ever been). Dante says that Corman is directly responsible for the "New Hollywood" movement; after the studio system collapsed it was the filmmakers that knew how to make films breezily and for pennies, that took over the scene. And it was the Corman ethos, of monsters and babes and big special effects that would grip the same market at the end of the 1970s. It's been noted before that "Jaws" was essentially a Roger Corman movie but with a bigger budget and stronger marketing push; after watching 'Corman's World' you can't help but feel the same way.

So much of 2011's cinema has been a dewy-eyed nostalgic look back at earlier times and places, and there's a fair share of that in "Corman's World: Exploits of a Hollywood Rebel." But, like the razor-toothed fish from "Piranha," Corman keeps moving forward, from drive-ins and grindhouses to home video (first VHS, now DVD and deluxe Blu-rays) to cable television, always looking for the next (and cheapest) way to entertain us. For all of his old-fashioned charm, there's always been something a little futuristic about Roger Corman. Even if you don't like his movies, 'Corman's World' will make you appreciate the man behind them. [A-]
1 Comment
aaa | December 18, 2011 2:42 PM
He's not really an "auteur" in any sense of the word...