Future Schlock (1984)
Directed by Chris Kiely / Barry Peak
Genres - Science Fiction, Comedy |
Release Date - Jan 1, 1984 (USA - Unknown) |
Run Time - 85 min. |
Countries - Australia |
MPAA Rating - NR
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Synopsis by Eleanor Mannikka
Technical flaws abound in this "punk" movie about an imaginary, 21st-century ghetto in Melbourne, Australia created by white-color, middle-class suburbanites to contain all the wild and wooly nonconformists in their society. At the center of ghetto life is a pub that features Sarah (Maryanne Fahey) and Bear (Michael Bishop), by night slamming the suburbanites and by day carrying out covert operations on the outside as the daring Cisco and Pancho. In that guise, the Bear dons various personas, such as that of a government minister, and announces radical changes to the citizenry: children should henceforth be painted green, family cars should be buried, and as winter chills the air, citizens are to sleep with ducks. This send-up of the middle-class is uneven and patchy, with acting that is alternately good and bad and lip-synching that is a misnomer -- but at the same time, this haphazard fluctuation in quality seems to fit right in with the theme of the movie itself -- slick just would not capture the point of it all. Future Schlock is here.
Characteristics
Themes
Keywords
ghetto, nonconformity, citizen, future, minister, pub, society, wild [undomesticated], infiltration, suburban-sprawl, misfit