I know that there are droves of Rocky Horror
Picture Show devotees out there, but while that cult classic has
a place in my heart, for my money there is no movie musical more bat-shit
crazy than the 1980 Cannon Films joint The Apple. Thank
you, Menahem Golan, you magnificent, lunatic bastard. It easily ranks in my top
ten films of all time, no question.
While it doesn’t ever quite reach up to those manic highs,
if you’re in the mood for a dark, Polish, new wave mermaid rock opera, you may
well want to check out The Lure now that it’s finally
hitting theaters and VOD platforms. Agnieszka Smoczynska’s film certainly fits
that description, and it will squeeze your brain until you’re on the verge of
passing out. Which can be fun.
The synth-driven house band at a 1980s Warsaw nightclub gets
and unexpected boost when, on what appears to be a group camping trip, they
encounter a pair of mermaid sisters, Golden (Michalina Olszanska) and Silver
(Marta Mazurek), who just so happen to be excellent singers. If there’s one
thing I learned from The Little Mermaid, it’s that all
mermaids are swell vocalists, so if you need someone to front a musical act,
you can do worse than looking to the sea.
From there the plot unfurls like your typical music industry
picture—there are sleazy promoters, newfound notoriety, internal jealousies,
complicated romances, and all the usual tics. The newcomers take over the
spotlight, there’s some infighting, but while all of this is fairly standard,
no one really bats an eye at the fact that there are two half-fish women on
stage belting out catchy ditties. Granted, they only have scales when they’re
wet, but there’s still a crowd surfing mermaid scene. And they do occasionally
kill people, so you might think someone would raise their hand and ask what the
hell is up.
Weird-as-shit Euro-pop musical numbers; a freaky,
hyper-stylized color scheme; excessive amounts of teen nudity (you may very
well feel feel like a dirty old pervert as the awkwardly young Gold and Silver
spend most of film naked, or at least topless, not to mention a few skin-crawling
moments with unusual orifices—they are half fish after all) combine to create a
strange, uneasy atmosphere. More than once I rubbed my eyes and pondered what
the hell I was watching. It’s in the unsettling tone and grotesque burlesque
feel where The Lure shines brightest.
The Lure isn’t a great movie. Full
of uneven pacing, random scenes that don’t connect to anything larger, and a
woeful dearth of character development in all but a few cases, it’s never
particularly engaging on an emotional level. But Smoczynska creates an unusual
dreamy sensation and drops the viewer right in the middle to take it all in.
From a purely spectacle angle, The Lure is a
strange, atypical film, and if you’re into crazy-ass shit—which is right up my
alley—you may want to take a look at this one if you have the chance. You
certainly haven’t encountered its ilk before, and it’s tailor made for cult
frenzy status. [Grade: C+]
This is a reprint of our review from the 2016 Seattle International Film Festival.
The Lure took me by surprise I must admit, I will not say much but this is a very good film with many elements.
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