Wikipedia
defines an auteur as “an artist, usually a film director, who applies a highly
centralized and subjective control to many aspects of a collaborative creative
work; in other words, a person equivalent to an author of a novel or a play. The term commonly refers to filmmakers or
directors with a recognizable style or thematic preoccupation.” If that doesn’t describe Ray Dennis Steckler,
I don’t know what does. He’s probably
best known (and rightly so) for The Incredibly Strange Creatures Who Stopped Living
and Became Mixed-Up Zombies. This, however,
just might be his magnum opus.
Rat
Pfink a Boo Boo is what you get when you take a hard-hitting crime melodrama, a
rock n’ roll musical, a dime-store superhero movie, and a killer ape flick, toss them in a
blender, and put the setting on WTF.
Apparently, Steckler started out making the crime picture and became
dissatisfied with the results. To amuse
himself (or more likely to cash in on the popularity of Batman and Robin) he
had his main characters become half-assed superheroes mid-film. He also padded out the rest of the running
time with musical numbers and an attack by a guy in a (rather impressive) ape
costume. The results are Z movie heaven.
What’s
interesting is that the early scenes are quite intense, given the budget and
the fact that it was shot silently with the sound added in
post-production. Steckler manages to
wring genuine suspense from the scenes of the trio of hoodlums mugging a woman
in an alley, as well as the scenes where they verbally harass Carolyn Brandt
(Steckler’s leading lady on screen and off) over the telephone. He does a fine job on the musical sequences
too (this is the guy who made Wild Guitar after all). The editing of the performances is remarkably
competent and would look right at home on MTV if it had existed in 1966.
It’s
when heartthrob singer Lonnie Lord (Ron Haydock, who also wrote the screenplay)
and dim-witted gardener Titus Twimbly (Titus Moede) become their crimefighting
alter egos Rat Pfink and Boo Boo does the movie really take off. The costumes look like they came out of a
dime store, but that’s kind of what makes them awesome. The fight scenes have a
filmed-in-someone’s-backyard quality to them.
What’s astonishing is that they are staged and edited with a surprising
amount of panache. You also have to give
Steckler credit for staging long motorcycle chases and parade scenes with no
budget and zero permits. It’s guerilla
filmmaking at its finest. (Speaking of gorilla, the ape suit is excellent and probably ate up whatever budget Steckler was working with.)
What’s
more is that the film is only 66 minutes and it moves like greased
lightning. There’s no fat on it whatsoever. Sure, Incredibly Strange Creatures is great
and all, but it bogs down like a son-of-a-bitch in the second half. This one is over before you know it and
leaves you wanting more.
Oh,
and how about that title? You might
think it’s a weird play on “a Go-Go”, but it’s not. The onscreen title was supposed to read “Rat
Pfink AND Boo Boo”, and the person who designed the titles just forgot to add
the “N” and “D”. I wish there was a
better explanation for it. Then again,
the oddball title just makes the movie that much more memorable.
Today’s
bloated big-budget superhero movies could take a page from Ray Dennis
Steckler’s playbook. There’s more
ingenuity on display here than in a dozen MCU films. Do you think the Russo Brothers could make
something this good if they had a Ray Dennis Steckler budget? Who knows?
I’d rather imagine what Ray could’ve done had he been given just a tenth
of a budget as those guys had when they did Avengers: Endgame.
AKA: The Adventures of Rat Pfink and Boo Boo.