If Looks Could Kill



Date of publication: 03/15/1991
By Roger Ebert
- `If Looks Could Kill" is one of those zany capers that come along
occasionally to remind us of the pleasures of Wretched Excess. The movie
tells a bizarre story about middle Americans trapped inside the byzantine
intrigues of Europe, and is perhaps the only film I can recall in which a
mad economist traps an entire Detroit high school French class in an iron
cage suspended above a cauldron of boiling gold.
- At first, it appears the movie is only going to be another one of those
brain-damaged caper ripoffs in which boring people do stupid things at half
the pace of real life. Then it turns on the supercharger and transforms
itself into the kind of hallucinatory fable in which a tiny woman wears a
golden whip around her neck, and uses it to reduce foreign ministers into
lumps of placation.
- The movie's hero is TV star Richard Grieco ("Booker"), who has
the kind of sleek dark looks that make you suspect he's wearing mascara when
he's probably not. He plays a high school senior who has flunked his French
class, but has a chance to make up the grade during the French Club's summer
tour of Europe. The name of his character is Michael Corben - and that's an
important detail, because on board the same flight to Europe is a superspy,
also named Michael Corben, and when the real spy is killed, Grieco is
mistaken for him. That leads to a labyrinthine plot tangle in which Grieco
finally has to save all of Europe from the schemes of a mad politician
(Roger Rees) who has a plan to convert the continent to a gold standard
under which all of the coins will bear his likeness.
- The plot is worthy of a James Bond villain, and indeed "If Looks
Could Kill" plays like a head-on collision between Bond and Indiana
Jones, if the primary goal of both of those heroes were transcendent
silliness. The movie's endearing goofiness extends even to shooting the
Paris scenes in Montreal, with a matte painting of the Eiffel Tower in the
distance, and using a chateau in Quebec as Rees' headquarters for torture,
gold-melting and world domination.
- It's all Grieco can do to keep up with the supporting cast, all of whom
seem to have been encouraged to unleash their latent skills for overacting.
Linda Hunt has the most fun, as Rees' diminutive sidekick, enforcer and
torture mistress. There are also roles for a birdbrained French teacher, a
seductive sexpot and all the usual characters we'd expect to find at
casinos, cabinet meetings, the first-class sections of airplanes, and the
dungeons of the perverse.
- Did I enjoy the movie? My reactions were in a constant state of
adjustment. I'm so accustomed to the badness of the movies in the spy-spoof
genre that it took me a while to realize that William Dear and Darren Star,
the director and writer, were sincerely trying to go over the top - that
like the makers of such films as "In Like Flint," "Invasion
of the Bee Girls" and the immortal "Infra-Man," they indeed
had an unholy light glinting in their eye, and were making a subversive film
rather than following a formula. By the time the chateau was in flames and
the helicopter was chewing its way across the burning roof I was ready to
concede that, yes, I was enjoying it.
If Looks Could Kill (STAR) (STAR) (STAR)
Michael Corben Richard Grieco
Ilsa Grunt Linda Hunt
Augustus Steranko Roger Rees
Vendetta Galante Geraldine James
Derek Richardson Michael Siberry
Mariska Gabrielle Anwar
Warner Bros. presents a film directed by William Dear. Produced by Craig Zadan
and Neil Meron. Photographed by Douglas Milsome. Written by Darren Star. Edited
by John F. Link. Music by David Foster. Running time: 84 minutes. Classified
PG-13. Opening today at local theaters.
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