Pepper
Spray
It was 20 years ago this week that Sgt.
Pepper dropped a bomb on movie theaters, so where's all
the rerelease hoopla?
By Serene Dominic
In 1978, RSO Records was the most successful record label
on planet Earth. From Christmas of 1977 to May 20 the
following year, the Robert Stigwood-owned label maintained a
21-week stranglehold on the top position of
Billboard's Hot 100 singles chart. No other record
label has ever managed to score six consecutive No. 1s, and
before summer's end, RSO clocked in an additional 11 weeks
at No. 1.
Meanwhile, on the LP charts, RSO boasted two
double-album movie soundtracks that spent a combined 36
weeks at No. 1. The first of these, Saturday Night
Fever, became one of the biggest-selling albums of all
time. Next came Grease, which was the fifth
top-selling album of the '70s.
Before anyone knew what a huge hit Fever would be,
Stigwood signed off on a third movie project with an
accompanying double album. There was every indication that
this was going to be huge. After all, it starred the Bee
Gees, who had a hand in both those RSO soundtracks, and
Peter Frampton, whose Frampton Comes Alive! was the
all-time biggest-selling double album right behind
Saturday Night Fever. Even Capitol Records was
optimistic enough to slap on its latest re-pressings of The
Beatles' Sgt. Pepper's Lonely Hearts Club Band big
word-balloon stickers boasting that this was "The
Original!"
But the splendid time guaranteed for all turned into a
bomb of Nagasaki proportions. Legend has it that the Sgt.
Pepper soundtrack was the first album to ship double
platinum and return triple platinum, meaning that even the
counterfeit copies were being returned by retailers. In
tandem, the Pepper film tarnished the careers and
reputations of its talented cast (see accompanying Pepper
curse list). When a flop of such magnitude is unleashed on
the unsuspecting public, you don't just pinch your nose. No,
you drop your jaw in utter awe of every ill-conceived and
poorly executed idea. This was no mere flop rock musical.
This was an unstoppable doomsday device. The book
Hollywood Rock likened the film to "watching human
life descend several rungs down the evolutionary
ladder."
So while the 20th anniversary of Grease was
recently observed with a major theatrical rerelease, a
home-video rerelease and a slew of media coverage, don't
expect the same wave of nostalgia for Pepper, which
reportedly lost all the cash that Fever and
Grease made for RSO. No one's marking this
anniversary with anything but stone silence.
"No one's making any noise about it at all. It's really
upsetting, actually. It's kinda bumming me out."
"It's
so bad, it's good. The battle to the death between
the Bee Gees and Aerosmith, that was it in a
nutshell." -- Denise George, Sgt.
Pepper devotee
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Meet Denise George, a 28-year-old working actress from
Brooklyn, New York. When she was 8, her sister took her to
see Pepper. Being such an impressionable young girl,
she naturally identified with Strawberry Fields, Peter
Frampton's virginal love interest in the film. "When
Strawberry fell down the little stair thing
[chained] to a neon dollar sign and died, I lost my
little mind. My sister said, 'Are you crying?' And I said,
'No! There's something in my eye.' It was pathetic."
Denise didn't realize until returning to school in
September that just admitting you saw the movie could lead
to immediate peer ostracism. "I told friends, and they went
'eeeewwww.' There were a lot of rock 'n' roll kids in my
town, so that 'death to disco' thing struck me pretty early.
I realized straight out that this movie was going to be a
guilty pleasure of mine and no one else was going to share
it with me, except a few handful of people on the World Wide
Web which I discovered recently. But I've gotten 4,000 hits
on it already."
Denise has a hilarious Web
site dedicated to this celluloid zero, the only site in
cyberspace of its kind with full-blown information on this
rock-movie abomination. For some inexplicable reason, VH1
keeps running it as part of its Rock Movie series, and it
gets frequent midnight showings on the WB. Whenever people
run across it and fail to catch the name of the girl with
kaleidoscope eyes, they look up the movie on the Internet
Movie Database and it links back to Denise.
Among the more recent curiosity seekers is Martin Lewis,
a man who's creating the George Martin Web site. He's
corresponded with Denise because the Beatles producer, who
also produced the Pepper soundtrack, didn't remember
much about his involvement in the 20-year-old movie. "He's
not sure which artists he produced or co-produced. He could
just look at the record," says Denise, "but he doesn't even
have it." From the sound of it, this key participant blotted
the whole thing out of his mind.
So what's the appeal of the movie to Denise now? "It's so
bad, it's good. The battle to the death between the Bee Gees
and Aerosmith, that was it in a nutshell," she says
laughing. "The only real redeeming quality in the movie was
the Bee Gees. Their music stood on its own, but their image
took a definite nose-dive. Those silver suits and the
blow-dried hair [in the movie] were exactly what all
the metal kids were against."
In Aerosmith's Walk This Way biography, drummer
Joey Kramer revealed that rather than fight with the Gibb
brothers, Aerosmith chose to just muss up their hair.
For local pop musician Adrian Smith (late of Sugar
High/Autumn Teen Sound, currently with Crashbar), the
Pepper film was his entree into Beatle music and,
more important, Aerosmith.
"I didn't even know it was a rock 'n' roll movie, I
thought it was going to be a war picture. I remember really
digging the movie and feeling really sad when Peter was
singing 'Carry That Weight' when Strawberry was dead. I've
always been kind of a sap," Smith says. (Smith fesses up to
using the "something in my eye" defense, too.)
"But I did get something out of that flick that stays
with me to this day, and that's a huge love for Aerosmith.
Remember Aerosmith played the Future Villain Band. They were
like this nasty, sexy, sleazy, dangerous bunch of guys, and
I remember being affected. I went out and bought the single
["Come Together"], held a portable cassette recorder
to my close-and-play phonograph speakers and filled a whole
60-minute tape front to back with that song. The Aerosmith
version. When I first heard the Beatle version, I was
disappointed."
A lot of people were similarly disappointed to see their
fanciful image of "Henry the Horse dancing the waltz"
translated into two guys roller-skating in a musty mule
costume. "Those guys had too much money, and they were
riding too high," Adrian says, nodding. "Like one of those
great ideas you get when you're drunk. No dialogue. We'll
tell the whole story with Beatle songs. It was an odd movie,
but there were a lot of overly ambitious musicals coming out
at the time, like Xanadu."
Surprisingly, in a recent Entertainment Weekly
home-video roundup of the worst rock films, Pepper is
conspicuously absent among dross like the Village People's
Can't Stop the Music and the recent Spice
World. Is Pepper on its way to becoming a
misunderstood cult classic? Well, let's come together right
now and watch it again, okay? You bring the popcorn and I'll
man the stomach pump.
Plot Synopsis:
Amazingly enough, this script was cooked up by a New
York Times film critic, Henry Edwards. Maybe he
remembered the earlier film All This and World War
II, which showed grainy newsreel footage to badly
rerecorded Beatle tunes. Anyhow, in this turkazoid, World
War II officially ended because Sgt. Pepper taught the band
to play so splendidly that everyone put down their weapons
to listen. Or maybe it was to cover their ears to escape
George Burns' listless narration (more on that later).
It takes Pepperland 20 years to decide it needs a new
band after the original Pepper kicks, so Billy Shears
(Frampton)) enlists the Hendersons (the Bee Gees) to play. A
big cigar-chomping record executive flies them out to L.A.
and signs them to a record contract after a PG-rated
orgy.
Meanwhile, back in Pepperland, evil people who hate joy
and love but somehow manage to love money plot to steal Sgt.
Pepper's instruments, which magically maintain the peace.
Edwards must've also remembered seeing the animated
Yellow Submarine, which handled the same convoluted
themes in a far more adult manner.
Noteworthy Observations About the Movie:
1. What looks like it could turn into a lesbian love
scene early on (yay!) turns out to be Sandy Farina
(Strawberry Fields) kissing the girlish Peter Frampton
(boo!).
2. Maurice Gibb, an exceptional bass player in real life,
is forced to be the drummer in Sgt. Pepper's band because he
has less hair than the other two Bee Gees. That's scalp
discrimination!
3. The fictitious record label BD Records has a bloated
red pig for a logo, a dead ringer for RSO's red cash
cow.
4. All the evil people in this movie smoke and hang out
with black girls. Mean Mr. Mustard even has two black
chickaroo robots!
5. Denise's Web site points to this reality check --
Lucy's band Lucy in the Sky With Diamonds has three songs in
the Top 10, yet she's the chauffeur for BD Brockhurst, the
record executive. You've heard of people, er umph, sucking
up before the deal is inked, but after? Hold on, aren't the
Bee Gees doing this grunt work for Stigwood after releasing
the biggest-selling album of all time?
6. As silent film stars, The Bee Gees' enthusiasm seems
inappropriately placed, which means their next film shoulda
been an infomercial. In stark contrast is the constantly
squinting Frampton. Unless he's singing, Billy Shears looks
as if his dick is about to be sheared by a pencil sharpener.
When he's about to be seduced, he looks as bashful as the
Beaver going to Wally for secondhand carnal knowledge.
7. The actor who portrays Strawberry Fields' dad is some
loser in Felix Unger's opera group on The Odd Couple
series. Thank goodness he doesn't get to sing, but Donald
Pleasence, Frankie Howerd, George Burns and Steve Martin,
who have no singing ability whatsoever, each gets at least
one number!
8. Getting George Burns to narrate must've been an
afterthought because the musicians couldn't execute any
lines that weren't chopped up on a mirror.
9. When Burns' character, Mr. Kite, is captured, bound
and gagged, the movie loses linear narration for about 15
minutes. Then try following this sequence. Strawberry leaves
Pepperland, which has become an orgy of disco-video arcades
and motels with adult movies, rooms by the hour and
(shudder, shudder) waterbeds!! Once she ventures out to Los
Angeles, she sees billboards of Sgt. Pepper and Lucy in the
Sky With Diamonds. Suddenly they come to life, Lucy seduces
Billy Shears and they kiss. The song's over, and Strawberry
realizes, Whew! they were only billboards. Later, she goes
to the recording studio and confronts Billy that his
billboard likeness has been unfaithful. Look, we told you
she was virginal!
10. So virginal, in fact, that when an unconscious Peter
fantasizes about her, she's dressed up in the trampy costume
Lucy in the Sky is wearing. All men are dogs, dogs,
dogs!
11. Sgt. Pepper's band members go to retrieve the stolen
instruments and let themselves get beat up by a buncha
nurses.
12. The Future Villain Band (Aerosmith) captures
Strawberry and threatens to turn her into a "mindless
groupie," something she's been all along -- for that sucky
Sgt. Pepper band!
13. Aerosmith, at the height of their druggin' and
drinkin', look almost cherubic here. In the script, it
called for Frampton to kill Steven Tyler. Tyler threatened
to walk off the film unless it was made to look like an
accident. So what happens? He lets a girl push him off a
platform to his death, leaving the other guys in the Future
Villain Band to form the Joe Perry Project on the spot,
natch!
14. Fans of those crash test dummies will want to play
Strawberry's death tumble over and over. It looks really
painful. Along comes grieving Peter Frampton, looking
slightly bummed, as if he's got to make alternate luncheon
plans.
15. After Strawberry's funeral, someone remembers -- the
eye dropper! Now Peter looks sad! In a sequence that starts
out looking like an ABC Afterschool Special, suicidal
Frampton comes alive, goes on the ledge and actually jumps
off. Just then the Sgt. Pepper weather vane comes to life in
the form of Billy Preston singing "Get Back." Zap! Frampton
is prevented from killing himself. Zap! Then he's zapping
all the bad people into clergy robes and nun habits. Zap!
Then he zaps Strawberry back to life. You wonder why Preston
doesn't zap himself back to the roof of Apple studios to jam
with the Beatles, and to hell with these impostors.
Let Me Take You Down: The Sgt. Pepper Career
Curse:
Anytime some actor or actress in Rebel Without a
Cause or The Wizard of Oz dies, the National
Enquirer will run a half-baked story on how the cast was
cursed to die at a tragically young or ripe old age. Unlike
those jinxes, this one here has irrefutable proof. Still
don't believe that this movie terminated more promising
careers than single-engine plane crashes? May I introduce to
you the acts you've known for all these years and the Sgt.
Pepper's Lonely Hearts Club Curse! See which performers fell
and never rose again, which came back after a lengthy dry
spell, and find out the lone recording act that suffered no
long-term side effects as a result of appearing in this
film.
1. THE BEE GEES
HOT STREAK BEFORE PEPPER MOVIE CURSE (1977-78): The Bee
Gees' Saturday Night Fever soundtrack sells 25
million copies, spawns three No. 1 singles that top the
charts for a total of 15 weeks!
COOL STREAK AFTER PEPPER MOVIE CURSE: Their first
post-Pepper album Spirits Having Flown also
spawns three No. 1 singles that only top the charts
for a total of five weeks! Their next single, "He's a Liar,"
barely makes it to No. 30 in 1981, and the album it came
from, Living Eyes, doesn't even dent the Top 40!
After the U.S. tires of Barry's falsetto and blames the Bee
Gees for disco, the Brothers Gibb can only score hits by
getting Babs Streisand and Dionne Warwick to record their
tunes. This Bee Gees freeze-out in America is only now
thawing. Ha, ha, ha, ha, stayin' alive, stayin' alive.
2. PETER FRAMPTON
BEFORE (1976-77): Frampton Comes Alive!
sells 16 million copies, and the title track to its
follow-up I'm in You results in his highest-charting
single ever (No. 2).
AFTER: Peter couldn't get near the top of the
charts ever again, not even with Frampton Comes Alive
II in 1995.
Immediately after filming, he is seriously injured in a
car crash, which spares him the humiliation of attending the
Sgt. Pepper movie première. When Frampton's
character was on a ledge contemplating suicide, the rowdy
Times Square audience laughed aloud and yelled, "Jump!
Jump!" Just like New Yorkers!
3. GEORGE BURNS
BEFORE (1975-77): George Burns hadn't seen action
like this since Gracie was alive. In 1975, he wins an Oscar
for The Sunshine Boys. In 1977, he stars in another
box-office smash, Oh, God!, with John Denver.
AFTER: Burns' movie career screeches to a halt
with his next three films, Oh God! Book II, Oh
God! You Devil and 18 Again. Say goodnight,
Georgie!
4. AEROSMITH
BEFORE (1976-77): Aerosmith enjoys its biggest
year in 1976 with two Top 10 hits, "Dream On" and "Walk This
Way," plus other notables like "Back in the Saddle" and
"Last Child."
AFTER: Not even being the Anti-Bee Gees in the
Pepper film can break the curse! Drugs and the
defection of Joe Perry ensure they will not score another
hit single until they make a pact with the Devil (Desmond
Child) in 1987.
5. ALICE COOPER
BEFORE (1976-78): Although Cooper's solo albums of
this period are not charting Top 40, his big hit singles
like "I Never Cry" and "You and Me" bring him some
popularity with housewives.
AFTER: The combination of alcoholism and appearing
in this film has a devastating effect on the Coop's career.
He scores one hit right after the curse with "How You Gonna
See Me Now" and spends one week in the Top 40 in 1980. After
that, Father Sun doesn't sire another hit single until
talking "Trash" with the Devil (Desmond Child) in 1989.
6. EARTH, WIND AND FIRE
BEFORE (1976-78): Earth, Wind and Fire albums keep
going platinum, and they actually score one of their biggest
hits with this movie's rendition of "Got to Get You Into My
Life." What gives?
AFTER: EW&F's platinum streak continues
unabated well past 1979. Whatever Egyptian god Maurice White
and the guys pray to seems to have done the trick. Perhaps
it's because they're the only act in the movie to use their
real name and perform as if you could be watching them on
the Midnight Special. Lesson learned? Don't be a
Pepper -- be yourself!
7. STEVE MARTIN
BEFORE (1976-78): Steve Martin's first two comedy
albums are huge hits, and while this movie is stinking up
theaters, the Wild and Crazy Guy has a summer hit single
with "King Tut."
AFTER: After two Top 10 albums, Martin's first
post-Pepper effort, Comedy Is Not Pretty, only
makes it to No. 25. His movie career fares little better.
With the exception of The Jerk in 1979, he becomes
synonymous with flops like The Man With Two Brains,
The Lonely Guy and Pennies From Heaven.
8. BILLY PRESTON
BEFORE (1976-77): Billy Preston's Top 40 triumph
(two No. 1s and another two Top 5s) had already peaked by
1975. But he still played with the Stones (1976's Black
and Blue) and even got a writing credit on a Stones LP,
something Brian Jones and Mick Taylor never managed.
AFTER: The traumatic sight of seeing Billy Preston
without an Afro wig in this bomb ruins whatever career he
had left, save for one hit duet with Stevie Wonder ex
Syreeta ("With You I'm Born Again" in 1980). Not only is
Preston never asked to appear on any Stones albums or tours
again, he reaches this new low: musical director on David
Brenner's flop talk show!
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