Da Capo Press, 2008. — 240 p.
In this collection of essays by members of the National Society of Film Critics, the "B movie" is defined, classically, as "the Hollywood stepchild, the underbelly of the double feature." What B movies have become is a question the book answers only partially - movie fans will certainly debate whether newer films like Tarantino's
Reservoir Dogs actually deserve a place next to proven genre classics like
Gun Crazy and
Crime Wave. Among dozens of pieces, highlights include Charles Taylor's appreciation of 1967's
Point Blank and its embattled director, John Boorman, who mixed French New Wave styling and pulp-novel nihilism to inspirational effect (he also discusses Mel Gibson's remake and Steven Soderbergh's open tribute in
The Limey). Roger Ebert's knowledgeable contributions don't disappoint; having himself penned the absurd B classic
Beyond the Valley of the Dolls, he champions outliers
Peeping Tom,
May and
Pink Flamingos. Rob Nelson includes the gonzo 1989 Nicolas Cage film
Vampire's Kiss, for which the actor ate a live cockroach on-screen. Other titles include
Detour,
The Conversation,
Vanishing Point,
Videodrome,
Eraserhead and last year's
Grindhouse; though the collection's breadth undermines any attempt to pin down the modern B picture, these brief essays celebrate well the reckless streak that runs through Hollywood.