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Kim Newman on... Hex
RT Obscura 18: Weird Hippie Shit with Gary Busey and Keith Carradine
by Kim Newman | June 23, 2008
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RT Obscura with Kim Newman

RT Obscura, the exclusive column by renowned critic Kim Newman, sees the writer plumbing the depths of the RT archive in search of some forgotten gems. In his 18th column, Kim uncovers Hex, a 1973 film in the "Weird Hippie Shit" genre starring everyone's favourite Carradine - Keith, and the one, the only Gary Busey.

A particular guilty pleasure genre of mine is Weird Hippie Shit cinema. In 1969, Easy Rider reaped huge box-office profits with its combination of biker cool, trippy strangeness, counterculture politics, naked chicks and a freak-out soundtrack album tie-in. Studios, from the majors down to the tiniest independents, appreciated the balance sheet but frankly didn't understand what 'the kids' saw in such a plot-free, self-indulgent, longhaired and untidy movie.

So they funded practically any stoned film school dropout who drifted in off the street with a screenplay in the hope that 'the kids' would turn up for equally 'far-out' flicks. Mostly, these pictures failed to haul in the Easy Rider audience -- let's face it, not everyone found a potential star like Jack Nicholson or could spring for a Steppenwolf song -- and slunk into drive-ins passed off as exploitation films. There were some hits (Alice's Restaurant, M*A*S*H) and a few lasting cult reputations (Two-Lane Blacktop, Zabriskie Point, Psych-Out), but the cycle mostly consists of hard-to-see oddities like Peter Fonda's Idaho Transfer, Moonchild, Alan Rudolph's Premonition, Brian DePalma's Greetings, Zachariah, David Carradine's Americana (it wasn't proper WHS unless you had at least one Carradine), The Second Coming of Suzanne, Is This Trip Really Necessary? or Jim McBride's Glen and Randa.

Hex


The WHS item under dissection here is Hex, a 1973 biker/western/horror/art hybrid also released as Charms and The Shrieking (the alternate titles suggest the problem WHS movies posed to distributors desperate to find a slot -- though the pun in Charms is quite clever). Some WHS films are revived because they are early works by directors (like DePalma or Rudolph) who have gone on to prominence (though even I've never seen Tobe Hooper's Eggshells); others come from one-hit wonders like James William Guercio (Electra Glide in Blue) or Robert Blackburn (Lemora -- A Child's Tale of the Supernatural).

Leo Garen, the director/co-writer of Hex, never directed another film, and his tiny handful of other credits are truly bizarre -- directing episodes of the saccharine sit-com I Dream of Jeannie, acting in Norman Mailer's improv Maidstone and scripting a couple of minor films for cinema (Band of the Hand) and TV (Inflammable). His co-writers are similar footnote characters, but all have some form: Doran William Cannon wrote a couple of higher-profile WHS films for established elderly auteurs (Otto Preminger's disastrous acid trip Skidoo, Robert Altman's admirable post-M*A*S*H flop Brewster McCloud), Vernon Zimmerman wrote and directed a scattering of more conventional exploitation films (Unholy Rollers, Bobbie Jo and the Outlaw, Fade to Black) and Steve Katz went on to 1980s bubblegum TV (The A-Team, Harcastle and McCormick).

Hex


The setting is Nebraska in the early 1920s -- the back-of-nowhere, on-the-road milieu almost excuses the hippie hairstyles, but somehow all the faces and attitudes on view scream '1973'. A small band of motorcyclists with kooky nicknames breeze into town on army surplus sickles, and get into a grudge race with a local lout (future Grizzly Adams, Dan Haggerty) who has a Model-T Ford souped up and customised like a drag-racer ('it ain't fair,' he whines, 'I lost speed missin' that old lady').
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