Bam Bam and Celeste Movie Review
Bam Bam and Celeste Review

"Bam Bam and Celeste" Overview

Rating: NR
2007
Cast and Crew
Director : Lorene MachadoProducer : Margaret Cho,Julie Huntsinger,Eva Kolodner,Yael Melamede,Karen Taussig
Screenwiter : Margaret Cho
Starring : Margaret Cho,Bruce Daniels,Elaine Hendrix,Butch Klein
Bam Bam and Celeste strains to be funny. Even the title: Bam Bam? Celeste?
That's a title that's trying to be amusing but isn't. You can tell writer/star
Margaret Cho is working hard to generate laughs with this vanity project, but
you'll have to be a lifetime member of the loyal Cho army to enjoy this
low-rent road picture.
When we first meet Celeste (Cho), she's miserable in her '80s-era Illinois high
school. As the only overweight Asian goth-punk in school, she's destined to
feel like an outsider. Her only friend is the flamboyantly gay Bam Bam (Bruce
Daniels), with whom she plans to make a great escape to the big city.
Flash forward 20 years, and the two (who haven't aged a bit) are still stuck in
DeKalb, where Bam Bam is working as a hairdresser. When the two spot a reality
makeover show on TV that's holding a contest to find new beauty talent, they
see their chance. Trading Faces will be their ticket to New York. Sure enough,
their application is accepted and away they go, with Celeste's Korean mother
(also played by Cho and very familiar to her standup audiences) giving her
warnings in her funny fractured English.
The drive to New York is filled with clashes with intolerant rednecks who can't
see Celeste's inner beauty or Bam Bam's overall fabulousness. There's a
blistering encounter with a violently racist convenience store worker (the
motor-mouthed Danny Hoch) who really lets Celeste have it, and after a motel
interlude, Bam Bam fails to see his lover (Wilson Cruz) chased off screen by a
band of gay bashers. A happier encounter is with a lesbian cowgirl (the
dependable Jane Lynch) who knows how to crack a whip. It's set piece after set
piece, with no real flow at all.
Once in New York, Bam Bam and Celeste discover that their competition on the
makeover show will be their old high school nemeses (Elaine Hendrix and Butch
Klein), who now run the city's chicest and bitchiest hair salon. Quite the
coincidence. The show's host (John Cho) is the smarmiest and bitchiest guy in
town, but luckily, the show's producer (Alan Cumming) is far more kind.
The message here is the same one Cho has been preaching in her comedy shows for
years: tolerance, inner beauty, diversity, et cetera. All noble sentiments for
sure, but Cho neglects to wrap a good movie around them. A tip of the hat to
Cho for organizing such a great crowd of cameo players, but that's about the
only good thing you can say about this stalled-out journey.
Y'all gonna laugh!
Reviewer: Don Willmott





