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Bugsy Malone Movie Review
Bugsy Malone Review

"Bugsy Malone" Overview

Rating: G
1976
Cast and Crew
Director : Alan ParkerProducer : Alan Marshall
Screenwiter : Alan Parker
Starring : Jodie Foster,Scott Baio,Florrie Dugger,John Cassisi,Martin Lev
Fourteen-year-old Jodie Foster had a very busy and very weird year in 1976.
There was Freaky Friday for Disney, there was Taxi Driver for Scorsese, and
then there was this. Thirty years after its release, Bugsy Malone, an adult
gangster comedy/musical in which all the roles are played by children, can make
you nostalgic for the '70s and the '30s at the same time. That this oddity was
directed by Alan "Midnight Express" Parker, only makes the whole thing more
bizarre. Watching the always amazing Jodie vamp it up with her co-star, '70s
teen dreamboat Scott Baio, as they lip sync to tracks of the adults who sing
for them is one of the stranger cinematic experiences you'll ever have. Forgive
me if I pause a moment to go look up more synonyms for "weird."
Basically a story of warring gangs, Bugsy Malone introduces us to Fat Sam (John
Cassisi) and Dandy Dan (Martin Lev), who are battling for turf. Bugsy (Baio)
shows up at Sam’s bar and meets Blousey Brown (Florrie Duggal), who wants to be
a star. When the bar is raided, Dandy Dan breaks out his new weapon, a “Splurge
gun” that shoots whipped cream. Bugsy and Blousey hit it off, but he’s also
caught the eye of sexy vamp Talullah (Foster), who always gets her man. Do you
care?
With a dozen songs by short-limbed '70s pop music go-to guy Paul Williams, most
of which are utterly forgettable drivel that even the Carpenters or the Captain
and Tennille couldn't have salvaged, the movie goes along in its own insane
way, alternating between boring stretches, the dubbed songs, and Splurge gun
fights that leave all the kid gangsters covered with goo. One wonders how all
the middle school students who use this story as a basis for their annual
school play finesse those gunfight scenes.
If there’s any winner here it’s Foster, who does what she can with the
material, playing the tough girl just as she did for Scorsese (and just as she
still does today). There’s little else here that delivers even the bare minimum
for a musical or a comedy. Your kiddies may find it fun to watch other kiddies
playing dress up, but you’ll just be scratching your head in amazement as you
ponder the fact that Baio, not Foster, was supposed to be the breakout star of
this show.
Why doncha come up and see me some time. We'll watch Teletubbies.
Reviewer: Don Willmott
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