Curdled Movie Review
Curdled Review

"Curdled" Overview

Rating: R
1996
Cast and Crew
Director : Reb BraddockProducer : John Maass,Raul Puig
Screenwiter : Reb Braddock,John Maass
Starring : Angela Jones,William Baldwin,Bruce Ramsey
Who says death can’t be funny? I mean, aside from the immediate knee-jerk
reaction of personally witnessing a decapitation or some other horrific method
of dispatch, it’s a pretty fair bet that culturally we can find individual X’s
demise a funny thing. In dark comedies it’s almost always the ultimate form of
irony (or a classic example of Murphy’s Law). It’s even become chic to make
movies founded and marketed almost entirely on the phrase “what a way to go”
(Final Destination and its sequel spring to mind). Let’s face it – we’re morbid
little schmucks. But even if you like dark comedies per se, you probably will
get no more than a few sardonic smirks out of this movie.
There’s a formula for good dark comedies, and somehow the cast and crew of
Curdled screws up this formula entirely. Instead of being cool and quietly
ironic, Curdled is the attention whore of dark comedies, begging for loving by
acting out in dumb ways and being blatantly over the top.
The whole movie revolves around a death-obsessed Columbian maid named Gabriela
(Angela Jones) and a bartender (William Baldwin) who moonlights as a gigolo who
moonlights as the Blue Blooded Killer (talk about killing your customer base).
For good measure, they also throw in Gabriela’s boyfriend-in-waiting, Eduardo
(Bruce Ramsey), but he’s like the motive in slasher movies: unexplained and
useless.
The maid finds work at a company called PFCS, the Post Forensic Cleanup Service
(that little pain you feel is an incredibly dumb joke hitting you over the
head). Work becomes crack for the little gore hound, and before you know it you
know it she’s developed an obsession dealing with whether or not heads speak
after they’ve been chopped off. Meanwhile the bartender/manwhore/psychopath
ends up getting his name written in Sharpie underneath the copious amount of
blood left by one of his victims. Ensue freaking out.
Curdled has roughly the momentum of a snail on speed. Throughout the 88-minute
dance towards each other, Curdled fails to make a single really funny joke
until the end. (The whole movie may be worth watching just for the most unique
salsa number ever, but you’d have to sit through the other 80 minutes to get to
that point or appreciate it.) Curdled spends its running time building up to a
joke that, truth to be told, isn’t all that funny and ends up coming out like a
long episode of Seinfeld without any of the building up humor – it’s a golf
joke that takes forever to get to the punch line.
Not to suggest another remake (Curdled was itself a remake of a 1991 movie),
but if Curdled had maybe added some funny things in between, or made us
actually give a damn about any of its characters (the neurosis that drives the
bartender to kill is a vast unexplored wilderness of potential funniness, as is
the source of Gabriella’s obsession with gore), then Curdled would actually be
worth sitting through. As it stands, you just want to stab the movie and chop
off its cinematic head.
Dance lessons.
Reviewer: James Brundage



