After watching the delectable THE LONELY LADY in the
mid-‘80s on VHS I made the solemn vow to catch anything that starred Pia Zadora.
It scarcely mattered if it was a film, an album, an invitation to some talk
show. As long as there was her name on it I was a happy trooper. That’s how I
came to rent 1982 FAKE-OUT a year
later. I remember being very excited at the prospect of finally seeing her in
something else. BUTTERFLY was still on my bucket list so I was really looking
forward to enjoying this one. Did I? Well, read on, my little cyber friends,
read on.
The best thing about FAKE-OUT (aka NEVADA HEAT)—besides having the lovely Pia sing the
opening Last Vegas number (‘Those Eyes’) in freeze-frame shots while clad in a
Bob Mackie original—is the first 17 minutes when she ends up being thrown in the
slammer after refusing to testify against her mobster boyfriend. There the
viewer gets to see Pia take a shower; grind her leotard-clad booty while conducting
an inmate aerobic class; get tough love via a girl on girl (suggested only) gang
bang action. Can we say CHAINED HEAT part deux? Not so, sadly, for what follows
is all happening outside the slammer where screwball comedy is king and playing
cat and mouse is a prerequisite.
Indeed, Pia’s character ends up buying her way out of
prison and spending part of the movie trying to sneak out of the casino hotel
room where custody cops Telly Savalas and Desi Arnaz Jr. keep her while she
waits to see the DA. Of course she’ll fail miserably while developing an
attraction to Arnaz who ends up taking her away in a luxury yacht where they
fall in love and ultimately get shot at before the final credits roll. The
movie is about 90 minute long but boy does it seem endless. Wooden characters, cringed-worthy
situations, clichés abound, FAKE-OUT
feels more like a collection of silly vignettes than an actual movie. Pia tries
her best but once out of jail nothing really makes her shine. Still, we get to
see her a lot, with or without her lack of chemistry with love interest Desi
Arnaz Jr. Oh and Savalas gets to play a Kojak-like type once again minus the
lollipop. Suffice to say his on-screen presence barely helps matters, but since
he was still a pseudo-hot commodity back then, what do I know? All in all, a
very disjointed film that started promising but quickly crashed and burned due
mainly to everything falling flat. Where’s Nomi Malone when we need her.
C0-written, produced, and directed by Matt Climber who
gave us the much better BUTTERFLY—Pia’s first major role—the year prior, FAKE-OUT is the remake of LADY COCOA
(1975) by the same director. It stars Vegas sensation Lola Falana. Supposedly
it is not so good either. I will still catch it one day and let you know all
about it. In the meantime go watch or re-watch THE LONELY LADY or BUTTERFLY
instead. You’ll have a better time. Trust me. Unless you’re a Pia Zadora super
fan, then, by all means indulge yourself. But you have been warned.
Until next post—Martin
1 comment:
Like you, I love all things Pia Zadora, and I remember being excited when I found this movie on the shelf at my local video rental place in the 1980s. Also like you, I was crestfallen by the time the final credits rolled. Matt Cimber was not auteur, be he was clearly going through the motions with this one. Lady Cocoa isn't much better, but the cast was a bit more engaging and the movie's tad bit sexier (the sex scene between Lola Folana and Gene Washington is more explicit than the safe-for-prime time TV love scene between Pia and Arnaz, Jr.). I find it telling that even though Fake-Out (a.k.a. Navada Heat) came out in 1982, it looks like it was made the same year as Lady Cocoa, 1975. That was the other problem with much of Pia's early '80s output: besides its spotty quality, it seemed better suited for 1970s tastes than the decade it was released. That said, I hope one day a box set of Pia's movies will be released.
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