#57
Post
by ballmouse » Tue Oct 17, 2023 10:59 pm
Never felt compelled to watch Showgirls based on the premise and the poor critical reception. But after watching Starship Troopers for the first time and not hating it, I thought it would be a change of pace from my usual fare to watch another Verhoeven. Enter Showgirls.
After watching it, I can't help but laugh because the poor reception actually implies viewers expected some sort of straight drama with Verhoeven, the guy who directed Robocop, Total Recall, and subsequently Starship Troopers, and that Verhoeven actually gave his audience too much credit, which makes it even funnier to watch knowing the subsequent reception of the film. The film is hilarious, precisely because it's satirical. The extravagant nudity and dancing, the sexy dumb blonde, the tough, sleezy strip club boss, the even tougher Vegas show boss, and the incessant non-verbal communication via body contact. I struggle to see how any critic could have taken Showgirls or Starship Troopers at face value. Hell, I tip my cap to Verhoeven because he actually added just enough credibility to the production that the film isn't unintentionally good because it's bad. It's actually intentionally good because it is good at being bad. And on the contrary, Berkley put up a fantastic acting job. She is the paragon of a number of women I have met who have looks, ambition, and naivete in a world where that sort of combination can easily be taken advantage of, which is exactly the premise here. I'm surprised Kyle MacLachlan wasn't proud of his acting job; he played the part of corporate sleezeball masquerading as handsome good guy as good on screen as what I see from the guys in real life.
Anyway, enough rambling. I'm excited to read up on everything about it now that I've got my own opinion of the film. My local library has a copy of You don't Nomi so I'll be checking that out as well as anything else I can get my hands on.