Director:
John Landis
Starring:
Michael Bennett
Release: 19 Jun. 04
IMDb
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Slasher
BY: DAVID PERRY
John Landis’ documentary on the art of selling cars could be
the most depressingly boring films of the year. Not only are the moments of
intended levity painfully unfunny, but most of the characters he’s
celebrating are annoying and cloying.
The central subject is Michael Bennett, a so-called slasher in the car
business who travels to remote car dealerships around the country to perform
sales that would be otherwise impossible. That this man, who could be the
seediest, most dishonest looking person I’ve ever seen, has a reputation for
convincing people of his sincerity is testament, I suppose, to either my
cynicism or his talents. Bennett’s been called to urban Memphis, where no
one has the cash to buy a car unless it’s the $88 car in the advertisements.
In other places, he can get people to buy a car while they hope to win the
$88 clunker –- in Memphis, they can only buying that cheap car.
And as Landis celebrates Bennett, finding his callow dishonesty to be
respectable even if it’s not unlike the “lies” he begins the film with from
Presidents Richard Nixon, Ronald Reagan, George Bush, Bill Clinton, and
George W. Bush, I could only feel horrible for the Memphis car dealers who
have little money to take care of their dealership and gambled on Bennett to
change things. A follow-up during the credits might have helped, if not for
the fact that it would likely state that Landis’ beloved Bennett caused the
car dealership to go out of business, and the kindly men we met from the
place to have started looking for their own $88 lemon.
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