Dirtymouth (1970) Poster

(1970)

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4/10
A shame it cannot be seen anywhere today
jwpeel-11 June 2005
I remember when this picture was fighting to get a distributor and it was shown in New York at one theater only. I heard so many people say that Bernie Travis was more like Lenny Bruce than Dustin Hoffman was in the later Bob Fosse film. It is a damn shame that nobody can see this picture today in any form. I remember being upset that the original Broadway star Cliff Gorman (an amazing actor who can be seen as a Lenny Bruce like comic in segments of the later Bob Fosse film "All That Jazz") was not cast in the flashy glossy Hollywood project. (Particularly ironic since Hoffman, Ina Playboy interview said he wondered why Gorman wasn't cast instead of him. No mystery there, Dustin. You were the bigger box office draw and Cliff Gorman was not a known commodity outside of the Broadway stage.)

My problem with Hoffman's performance was that he was not convincing as a stand-up comic in the on stage performances, and that he did none of the character voices Lenny was famous for. The truth is that Hoffman asked comedians like the late Rodney Dangerfield what it was like to do stand-up only to be told that you had to do it to know.

While no impressionist, Lenny did some very funny voices that fit within the framework of his most elaborate bits like the astounding "Comedian bombing at the London Palladium." Gorman did all the stuff Lenny did, and could most probably would have had a great career at stand-up, and yet, Hollywood decided to go with a star power name instead of giving a great actor a chance at becoming a star (much like Coppola did with a young upstart named Al Pacino. It's a real shame.)

But, alas, this film is in the ether unless someone with a print and some money can put it out on DVD and promote it as the lost Lenny Bruce film biopic.

One can only wish.

Sure, it is a low budget film that looks like a low budget film, but it gives us perhaps a better glimpse of what could have been done with the fascinating story of the great Lenny Bruce.

I hope that someday someone will make a better film about Lenny that doesn't pull any punches.
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4/10
Worth a look as a curiosity.
mark.waltz16 March 2022
Warning: Spoilers
It's dirty and crude, and that's the point. A film about Lenny Bruce should be dirty and food. The problem is though that's the rights to Bruce's story had already been bought so this extremely low budget underground film had only minimal healing and has fallen Into obscurity. Another issue is the lack of star power no Dustin Hoffman, no Valerie Perrine, and certainly no Bob Fosse as director. Bernie Travis gives a very energetic performance, a very natural thing Bruce Sensi had played him in an off-off Broadway show, maybe not on par with Cliff Gorman on Broadway as far as mainstream, but definitely prepared him for the camera.

For fans of the classic soaps, it's a rare opportunity to see Courtney Sherman (Simon) who played a feminist attorney on "Search For Tomorrow" (as ahead of its time in the seventies as this was), and she's quite good here. The story is slim but covers all of the major events in Bruce's life. Obviously his style of comedy is far from everybody's taste, but as far as his influence was on stand-up and sketch comedy, it's an interesting if not completely successful view of the legend he became with his groundbreaking style. Director and writer Herbert S. Altman gives a different viewpoint than the Fosse film so they are incomparable outside of the subject matter. It's as technically inferior as early John Waters films, but there's still some art in that there inferiority.

The highlight of the film is at the end when Bruce is on trial for public indecency after an onstage rant. Travis loses comfortable control and begins to drool as he becomes more unhinged. There's a montage of people at the end describing why they found him offensive, particularly an old woman who claims to be 55 yet looks much older and can't comfortably describe the meanings of the offensive words thrown her way. Comic gold.
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Low-budget bio on Lenny Bruce's life
Serpent-525 June 1999
Bernie Travis plays Lenny Bruce in this low budget entry on the nightclub comedian lifestyle. The film is very cheap looking, but Travis seems to give a fine performance, but Dustin Hoffman has nothing to worry about. Made way before the 1973 major studio film LENNY, but for a film based on a "R" rated comedian, this 1965 film kind of censored it giving it a PG-13 feel. The opening credit of the credit getting flushed by the toilet is amusing. But the ending execution is a let down.
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