Watched: 03/29/2022
Format: Amazon Streaming
Viewing: First
Director: Jeffrey McHale
After watching and podcasting Showgirls, I believe Justin (and then Paul) suggested I watch the documentary You Don't Nomi (2019) a sort of retrospective investigating how we can view the 1995 film, seen as a catastrophe at the time of release but which has been reconsidered as a camp classic in the intervening years. The doc features multiple reviewers, entertainers and others engaging with the film. No small amount of the original film is seen as the movie leverages the idea of fair-use in investigating and transforming the source material - and so too does it liberally borrow from other films by Paul Verhoeven.
In many ways, it's like a bit of film school packed into a tidy 1:38 or whatever it was. Opinions are applied as fact, schools of thought as dogma. But almost no one speaking is in total agreement. We look at what else Verhoeven has done, we look for things he returns to, what his films say on certain topics (women! violence! seeeeeeeexxxx!) and try to draw conclusions. And with Verhoeven, the answer is often that, no, he's not making a mistake or doing something goofy, he meant something specific and it wasn't there to make you feel better or confirm your biases. All of which, were I to watch Showgirls sober, would definitely make me re-evaluate the film.