208. THE APPLE (1980)

“I’ve never been so high in my life!”–Bibi in The Apple

DIRECTED BY: Menahem Golan

FEATURING: George Gilmour, Catherine Mary Stewart, Vladek Sheybal

PLOT: Alfie and Bibi are a naive duo of musicians from Moose Jaw, Canada. Mr. Boogalow, a Faustian music producer who controls the entire world’s music industry with his BIM corporation, tries to sign them to a contract; Alfie refuses, but Bibi is seduced by the lure of fame. Bibi becomes the world’s biggest pop star as Boogalow extends his influence to government, forcing all citizens to wear a “Bimmark” or be fined; Alfie tries to win her back.

Still from The Apple (1980)

BACKGROUND:

  • Together with his cousin, Yolam Globus, The Apple screenwriter/director Menahem Golan ran the Cannon Group, which produced hundreds of B-movies in the 1980s. Golan personally directed 46 films and produced or co-produced over 200. Some of the films Cannon later produced or distributed included ‘s King Lear, The Company of Wolves, and Lifeforce, along with exploitation movies featuring Charles Bronson and Chuck Norris and a handful of lucrative ninja movies. Their story is told in the 2014 documentary The Go-Go Boys: The Inside Story of Cannon Films. The Apple was made near the beginning of their moviemaking careers.

INDELIBLE IMAGE: Alfie’s vision of glam-rock Hell, featuring Napoleon, a dancing chorus of the damned, and a giant plastic apple, with a Roger Daltrey clone in a gold lamé G-string serving as master of ceremonies. It’s all capped off by the moment when an actual, actual, actual vampire (with a Bride of Frankenstein hairdo and a sheer periwinkle scarf) pops into the frame, displaying her fangs and jazz claws, cocking her head, and generally acting like a vampiric village idiot.

THREE WEIRD THINGS: An actual, actual, actual vampire; pop dictatorship; deus ex Cadillac.

WHAT MAKES IT WEIRD: This science-fictiony musical satire/religious allegory is an attempt to cash in on the camp credibility of The Rocky Horror Picture Show, but with the disco sensibility and glittery production values of Xanadu (also made in 1980). The results are spectacularly uneven: the bizarre costuming, choreography, and psychedelic production numbers are actually pretty good in their deliberate excess, the songs range from annoying to hummable, and the rushed, out-of-left-field messianic ending is an unforgettable cinematic disaster.


Original trailer for The Apple

COMMENTS: The Apple pulls you in many different directions: you’re never quite sure whether to tap your toes, roll your eyes, drop your jaw, or bring up your lunch. The plot, which mixes old MGM backstage musical themes with the Faustian corruption of show-biz innocents and a touch of dystopian literature, is familiar and easy to follow; it’s the production numbers that strangify things. The easiest way to simulate the insanity of The Apple is to take a track-by-track guided tour of the film.

“BIM’S on the Way.” (Representative lyric: “there ain’t no shame…”).  A full scale glam rock concert anthem, complete with dozens of backup singers, flashing multicolored lights, a disco ball, and a sheep-like audience armed with green glowsticks. Two pop stars in sequined skullcaps screech out a propaganda ode to their corporate sponsor (B.I.M. stands for “Boogalow International Music,” the name of the villain’s consortium).  It’s 1994′s “Worldvision Song Competition” to determine the pop anthem that will serve as the theme song for the New World Order. Back in the control room, Mr. Boogalow and his transvestite entourage are monitoring the audiences pulse rate and other key biorhythms. They are thrilled with the results, until the next song…

“Love, the Universal Melody.” (Representative lyric: “United by our love, we’re all children of the universal family…”) Moose Jaw, Canada troubadours Alfie (think Donnie Osmond with a German/Canadian accent) and Bibi (looking eerily like a “Partridge Family”-era Susan Dey) get on stage with their guitars and blue jeans and sing a sticky-sweet song that’s the musical and nutritional equivalent of Rice Krispie treats marinated in maple syrup. Fortunately, Mr. Boogalow senses the audience’s distress (that’s our distress, not the movie audience’s: they suck up the pabulum) and plays a tape of Lou Reed’s “Metal Machine Music” over the speakers so the fascist pop fans turn on them.

“You’re Made for Me.” (Representative lyric: “You’re made for me/Created for me/And I am your king…”) At a party at Mr. Boogalow’s, evil BIMstar Dandi (think Roger Daltrey) dazzles Bibi with his perfectly feathered hair, gives her a pill, and serenades her with this 1950s style doo-wop number while a chorus-line who would have been kicked out of the Official Ziggy Stardust Drag Queen Fan Club for dressing too flamboyantly dance in the background. When Alfie catches Bibi making out with Dandi, he breaks up the party, but the duo is still invited to sign a contract with BIM, leading to…

“Life is Show Business in 1994.” (Representative lyric: “Like the bleary eyed baboon/To an organ grinder’s tune/Mankind screamies for whatever kind of dreamies we might treat them to…”) Waiting for an appointment with Mr. Boogalow, Bibi and Alfie watch “Ballet 2000″ (a clown-heavy troupe that’s a shockingly prophetic prefiguration of Cirque du Soleil) rehearse in the BIM building foyer. Mr. Boogalow and his femmiest assistant, Shake, take the lead in singing this cabaret number.

“The Apple.” (Representative lyric: “It’s a natural natural natural desire/Meet an actual actual actual vampire…”) This is The Apple‘s knockout centerpiece, and there’s no denying it’s filled with infernal energy. When Bibi signs a contract with Mr. Boogalow, a recalcitrant Alfie hallucinates that she’s Eve in Hell (?) being tempted with a fatal apple by Dandi (wearing a sequined speedo) while a team of damned dancers prance about (including Napoleon, a two-faced man, and of course, an actual actual actual vampire) to a rather catchy R&B tune. Possibly the weirdest song and dance number ever put onscreen; this one may well have been choreographed by Busby Berkeley’s zombie.

“A Master.” (Representative lyric: “Cultivate a need/Grab them by their greed…”). This is another well done musical snippet, and the lyrics aren’t even an embarrassment this time. Mr. Boogalow suavely slides his way through a self-congratulatory calypso-tinged number, with sweet harmonies. It doesn’t add anything to the story, but it gives Vladek Sheybal, the film’s only acting asset, another moment in the sun, and might just be the movie’s best song.

“Speed.” (“America, your red, white, and blues/Are in our blood; we’re strung out on you…”) After two fairly good musical numbers, The Apple shows us its rotten core with this satirical, motorcycle-themed abomination. Bibi becomes an unlikely BIM star singing this ironic and annoying tribute to life in the fast lane that sounds like it might have actually been written during a coke jag. The black leather backup dancers look like they came off the set of Scorpio Rising, only made up with gobs of silver eyeliner to look gayer.

“Where Has It Gone?” (Representative lyrics: “I walk through a world of deceit and decay full of faces with sad frightened eyes…”)  Out in the real world, a down-and-out Alfie is trying to sell another earnest, Donovan-esque folky love song.  He can’t understand why no music executives are interested: is it because the sinister BIM corporation controls the airwaves, or because he no longer has a hot chick standing next to him to distract us from the actual music?

“BIM’s On the Way (reprise).”  BIM has tricked the government into signing a contract mandating an hour of aerobic exercise per day, to be done the tune of their big hit.  Comic relief comes in the form of dancing nuns and firefighters letting a building burn down while they twirl and do high kicks.

“Alfie.” (Representative lyric: “Should I go on living for the memory of your love, or should I end it all?”) Dressed as a dominatrix (complete with studded dog collar), Bibi looks out from her opulent balcony and longs for the lost love of her lunkhead ex-boyfriend.  Meanwhile, a bloodied Alfie, whose been beaten up for not wearing a BIMmark (long story), leans out if his crummy tenement window and sings a similar lament.

“Come for Me.”  (Representative lyric: “I’m coming, coming for you…”) Alfie goes to a BIM party to try to talk Mr. Boogalow into releasing Bibi from her contract, but Dandi’s female equivalent, Pandi (think Donna Summer), slips a hallucinogenic aphrodisiac into his drink. High-as-a-kite Alfie sees BIM’s usual entourage of harlequins, leather freaks and cross-dressing weirdos in quadruplicate as Pandi leads the staggering folkie to the bedroom. It’s the extreme subtlety with which the seduction is handled (Pandi sings, “Make it harder and harder and faster and faster and when you think you can’t keep it up/I’ll take you deeper and deeper and tighter and tighter and drain every drop of your love” while a dozen couples in their underwear dry-hump on a sea of beds) that makes it work. This may be the dirtiest PG-rated sequence ever filmed. The funky song is catchy, but it’s not catching; however much you may be tempted, you don’t need to get yourself checked for an STD after watching this scene.

“Something’s Happened to Me.” (Representative lyric: “I thought that I had died and then I looked into the light and I found me.”) Impressed by Alfie’s devotion to Bibi, Pandi decides to help the songstress escape BIM, then sings this redemption song.  The suspicion is that the producers did not want the audience to go home remembering actress Grace Kennedy as the slut from “Come for Me.”  They needn’t have worried about people remembering her.

“Child of Love.” (Representative lyric: “Shine on me, child of love.”)  Alfie and Bibi escape to a cave occupied by a band of hippies, led by a baritone dressed like Gandalf the Grey. The tune is a mercifully short, mercifully sitar-free hippie chant; it serves as a sort of a common-law wedding song for Alfie and Bibi.

That’s the end of the musical numbers, but not quite the end of The Apple. The movie suddenly realizes it’s spent one hundred fifteen minutes singing and dancing and has only five minutes left to wrap up the plot.  So, the screenplay does what any good script would do in this situation: it has God come down from the heavens in a glowing muscle car to lead Alfie and Bibi and the hippies to paradise.  Queue up “The Apple,” and roll credits.

I’d call The Apple a religious allegory, except that Mr. Boogalow turns out to literally be Satan. The film’s religious argument seems to be that disco is the work of the Devil (agreed) and that hippies are God’s chosen people who will be raptured for resisting its lure (there, my personal theology diverges from The Apple‘s).

The Apple is one of those movies that could only have come out of the swinging, anything-goes psychedelic 1960s. Yet, impossibly, it was made in 1980. It tries to be deliberately outrageous and ridiculous, yet its absurdities are frequently accidental; it becomes a spectacle of camp devouring itself. That makes the question of whether The Apple is a good or a bad movie irrelevant. You can call it one of the worst musicals ever made, or praise it as one of the greatest unintentional comedies; no one’s going to get much traction from either argument, because The Apple is so singular and prophetic, we’re only just now taking the first baby steps towards devising a new critical vocabulary capable of discussing it.

Or, maybe The Apple‘s just rotten.

WHAT THE CRITICS SAY:

“The peculiar genius of The Apple is that every time it appears that the film cannot get any crazier, it ratchets up the weirdness to almost indescribable levels. It belongs to the curious subset of movies so all-consumingly druggy and surreal that they make audiences feel baked out of their minds even when they’re stone-cold sober.”–Nathan Rabin, The Onion A.V. Club (“My Year of Flops” series)

“…the strangest sight your eyes have ever beheld… something like the Village People on acid.”–Ken Hanke, Asheville Mountain Express

“It feels for all the world like a mad auteur’s highly personal vision gone wildly far off the rails, not like an attempt by two savvy producers to make a popular disco cash-in… it is a privilege to be part of the same species that could cook up something so totally imaginative and divorced from anything resembling rules, logic, good taste, or basic decency.”–Tim Brayton, Antagony & Ecstasy (DVD)

IMDB LINK: The Apple (1980)

OTHER LINKS OF INTEREST:

The Apple Movie – Eighties Movie Rewind – This Eighties movie review site excoriates The Apple, but includes lots of (crowdsourced) trivia from people who claim to have worked on the film

“The Apple”: The Lost Footage, Revealed – A report on an alternate screening cut of the film with three extended scenes

Bombast: The Apple, After the Fall – Critic Nick Pinkerton takes Menahem Golan’s death as an opportunity for a sarcastic, yet affectionate, review of The Apple for Film Comment

List Candidate: The Apple (1980) – This site’s original review of The Apple

DVD INFO: Unfortunately, MGM’s out-of-print 2004 DVD release (buy) is one of those “don’t know a cult thing when they’ve got it” bare-bones affairs with no extra features. Hopefully a Blu-ray special edition will soon arrive with the extended scenes, at the very least, as extras. In the meantime the film is currently available for streaming for those with subscriptions to Netflix or Amazon Prime.

(This movie was nominated for review by reader “Tony,” who called it “one of the worst, and possibly the weirdest movies of the 80′s.” Suggest a weird movie of your own here.)

5 thoughts on “208. THE APPLE (1980)”

  1. You don’t like the “Speed” number? Oh, Greg…

    The Projection Booth podcast did a segment on The Apple some time ago; they talk about some of that ‘lost’ footage.

  2. I saw this last night at cult movie night… I’m a fan of earnest folk music and an avid consumer of rock biographies, but 5 minutes in I sympathized with the demonic record executive over our white-bread ‘protagonists’. All the triangle imagery prefigures the conspiracy theories that every popular musician today is controlled by the Illuminati, but those BIM marks are pretty cool looking. If they cut out all the folk and hippie stuff they’d have a decent disco musical.

  3. By the way, the opening scene makes so much more sense once you’ve seen at least one Eurovision Song Contest.

  4. Apple fans might want to know that Coby Recht, who wrote the original story and most of the music for the movie, is currently in some major health and financial difficulties and has a GoFundMe campaign. If you’d like to help, here’s the link: gf.me/u/v8sbsx

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