Dragstrip Girl is not a remake of the 1957 film, but rather is about young man named Johnny (Dacascos) who dreams of leaving the world he inhabits as a Mexican American in 1950s Los Angeles, to join the rich elite he sees when he parks their cars at their fancy clubs. In particular he's taken a shine to high school girl Laura Bickford (Natasha Wagner Gregson), and concocts a way to lie and con her into loving him. At the same time, to sell his lie, he's stolen a nice car, and the cops are looking for it. As he gets the girl, everything else crashes down around him. Will he manage to make it all work?
This was a fascinating movie. As someone who enjoys the source material, 1950s low-budget genre movies, it felt like Mary Lambert nailed a lot of it, including the bad parts, like the loose ends of the story flying together in the last five minutes, or the massive both figurative and literal right turn the thing takes at the end. The other thing I appreciated in both her direction and Jerome Gary's writing was the ambiguity in Johnny, which Dacascos pulled off well in his performance. There are times where we root for him, which makes sense with him as the lead, but also plenty of times where we want Laura or his previous girlfriend Pearl (Maria Celedonio) to get away from him. And Lambert doesn't shy away from any of this, like when Johnny and Laura have sex, Laura says to him "don't ever lie to me," when Johnny knows full well he's been lying to her this whole time; but then Lambert takes these issues regarding consent where a 21-year-old has conned a 16-year-old into being with him, and while in the construct of this movie is brushing them aside with Laura telling Johnny after the fact "you should've just told me the truth," but she still loves him, we still feel that lack of consent and manipulation hanging over things. The other part of this is Johnny's identity, and Lambert doesn't shy away from that either, as Johnny aspires to be a part of this rich, white world, he's casting aside Pearl for the symbol of that rich, white world, Laura, but Pearl doesn't disappear from the film, reminding us of what Johnny is forsaking in his aspirations, which, again, makes us not want to root for him. It definitely has its flaws, and whether those flaws are intended or not, they're there; but for me the ambiguity Lambert infuses into the whole thing makes this work in a way other movies like it wouldn't.
I originally thought we were now at 25 films for Mark Dacascos, which would've meant I did my math out wrong for getting him in the 30 Club by the end of the year, because if we do one every other month from here out, that would've left us with 29 in November, meaning we'd've had to double up at some point. Then I discovered that we hadn't tagged him for his stunt work in Steele Justice, which means he's at 26, and we're on track for the 30 Club again. This is a unique role for him, no martial arts, a few stunts, but it was more about his acting, which I thought he did a great job with. He gets that Johnny is supposed to be someone we root for at points, but also be someone we look at and say "you're being kind of a jerk, Johnny," or "that behavior's kind of predatory, Johnny." Obviously we like seeing Dacascos show off his next level martial arts skills, but it's nice to see him hit a dramatic role out of the park too. What I would say to that though is, as a dramatic actor, he's good, but as a martial artist, he's one of the best to do it, which is what's always exciting to see from him.
We last saw Mary Lambert here on the site for Mega Python vs. Gatoroid, which was the only other film of hers we've reviewed. I've always known her more for her great music videos, but a film like this is a reason why I'm a huge fan too. In a way she refracts the light off of the lead character, Johnny, and shines it on his two love interests, Laura and Pearl. Not only does he treat them poorly, but they love him in spite of that, and Lambert gives us this without any judgement on either of them. Part of that is the performances too. Natasha Gregson Wagner really plays her character like she's 16, which is even starker when compared to Dacascos's character who's supposed to be 21, but feels older. She's sixteen and feels trapped in her world, and here comes this man in a fancy car to help her escape all that. She doesn't realize what's happening when Dacascos takes her to a Mexican restaurant where everyone he knows hangs out so he can show her off to them. At the same time Pearl is being treated poorly by Johnny too, but there's a part of her that thinks he'll come back to her once he's rejected by the rich white girl and her friends and family, and she thinks he's worth waiting for, even if he's treating her poorly in the process. I don't know if Lambert could've made this movie about Gregson and Celedonio's characters instead inside of this Rebel Highway construct, but I like the way she packaged it as a coming of age story about a guy while ultimately telling the story of the two female leads as well. In a way she subverts the story of the original Dragstrip Girl, which was supposed to be a girl who was a drag racer, but ends up being more about the two guys who have a thing for her.
This is our second Traci Lords film this month, which wasn't something I planned on, but I wanted to do both this film and Intent to Kill, so here we are. She plays Blanche, a friend of Dacascos and his brother Anthony's (Augusto Sandino) mother, and takes them in when she dies. She does a great job playing a high-end sex worker who has clients back to her place next door to them. The weird part is she's younger than Dacascos but playing older, but I can also see how she was right for this role, even if age-wise it was off. We also had Raymond Cruz, who is probably best known for Breaking Bad and Better Call Saul, but he had one of the more prodigious CVs of anyone in the cast when this film was made, having been in Clear and Present Danger, and two Seagal films, Under Siege and Out for Justice. You could kind of see the seeds of Tuco Salamanca in this performance here, and I wondered if Vince Gilligan caught this on cable and was like "there's my Tuco Salamanca!" This wasn't his first time on the site either, all the way back in 2008 we reviewed From Dusk Till Dawn II: Texas Blood Money.
Finally, of all the videos Mary Lambert has directed, one I didn't expect was Boz Scaggs's "Heart of Mine," which was off his 1988 Adult Contempo come back album Other Roads. Why is that important? The song was written by one of my favorite artists, Bobby Caldwell, who was a friend of Scaggs, and Scaggs was the one who told him he could make money writing songs for other artists, like himself. I don't remember the song from when it was new, I knew it first from Caldwell's album of the same name, Heart of Mine, where he did his own versions of all the songs he wrote for other artists--one you might know is Al Jarreau's "All or Nothing at All." Anyway, going back to Scaggs, that album had all the hallmarks of that late 80s/early 90s Adult Contempo album from a singer who was big in another era, complete with him in the midlife crisis leather outfit while leaning on the equally midlife crisis-y sport bike on the cover. There were also a bunch of great artists on it, like David Paich, Jeff Pocaro, and Steve Lukather from Toto, and backing vocals from Phil Perry, Siedah Garrett, and James Ingram--who performed on "Heart of Mine." It was the kind of music Boomers of that era loved when they were entertaining--earlier in the evening, of course. Once the wine has kicked in after dinner though, they pulled out Silk Degrees from the collection and cranked "Lido Shuffle" while their teenage kids were rolling their eyes in their rooms upstairs. I'm joking about all this, but I'm older now than Scaggs was in 1988 when he donned that leather outfit and leaned on that motorcycle, knowing full well I'd have been yelling at the photographer "take the picture before I fall over! I can't stand like this anymore!"
And with that, let's wrap this up. Currently this can be rented on Amazon, Xfinity, or other places you rent movies on demand. I don't know if it's worth a rental, but if it comes up on any streamers, I think it's worth checking out--and to be fair, it would be nice if all the Rebel Highway movies ended up on streamers, there were some other great directors involved in those, including William Friedkin.
For more info: https://www.imdb.com/title/tt0109662
And check out my newest novel, Mark in Sales, on Amazon in paperback and Kindle.




























