Retro Review: 'Dudes'
The story model provided by the Western is very specific to a bygone era, but that has
Grant, Biscuit, and Milo decide they have had enough of not making it in the New York music scene and the bright lights of Hollywood is where they belong. Along the way they run across a gang of marauders who rob them and murder Milo. When it becomes clear the law is not going to do anything to bring these criminals to justice Grant and Biscuit take things into their own hands. Finding themselves literally guided by the spirits of the those who tamed the American West (yes it is as weird as it sounds) they toughen up and set out on the warpath.
To be perfectly blunt, Dudes is a very strange movie. Director Penelope Spheeris is given the unenviable task of putting a bunch of spikey haired, leather clad rockers into a completely new setting where they are most definitely out of place. But she approaches the task with great gusto, not shying away from story elements like; ghosts, an Elvis impersonator, and a roving band of outlaws. In fact if you look past the protagonists who do not fit the backdrop at all, Dudes flows like a standard Western for the most part. The fact that the cast is strangely endearing will keep the audience rooting for them throughout their journey. 80's era Jon