Electric Boogaloo: The Wild, Untold Story of Cannon Films (2014)

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Electric Boogaloo: The Wild, Untold Story of Cannon Films (2014). 1h 46m | R

“Mark Hartley, the man behind the wildly entertaining documentaries about B-grade films and filmmakers, Not Quite Hollywood (2008) and Machete Maidens Unleashed (2010), premiered his latest and, sadly, last documentary – Electric Boogaloo: The Wild, Untold Story of Cannon Films – in the opening weekend of the 2014 Melbourne International Festival (MIFF). u003cbr/u003eu003cbr/u003eAs with Hartleyu0026#39;s previous documentaries, the story at the heart of Electric Boogaloo (its name taken from the film, u0026quot;Breakinu0026#39; 2: Electric Boogaloou0026quot;, the strange sequel to the hit 1984 rap dancing film, u0026quot;Breakinu0026#39;u0026quot;) cleverly unfolds through the skillful editing together of myriad eyewitness talking heads and interspersing these with clips from relevant films along with some wonderfully tongue-in-cheek animations. Essentially, Hartleyu0026#39;s latest film explores the story behind Cannon films from its inception to its ultimate demise, following the weird and wild careers of crazy Israeli cinephiles-cum-directors-cum-producers-cum-Hollywood B-grade movie moguls, Menahem Golan and Yoram Globus. Theirs is an extraordinary rags-to-riches- rags story and one well worth seeing for yourself. Hartley has a rare gift for storytelling in his documentaries, bringing together a complex panoply of opinions, rants, scathing criticism and fond remembrances, and weaving these all together into a taut, laugh-out-loud, highly entertaining film, and Electric Boogaloo is no exception, as demonstrated by the very enthusiastic reception the film received from the audience at MIFF. u003cbr/u003eu003cbr/u003eFor film lovers and those who grew up with the Golan/Globus catalog in the 1980s with films like Missing in Action, Lifeforce, Treasure of the Four Crowns, American Ninja, Break Dance, Death Wish 2 and its sequels, Masters of the Universe, The Last American Virgin, Cyborg, Superman IV: The Quest for Peace … the list goes on, and on, and on … this film is pure joy and something of a nostalgia trip. In this regard the film does have a sad side as it follows how the dreams of Golan and Globus would eventually fizzle up in bankruptcy and acrimony, leaving behind a library of impossibly bizarre creations that are truly weird and wonderful. Electric Boogaloo will no doubt prompt you to want to revisit many of these titles or discover others for the first time. I suspect that, being a true lover of B movies, this is ultimately one of Hartleyu0026#39;s aims.”

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