Vinegar Syndrome: Drop Dead Fred (1991) - Reviewed

Images courtesy of Vinegar Syndrome

In the wake of movies like Gremlins, Little Monsters and Don’t Tell Mom the Babysitter’s Dead, a slew of edgier, darker “family” oriented cinematic fare began permeating the 1990s and particularly kids television sets at home on VHS repeats.  Among the most controversial, derided and later reappraised by critics and filmgoers is Dutch director Ate de Jong’s 1991 English language feature debut Drop Dead Fred starring Rik Mayall and Phoebe Cates.  Springboarding from the imaginary friend comedy concept ala Harvey but on the heels of Little Monsters with the zany comic energy of the hit sitcom Bottom, de Jong and Mayall unleashed perhaps the strangest, most disturbing and oddly one of the more realistic studies of childhood trauma that isn’t an overt horror film.  While possessing the mania of a Saturday morning cartoon, its primary concerns couldn’t be more serious.

 
Minneapolis court reporter Elizabeth Cronin (Phoebe Cates) is having a terrible day.  Separated from her husband Charles (Tim Matheson), she loses her purse, her car and then her job for showing up late.  Before she knows it, her domineering and emotionally abusive mother Polly (Marsha Mason) has packed her bags to move back home with her.  Upon moving back, childhood memories lead her to find a hidden, taped-shut jack-in-the-box housing her lifelong imaginary friend Fred (Rik Mayall), a red-haired, green suited freak who causes all manner of havoc and destruction the moment she summons him back into her life.  From there, the film becomes a slapstick series of increasingly bizarre misadventures Elizabeth’s imaginary friend takes her down, amplifying the mayhem while also observing her demeanor changing.  For all the problems Fred keeps causing her, she seems happy.

 
Exquisitely lensed by David Lynch’s cinematographer Peter Deming of Mulholland Drive and Twin Peaks: The Return and given a wacky but mostly family friendly comedic score by Ghostbusters II composer Randy Edelman, the uncategorizable Paisley Park studios filmed Drop Dead Fred despite fierce critical drubbing went on to become a success and later a cult favorite.  Not hard to see why as for all of its zaniness and comic energy it digs its claws into headier issues of childhood trauma and coping mechanisms.  Though possessing the cartoonish (literally and figuratively) persona of a Looney Toons animated endeavor or even a dash of Ren & Stimpy, de Jong finds a way to repeatedly cut back to the crux of the problem with Polly and some of her scenes waging war on her daughter are quite painful to watch.

 
That’s not to say it is all dour and drab.  The film contains a tour-de-force performance from Mayall who is in a comedic arena completely of his own making.  Even the poster art itself can barely contain him.  Phoebe Cates is no stranger to playing psychologically damaged characters, judging from her turn in Gremlins in easily the film’s darkest scene of remembered childhood trauma, and her she comes across as a child at heart despite being fully grown.  Carrie Fisher also gives in a sneaky cameo perhaps her funniest bit of comedic acting ever in a scene where she “spars” with the invisible Fred.  Still, the one who nearly steals the show from Mayall is Marsha Mason as Elizabeth’s alienated, lonely and ultimately strict mother Polly who herself may well be responsible for Fred’s existence in the first place.

 
On a tight budget of near $7 million, the strange hyperactive and abrasively naughty bird of a film opened theatrically to an astounding $24 million in global sales despite being burned at the stake by the media upon release.  Called ‘one of the worst films I’ve ever seen’ by Gene Siskel, the Schizotypal personality disorder surreal comedy nevertheless endured after all these years and now thanks to the efforts of Vinegar Syndrome who performed a 2K restoration from the 35mm interpositive audiences today have a chance to decide for themselves if Drop Dead Fred is secretly an underrated gem.  Though it would overshadow Rik Mayall’s other subsequent, decidedly more unhinged film Guest House Paradiso, Drop Dead Fred today is the kind of childhood trauma film rarely ever seen anymore let alone in comedies.  The film can barely contain Mayall’s manic performance and in the end it leaves you feeling changed somehow.  A paean to any and all who have stories to tell about their imaginary friends.

--Andrew Kotwicki