Unearthed Films: Homework (1982) - Reviewed

Images courtesy of Unearthed Films

Years before accomplished and renowned sound editor James Beshears made his name for work on everything from The Fugitive to True Lies, he had his name on screenplay for the Neil Young directed Human Highway and today’s forgotten teen-sex “comedy” film Homework starring Joan Collins or for most of the rest of the filmgoing public a comedy about a mother who seduces her daughter’s boyfriend.  Unlike the Dean Stockwell, Russ Tamblyn and Dennis Hopper co-starring cult favorite, Homework became the subject of a lawsuit from four of the film’s co-stars including Joan Collins claiming the advertising was misleading and capitalized on a nude scene created in post-production with a body double to garner some extra attention from her then-hit TV show Dynasty. 
 
Meanwhile the other actors also felt misled by the kind of film they ultimately ended up making as Collins won part of her suit against Jensen Farley Pictures to block further advertisements banking on a nude image of Collins.  Between the film’s already rank status as a grimy regional sexploitation ‘laugh riot’ compounded with the legal action taken against it by its key performers, factors like these can only attract boutique releasing labels like Unearthed Films to give it a deluxe release on their Classics brand not wholly unlike flies gathering around fecal matter.  It isn’t good but for fans fascinated by this strange post-apocalyptic era of films made in the wake of National Lampoon’s Animal House and there are oh so many, it makes absolute sense why this understandably controversial near-statutory little cockroach of a movie should get a spotlight on it.

 
Tommy (Michael Morgan) is a young wannabe “rock star” in high school, longing to lose his virginity amid hastily forming a garage band his friend and several of his classmates including a choir singer, a skateboarding blonde and failed attempts to get a renowned coked up horny rock singer named Reddog into their group.  Meanwhile his girlfriend Sheila (Erin Donovan) is obsessed with becoming a top swimming champion well past the point of insanity, leaving enough time for her mother Diane (Joan Collins) bored with her husband (whom we never see onscreen with her) to start making moves on her daughter’s beau.  There’s a subplot involving Tommy’s therapist where he talks about his sexual fantasies involving becoming a rock star with groupies literally disrobing on stage with him as he's performing and a young female substitute teacher who invites male students to her home for tutoring when she isn’t fending off catcalls in the classroom.  Oh and there’s a lot of random nudity with close-ups of bare breasts and horny teens looking into the girl’s locker rooms Porky’s style. 

 
Another one of those horny sexed up teen “comedies” which not unlike slasher horror films are more interested in getting the young actors to Larry Clark themselves before the cameras except this one goes as far as to sneak in a double through tricky re-editing to make it look as if Joan Collins is getting nude and into it with her underage costar, Homework in spite of a startlingly realistic coda is pretty dire.  With most of these sorts of regional comedies ala Pinball Summer or The Party Animal they’re never really all that funny or have characters resembling real human beings onscreen and many of the sexual or nude antics are the kind you only really ever see in movies like these and nowhere else.  And there’s the laundry list of needle drops no one has heard of but sound a lot like the real ones in bigger budgeted movies that can afford to pay off rights issues.

 
Visually the film looks pretty grimy mostly due to the transfer which looks to be from a worn theatrical print though incredibly the film’s cinematographer Paul Goldsmith climbed up in the film world going on to do several episodes of Max Headroom as well as the award-winning Muhammad Ali documentary When We Were Kings.  For a movie about a group of high school kids trying to form a garage band for their school talent show, the music from the original score by Tony Jones and Jim Witzel is puny and average.  The young cast does what they can with the piece though reading about what went on with the actors taking on the producers and filmmakers in the legal room over this movie is far more entertaining than anything going on within its mercifully short running time.

 
Fans who eat these regional teen sexploitation drive-in “comedies” will be salivating with baited-breath over this Unearthed Classics release replete with a slipcover, newly conducted interview with producer Max Rosenberg and promotional poster art.  The rest of us, while eager for more Unearthed fare scraped from beneath a rock locked in the ocean floor, will be exasperatedly bored with this misbegotten stillborn dud.  Bless Unearthed Films and MVD Entertainment for bringing this foul turd to the surface.  The disc release is good and the film technically is a fascinating chapter of actors barking back at their own work in a cinema historical sense.  But as a movie it is a real chore to get through.  Consider yourself warned.

--Andrew Kotwicki