Monday Movie Review: Times Square

Times Square (1980) 8/10
Pam (Trini Alvarado) and Nicky (Robin Johnson) escape from a hospital psychiatric unit and make a life for themselves in the pre-Disneyfied Times Square of New York City. With the help of a popular DJ (Tim Curry) they make their case for freedom and develop a cult following.

Times Square is both a cult movie, and about cults, and seems to be a self-conscious attempt to create a cult about itself (which failed—the real cult following was entirely different).

Although Tim Curry was given top billing, his is a supporting role. The real stars were the two teenage unknowns, Alvarado and Johnson. The story follows these two opposites-who-attract as they escape together from a hospital where they’re undergoing psychiatric and neurological tests. Pam is the daughter of a well-known politician; she is depressed and withdrawn and we clearly see that these tests are her father’s way of throwing money at the problem rather than really be involved with his daughter. Her hospital roommate Nicky is clearly disturbed; she is also exciting, electric and incredibly bold, and Pam is intensely attracted to her.

Curry plays a DJ with a bit of a cult following, and here the movie is clearly playing on Curry’s cult appeal to Rocky Horror fans — in 1980, Curry was still sexy as hell, was recording rock albums (remember I Do the Rock?) and the Rocky Horror cultwas in full swing. I certainly knew fans in the eighties who were happy to form a cult around any movie Curry was in—some were even seeing Annie every week!

Curry’s character reads warm platitudes and heartfelt letters from teenage girls between playing 80s punk and New Wave songs. He realizes that the runaway politician’s daughter has written to him in the past and helps to create a teen cult following for the “Sleez Sisters,” as the girls call themselves.

There’s a lot going on here. The “Sleez” motif stands in opposition to a father who wants to clean up Times Square; of course he and his ilk have won by 2007. Although the movie—through Curry’s voice—is very preachy about this, you also get to see for yourself the vitality and value of the filthy, un-cleaned-up streets.

In addition, there’s the creation of a cult at work. The movie doesn’t much examine what this means, and I had a sneaking suspicion that the real intention of the filmmakers was to create the very cult they depicted, which of course makes the whole thing irritating and heavy-handed. But it’s there and available for the viewer to ask—what happens when something real and vital becomes just another fashion statement? What does fandom do to its object of adoration?

There’s also the story of the liberation of these two girls, which is over-done, and again seems designed to make other girls become adoring fans of the Sleez Sister message, but there’s a core of real beauty to it.

The relationship between the girls is clearly romantic, and that’s where it developed its real cult following—from showings at lesbian festivals. Much of the lesbian content was never filmed, and most of the rest landed on the cutting room floor—so much so that you know there are missing pieces as you watch; it’s often obvious you’re seeing the second part of something without a preceding scene to establish it. Nonetheless, there is passion, adoration, loyalty and tenderness between these girls, and it works.

The first time I saw this movie, I saw the surface stuff; “No Sense Makes Sense” and “they” think that bad girls are crazy. But Nicky clearly is crazy, and the script and acting portray that with a clear eye.

Finally, Times Square has one of the best rock and roll soundtracks around; Suzi Quatro, The Pretenders, D.L. Byron and Patti Smith among others. The soundtrack itself has a cult following, and deservedly so.

4 comments

  1. Roberta says:

    You know I love it too, but I agree that it was too blatant an attempt to be a cult. And to that end I think he (director Allan Moyle) sacrificed substance and relationship and character and backstory.
    Also, for a film which glorifies filth and sleaze (and I am with you; it has a glory, and that glory is beautifully portrayed… this was before kids paid top dollar for their jeans to look worn out, and had to buy their Manic Panic in the east village, and used actual safety pins as earrings), man, were these girls unscathed. Living on the streets among the homeless and the pornographic, they stay pretty safe. Then again, I love stories where New York is just a big old neighborhood.

  2. Ken says:

    I have vague memories of seeing this on HBO back in the early days, although I don’t think I ever saw it straight through in one sitting. It was one of those movies I kept coming into partway through…… You know how that goes.

  3. deblipp says:

    Anchor Bay is to weird cult movies as Criterion is to classics. I spent real money on Times Square. But that was before Netflix.

  4. Roberta says:

    Ken, it’s a beautiful movie. Flawed, and with holes, but worth a sit-down.