Cinematic villains love to cackle,
and few bad guys cackle more or better than those from Hong Kong genre cinema
and English-speaking exploitation cinema.
Show me a martial arts film made anywhere from the Sixties up to about
the year 2000 that doesn’t have one (usually either followed by or while simultaneously
stroking a ludicrously long, stringy beard), and I’ll show you a cigar box full
of four-leaf clovers. American action
films typically have a gang of lowbrow guttersnipes who all think things like
rape and murder are the funniest things in the world. I can’t tell you where this tradition
started, but I know that it swiftly became a staple/cliché that carries through
to today. The idea is that the villains
have a sense of superiority, and their haughty laughter shows this to their
enemies and victims. Likewise, it’s meant
to show the audience that these characters are vile. The things they find uproariously hilarious
are things a normal human being finds odious and tragic. It also removes the films further away from
reality, because these guys are so heightened in their reactions to everything,
they become cartoonish. Take Edward
Victor’s Alley Cat, for example. The iniquitous Bill/Scarface (Michael Wayne,
an actor who only appeared in this one film but could very easily have been the
Anthony James of films that only had $1.22 to spend on casting) brays when he
thinks of what he’s going to do to our heroine Billie (Karin Mani), and his
underlings follow along, because being a scumbag is fun (conversely, this is
also meant to be menacing for the same exact reasons).
Billie chases a couple of thugs
away from her car with her Karate skills (and it should be said that either
Mani actually knows martial arts or the stunt-doubling is impressive, maybe
both), but their boss Scarface decides to teach her a lesson by stabbing
Billie’s grandmother. Billie decides to
take this rather personally.
Alley Cat is a standard revenge film in every way, and that
includes its philosophy of disproportionate responses. Billie kicks the stuffing out of Tom (Tim
Cutt) and Mickey, who run off crying to Scarface. To show her who’s boss, these jerks follow
Billie’s grandparents and assault them, leading to Grandma Clark being comatose
and, eventually, dead. The average man
might have just forgotten about having their ass whipped by a woman, been
thankful they didn’t wind up in the pokey, and gone about their felonious
business elsewhere. Not these guys. Every affront must be met with five times the
violence and viciousness. Billie,
however, is just like them. Yes, she
starts off defending her property and family or helping a stranger, but she
quickly discovers that the adage about if you can’t beat them, join them, holds
true when it comes to thugs. Inevitably,
she does to the bad guys what they tried to do to her, tracking them down and killing
them (I assume; there’s only one definitive onscreen death). Yet, we side with her because we repeatedly
see her attacked (honestly, I can’t think of anyone who wouldn’t give up
jogging at night if they were assaulted even half as much as Billie is) for no
real reason. She goes from defensive to
offensive, but morally, she’s correct.
The justice system we rely on also lives up to the rule of
disproportionate responses. After Billie
rescues a woman from a rape using a handgun, she is arrested for a variety of
crimes which she did violate, but that any decent cop would let slide, all
things considered. The judge who
presides over every single case that Billie is involved in chucks her in jail for
contempt of court (where she makes a few friends for life).
This leads to the idea of misogyny
that pervades the film. Every man in the
film either hates women or is ineffective (read: a pantywaist). All the men on the street want to have sex
with every woman they see (willingly or not).
Billie is chased and set upon multiple times in the park, and the men
who do this have nothing but sex and violence on their minds. Scarface’s girlfriend is treated like the
piece of meat she is. He calls her “Miss
Blowjob,” and the two are not above throwing things at each other. He puts her down and reminds her constantly
that she’s nothing but a warm hole. She
puts up with it likely because she’s been beaten down and is now simply inured
to the fact that this is the way of things.
Boyle (Jon Greene), a beat cop, is the one who gives Billie a hard time
about her need to carry a gun when she goes out at night. He delights in handcuffing her and charging her
with every single thing he can. Boyle
also has a hooker (Britt Helfer, whom you likely remember from Raw Force or the soap opera Loving, but, either way, is physically
impressive, just to play my own pig card for a moment) he bangs while on duty
(and, we can infer, without paying for her services). The single male who isn’t a complete swine is
Johnny, the cop Billie meets cute with at the hospital and who quickly becomes
her boyfriend. At first, Johnny is the
paragon of virtue, standing up for the little guy and attempting to keep Billie
out of danger while trying to bring the bad guys to justice by the book. even he has a level of sexism about him, trying
to show Billie how to do Karate without knowing she’s working on her black
belt. What Johnny finds out, however,
much like Billie did just slower, is that to get justice one must get one’s
hands very dirty. You can’t clean up a Jell-O
wrestler without getting some on you, so to speak. As in all movies of this stripe, the system
is moribund, if not five weeks gone, allowing the misogyny perpetrated on the
streets to corrupt the decency it’s supposed to stand for. The choice left for victims is surrender or vigilantism.
Alley Cat has some good things going for it. Being an exploitation film, it is loaded with
beautiful women who don’t mind doffing their clothes onscreen. There are action scenes every few
minutes. There is a layer of grime all
over it; you can almost feel the grit on the characters and smell their b.o. What it gets wrong is that it is
unfocused. Did we need the lengthy
sequence of Billie in prison? Did we
need the lengthy sequence of Johnny tormenting the Helfer character for
information? Did we need the random
jogging assault attempts that have nothing to do with the main story? No, to all.
Yes, they each satisfy for this type of film, but they are all
extraneous. You could argue that they
are necessary as illustrations of systematic misogyny, but they distract from
the main narrative. Maybe that’s the
point? Maybe the filmmakers wanted to do
a more holistic approach to a Woman’s Revenge film? It’s possible. But, at eighty-two minutes, the tangents drag
down the pacing, and they made me think that the filmmakers simply didn’t have
enough story to fill out that time frame.
Fair enough, because the distractions do what distractions are supposed
to do. But they also remind the viewer
that time is dragging by.
MVT: Mani can keep a movie
together and handle physical action, and, with a better script and some better
direction, I believe she could have been a genre luminary.
Make or Break: The finale
drops what scant subtleties the film had and digs into its genre trappings full
bore while displaying exactly what Billie has become.
Score: 6/10
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