Home / Entertainment / Scenes from the Goldmine (Marc Rocco, 1987)

Scenes from the Goldmine (Marc Rocco, 1987)

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nDo we really need another movie to tell us that the music industry is full of assholes? Since I’m the only one here at the moment, I’ll go ahead and answer that question myself. No, we do not. We do, however, need more movies that star the amazing Catherine Mary Stewart, an actress who you might know from Night of the Comet, Nightflyers, Dudes, etc… Oh, and The Apple! (God, how could I forget The Apple?) And Scenes from the Goldmine provides us with more C.M.S. than all those other movies combined. (Even more than The Apple?) Oh, you better believe it. This film is the ultimate C.M.S. experience. Sure, it’s premise is basically this: The music industry sucks. But nothing is gonna stop me from enjoying the sight of Catherine Mary Stewart playing keyboards in winklepicklers alongside… (Wait a second. Did you just say, winklepickers?) Yeah, so? (How are you so calm right now?) Trust me, I’m not calm. In fact, my mind is racing like a cocaine-fueled tornado. When the camera zooms in on Catherine’s multi-buckle winklepickers while her band was jamming at a local bar at their rehearsal space, I had to stop watching for a minute, as my psyche suddenly found itself inundated with pure, pointy-footed pleasure.

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nAs far as I’m concerned, there’s no other type of footwear on the planet that brings me more joy than winklepickers. Okay, creepers make me smile as well. But when it comes right down to it, I’m a winklepicker man through and through. Always have been, always will be.

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nOf course, I own pair of winklepickers myself. Unfortunately, due to financial constraints, I could only afford a pair of winklepickers that sport two buckles. Don’t feel too sorry for me, my two buckle winklepickers and I have had some pretty good times together. It’s just that I feel that I could have had an even better time if my winklepickers had more buckles.

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nAnyway, what caused me to react so intensely to the sight of Catherine Mary Stewart’s winklepickers was the fact that they had [are you sitting down?] six(!) buckles (that’s a total of twelve all-together). When I would dream about owning a pair of winklepickers that had more than two buckles, I would usually stop at four buckles. So, as you might expect, the sight of C.M.S. wearing a pair with six… (Yeah, yeah, you like pointy, goth-friendly footwear.) You don’t understand, they’re very important to me.

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nBesides, I’m sure everyone would rather listen to me bather on and on about winklepickers, than listen to me describe the plot of this toothless jab at the music industry. Yes, people who work for record labels are terrible human beings. We get it.

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nWhile it’s true, the film, written and directed by Marc Rocco, does cover a lot of familiar territory, it does have a few nice twists here and there. The biggest one being that Niles Dresden (Cameron Dye) of Niles Dresden and The Pieces is just as big of a phoney as the music execs.

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nTo an outsider, the red flags should have started waving immediately. But I guess Debi DiAngelo (Catherine Mary Stewart) was too awestruck by Niles’ mega-mullet to think clearly. I mean, the way Niles and the boys, Dennis Lameraux (Timothy B. Schmidt) on bass, and Kenny Bond (John Ford Coley) on drums, fired Stephanie (Pamela Springsteen), their previous keyboard player, should have sent alarm bells ringing in Debi’s head. But like I said, his mega-mullet is pretty persuasive.

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nI know, how can an overgrown clump of hair cause someone to lose touch with reality? It’s simple, really, the clump in question is flowing from the back of the head attached to Cameron Dye (Valley Girl), a man whose sharp bone structure could moisten even the most obdurate of panties.

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nOf course, I don’t mean to imply that Debi’s new wave panties are soaking wet after successfully auditioning to be the band’s new keyboard player. I’m just saying her judgment must have been hampered somewhat. As the quote that opens the film says, “A good girl falls for a wild one every time.”

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nNow that Debi is a fully-fledged member of the Pieces, Harry (Steve Railsback, Lifeforce), the band’s manager and Niles’ brother, get them a gig at a local club, where Manny Ricci (Joe Pantoliano), an artists and repertoire man for Rush Records, will apparently be in attendance.

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nEven though the song they play, “Listen To My Heartbeat,” is a non-threatening slab of banal mid-80s pop rock if I ever heard one, the band still manages to impress Manny, who tells them to basically keep at it.

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nAfter having dinner with her drug addict brother and her disapproving parents (her father, played by Alex Rocco, doesn’t like the fact that his daughter is performing at clubs with names like, “The Lingerie”), Debi hangs out at the beach with Dana (Jewel Shepard), her best friend/roommate. It wasn’t until near the end of the movie that I realized that Debi’s pal was played by Jewel Shepard. I blame the director for this, as he seemed to like to shoot everyone, except for the two leads, from afar; the same goes for Lee Ving, who plays an eccentric music video director.

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nTaking Manny’s advice to keep at it, Niles and the Pieces perform “I Was Just Asking” at their rehearsal space. On top of being my favourite song in the movie, this is the sequence where we first see Catherine Mary Stewart in her six buckle winkpicklers.

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nIn a weird twist, Catherine’s winklepickers get more close-ups than both Jewel Shepard and Lee Ving combined.

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nSpeaking of weird twists, the decision to feature three bands performing covers of “Twist and Shout” during Niles and Debi’s club crawl courtship sequence was the film’s most interesting from a stylistic point of view. Of course, the version I liked the most was the robo-synth one by James House’s Roberto Roberto.

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nNow, I don’t want to say too much about what happens after Niles and Debi eventually become a couple. Though, I will say this, Debi should have never shown Niles her giant binder of songs. Seriously, that was a bad decision (you’ll see why). But I like said earlier, it’s hard to say no to a fully-mulleted Cameron Dye… he’s a wild one.

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nEven though you’d be probably better off watching Ladies and Gentlemen… The Fabulous Stains, Breaking Glass, or even Eddie and the Cruisers, if you’re a fan of Catherine Mary Stewart (who does all her own singing), music movies, winklepickers and zebra print, you should probably check this film out. If you can find it (there’s hardly any information about this film on the interweb).

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