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Greetings again from the darkness. I get that many would quickly toss this one aside without so much as a second thought. After all, Pamela Anderson hasn’t been featured much in the last decade (or two), and most only recall her from “Baywatch” in the 1990’s and, umm, perhaps an infamously intimate video. My advice would be to reconsider. She’s now 57 years old and is absolutely terrific in this film from director Gia Coppola (granddaughter of legendary director Francis Ford Coppola; her big screen debut was as baby Zoe in NEW YORK STORIES, 1989). The screenplay is from TV scribe Kate Gersten (“Mozart in the Jungle”).
The film opens with Shelly (Ms. Anderson) in a close-up during an audition. She’s obviously quite nervous and a bit out of her comfort zone. It turns out most of the movie is a flashback that leads up to the full audition, including her verbal sparring with the show’s casting director (Jason Schwartzman, director Gia Coppola’s cousin). We soon learn that Shelly is a veteran dancer who has been a part of the ‘Razzle Dazzle’ burlesque show in Las Vegas for 38 years. The show’s promotional posters from the late 1980’s feature a young Shelly – and she’s been there ever since.
We experience the frenetic energy and near chaos backstage during the show, as Shelly and her fellow dancers, Mary-Anne (Brenda Song, THE SOCIAL NETWORK, 2010) and Jodie (Kiernan Shipka, “Mad Men”) juggle for dressing room space and costume changes between numbers. The two younger dancers look up to Shelly, who even fills the role of mother-figure for Jodie – a youngster dealing with family issues. All of the timing is coordinated by the Stage Manager Eddie (Dave Bautista, GUARDIANS OF THE GALAXY, 2014), a figure of calm who has a history with Shelly.
Shelly’s best friend is Annette (Oscar winner Jamie Lee Curtis), who plays an aging cocktail waitress trying to hang on despite the generational shifts. What seems quite clear is that all of these folks are caught in a web of day-to-day survival – never able to get ahead (despite a career spanning almost 4 decades). When the new owners decide to shut down Razzle Dazzle in favor of a circus, Shelly experiences double panic mode. Not only is her livelihood at stake, but her estranged daughter Hannah (Billie Lourd, “American Horror Story” and daughter of Carrie Fisher) is showing signs of wanting to reconnect with, or at least make sense of, a mother who chose the stage over her. The two share some emotional scenes.
Many will be surprised at the range Pamela Anderson shows in her performance, and the story itself should not be overlooked. Razzle Dazzle acts as a stand-in for the life so many folks have led, and just how untethered and lost they feel when the rug is pulled from the only life they’ve known. Shelly mentions a couple of times how she’s always having to defend her life, somehow not recognizing the need … even when Hannah is standing face to face with her. There’s a lot here, and I’m hoping movie lovers give this one a shot.
Opens in theaters on January 10, 2025
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