This week: Glitter Filthy says:

"The movie Mariah Fans justly deserve." Note: This review may be biased by the fact that I am the President of the Arvada Chapter of the Mariah Carey Fan Club. It takes balls. It takes big fat hairy crotch rocks, the kind that are so big they're thrust out in front of you when you walk, the kind that are an easy target when you wear your Speedos, the kind that chafe against even the loosest Levi's. It takes monster balls to make the movie that we Mariah fans demanded, a movie that refuses to show Mariah in colflict, in tension, or less than perfect lighting. That is, a movie like Glitter. This story is the untold story of so many celebrities: the rapid, conflict-free rise of an almost impossibly dim and dull jerk to the heights of fame and fortune. Think about how many times you've watched television or a movie and wondered "How did that fucking asshole get to be so famous?" Now, thanks to Glitter, we know the answer. It is by smiling a lot. Glitter is a salute to all that makes Marah a super-duper star. It is mundane, trite and boring. It doesn't once suggest that the rise from a New York orphanage to world's biggest singing star is exciting or interesting. Rather, it dares to say such a story is silly and hackneyed and totally predictable. It doesn't pretend that this journey is complicated or that to achieve success requires much talent, shrewdness, planning, scheming or intrigue. You simply warble in a throaty voice, bobbing up and down the scales like a whore's mouth on a cock. And success doesn't require that you be surrounded by interesting people. In fact, you can surround yourself with stereotypes stolen from much more involving rags-to-riches stories. The story of Glitter dares to dream of a world devoid of anything that would make us give a flying fuck. And that's the way we Mariah fans like it. Of course, megastar Carey deserves the bulk of the credit for her sublime performance as a girl who isn't bright, has no discernible personality, and no control of her own career. She has the strength and conviction to stand statically in the foreground, smiling numbly while secondary characters sweat to move the plot around like a heavy boulder. It's phenomenal, really, that she had the courage to take a role that reveals to the world what her fans have known all along: behind her chipmunk smile and inside her slightly-soft body is nothing of substance, absolutely nothing. Kudos, Mariah! But let's not forget the little people who support Carey like Oakland Raiders hoisting John Madden circa 1976. Max Beesley is top-notch as "D. J. Dice," a deejay who discovers and nurtures Carey's rising star. Try to imagine a film that consistently reaches the level of creativity shown by naming the deejay "D.J." and you will overestimate Glitter. Beesley almost hides an obvious English accent under what might be generously called by the most devout member of his fanclub as a Brooklyn accent. But that's part of the film's beauty, you see. It says, why try to get such a little detail right when a good performance or original character would only detract from the film's message: talent and integrity are not necessary for success. Beesley's character is just a little strange. Is he a Svengali, a saint, or arbitrarily whatever the movie needs at any specific time? If you wonder this, you need to fucking relax and just sit there and whack your prick while Mariah sings, just like the rest of us fans do. The unobserving moviewatcher might think that Carey's sassy friends from the orphanage days are shitty sidekicks. They are given nothing to do, provide no levity and are about as "sassy" as an instant-coffee commercial. To those critics I say, fuck you and stop saying bad things about Mariah's movie!!! If this movie wanted these gals to actually be sassy or funny, they would have been. But it didn't. It wanted flat and dull ladies that, by contrast, let Mariah, with her limited acting ability and weird looks, sparkle and shine like a God damn rhinestone in a tawdry ring on the Home Shopping Network. Director Vondie Curtis-Hall gives the movie the movie the perfect level of "what the fuck are we doing" incompetence. Knowing what Mariah fans expect, he gives the story a dull finish usually found on old linoleum floors. He makes New York nightclubs circa 1983 look like the most uninteresting places ever. And that gives us fans solace about our own miserable living conditions. Curtis-Hall makes the movie plod from pointless scene to pointless scene. It leaves us Mariah fans delightfully scratching our heads in the sort of dumbfounded confusion we can only imagine Mariah feels every moment. Curtis-Hall produces some scenes that will be forever remembered as classic examples of mid-level achievement. A few favorites include a brilliant sequence where Mariah first tells Beesley that she loves him and she wouldn't even want success without him. One scene later she says, as she storms out, that he's ruining everything she's worked so hard for. Wow. For some people it takes years to come to such realization. With the help of a bad script, Mariah learns in minutes. And when she leaves Beesley, she does so with her cat, which the film had ignored since a very early scene when Mariah is nine. I assume Mariah fed it in the ensuing 13 years. It's like seeing an old friend again when the cat suddenly reappears. The audience laughed aloud because they were so happy that Mariah still had the fucking cat. Another beautifully set scene is after The Breakup. You know that despite their fight, Mariah and Beesley love each other. Otherwise, how could they be in different buildings, psychically collaborating on a song? The power of love, I swear to God. Mariah fans cannot afford to let sadness into their lives. We're all already on the edge of a deep chasm of despair, loneliness, long nights with gallon tubs of generic ice cream and 120-proof liquor. Sadness is just the bully who shoves us in. So, when Beesley is killed in a ridiculous subplot, it is not a loss. It's a fucking victory! His death does not send Mariah into a psychiatric clinic. No, it makes her a better, more successful and happier singer. And that's the power of Glitter. Five Fingers.

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