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Sugar Town
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Ten years after Allison Anders and Kurt Voss collaborated on Border Radio, a gritty and evocative look at life along the margins of the L.A. punk rock scene, the two have reunited for another look at the California music biz, this time aiming their sights considerably higher up the ladder. Sugar Town follows the interconnected lives of a handful of power brokers, wanna-bes and has-beens. Gwen (Jade Gordon), a self-centered would-be rock star who will do anything to further her career, is working as an assistant to production designer Liz (Ally Sheedy), but when Gwen discovers Liz has a date with famous producer Burt (Larry Klein), any loyalty she has to her boss immediately goes out the window. Burt's latest project is a comeback attempt from three aging Brit-rockers, Nick (Michael Des Barres), Clive (John Taylor), and Jonesy (Martin Kemp). Clive is married to Eva (Rosanna Arquette), an actress and one-time sex symbol depressed over her latest job offer -- playing Christina Ricci's mom. Nick has a dilemma of his own -- the band is strapped for cash, and Jane (Beverly D'Angelo), a potential investor, will write them a check only in exchange for sex with Nick... who unfortunately is only attracted to teenage girls. On the other side of town, Carl (John Doe) is a session musician with a pregnant wife (Lucinda Jenney), a flock of kids to support and bills to pay. When he's offered a spot in the touring band of a popular Latina singer, Rosio (Lumi Cavazos), Carl is torn -- his wife wants him to take the job, but Carl knows Rosio wants him for sex as much as music. Sugar Town, which premiered at the 1999 Sundance Film Festival, is authentically cast with many real-life rock musicians, including Doe (a member of L.A. punk legends X, and co-star of Border Radio), Taylor (from Duran Duran), Kemp (ex-Spandau Ballet), Des Barres (who has sung with Silverhead, Chequered Past and The Power Station) and Klein (a bassist and producer who's worked with Peter Gabriel and Joni Mitchell). ~ Mark Deming, All Movie Guide
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Review by All Movie Guide
All Movie Guide
is neutral about it.
The work of Allison Anders is characteristically thought-provoking and insightful and in Sugar Town she and co-director and co-writer Kurt Voss take aim at the Los Angeles music scene with mixed results. The film follows several interconnecting story lines that never really go anywhere except as short vignettes, and, particularly surprising from Anders, are rather bland. Ally Sheedy is very effective as a high-powered woman who can't seem to find the love she's looking for, particularly when her career-obsessed housekeeper Gwen, played by Jade Gordon, steals her music producer boyfriend as a means of getting a record deal. There are plenty of other unredeemable characters as one might expect from the subject matter, but Rosanna Arquette is quite likeable as a former movie star married to a rock star who must deal with the issue of her husband's fathering of a child out of wedlock. One of the more interesting aspects of the film is the use of actual rock stars as the former glam rock band trying to recapture their glory, including John Taylor of Duran Duran, Martin Kemp of Spandau Ballet, and Michael Des Barres of the Power Station. Beverly D'Angelo has a brief role as a wealthy widow who might finance the big comeback. It's a very campy part, and, given the dearth of quality acting from others in the cast, perhaps deserved more attention. Overall, Sugar Town has its moments, but it never truly gels like it was intended to. ~ Dan Friedman, All Movie Guide
 

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