Down on Us (1984) Poster

(1984)

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A "so-bad-it's-good" rock & roll anti-classic! spoiler-ish...
EyeAskance20 March 2006
Warning: Spoilers
The inimitable schlockmeister Larry Buchanan must have really poured his heart and soul into this broccoli-fart...it's far more polished than any of the other pictures I've seen by him. That said, it is also possibly the worst film about rock and roll ever made, and paroxysmal laughter is one-hundred percent guaranteed.

This is an intellectually-challenged conspiracy feature which brings to light the shocking "truth" about the wild lives and untimely deaths of three rock legends-- Jimi Hendrix, Jim Morrison, and Janis Joplin. As you will see...they did NOT die from drug overdoses, as claimed the headlines...nope. The startling fact is that they were murdered by an elite group of assassins because they were subversive counterculture mavericks leading a massive youth rebellion during the Vietnam war! One of them may have been spared...but why spoil a novel "twist" ending?

You know you're in for a really stinky treat when the cover of a video about these long-dead rock legends boasts that there are "12 original songs", but frankly, a better than expected job was done making them sound authentic. In fact, the ersatz Doors pieces are frighteningly believable. Less believable, however, are the performances by the leads...they should thank God that they never became famous, because there's no way in all hell they'd ever be able to live this one down.

Big cheers for the MC5 poster, gratuitous groupie boobs, and one of the famed penis immortalizers hauling her plaster-casting gear around in the same vintage Carousel wig box my mom had back in the day.

Seven and one half stars(of ten), for all the wrong reasons.
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2/10
Probably did more to undermine conspiracy theories than further them
vonnoosh1 December 2019
I am usually very forgiving when it comes to low budget movies. I accept them for what they are and some have a quaint, perhaps overly ambitious but unpretentious charm about them. This is not one of those movies.

For one thing, this movie clocks in at almost two full hours. About half of the running time includes actors performing songs no one ever heard of as Jimi Hendrix, Janis Joplin and Jim Morrison. Only song you will recognize is the Star Spangled Banner which was performed at Woodstock on a gray morning. In the movie, its a small stage indoors. Anyone expecting this movie to have an hour of real concert footage of the three stars mixed in are mistaken. Again, this movie is two hours long and that just summed up half of it.

It is very easy to look up the chain of events that led to Jimi, Janis and Jim's death now. Back in the mid 80s, it wasnt so easy. The basic premise of the story is the government targeted these three rock stars for assassination. The reasons are not really well explained. Paranoia that they had some political power? Paranoia over the influence they had on the baby boomer generation? At first it looked like paranoia over their views of the Vietnam war but that didnt last. The story is built around an unfinished autobiography of an agent who is killed presumably to cover up the events. How this agent learns about the things he isnt there in scenes is not explained.

The movie often looks like mid 80s instead of late 60s/early 70s where it was set. The New York club scene is very 80s to the point I thought the Tom Tom Club and Cindi Lauper would make a flamboyant appearance. If I walked in on that one scene, id think Jimi Janis and Jim lived into the 80s and that was the big surprise in the plot. I probably would respect this movie more if it did have a twist like that.

There is tons of small budget showing up in the movie. Again, i accept that if there is some entertainment value but it is hard to find entertainment in this movie because of these weird music performances. I can't really fault the acting considering the script they had to work with. Its a shame they couldnt buy the rights to perform the songs the artists are known for but honestly, i dont think it would be worth the money to do that.

There is a funny scene with veteran b movie actor, Richard Kennedy as J Edgar Hoover takes a phone call in a dress. Yes, we know the stories alleged about Hoover but it was still funny to see.

Overall, the story is nil and quite boring with alot of music that only vaguely resembles anything Hendrix, Joplin or the Doors did. 2 hours is a far too long for a movie of this quality. I admire the overly ambitious subject matter but this is definitely a pretentious offering from Larry Buchanan and I didn't see that quaint charm shining through on this effort.
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1/10
Don't get "Down"....
Mister-610 May 2002
Larry Buchanan. Yep, same guy who did "Attack of the THE Eye Creatures" and two (count 'em: TWO) conspiracy movies about Marilyn Monroe. He's to blame, here.

Adding onto his ever-growing pile of folders left over from Oliver Stone's "eh-I-grew-out-of-it" conspiracy drawer, here's "Down On Us (i.e.- "Beyond the Doors") which is the working definition of historical inaccuracy.

Forget everything you THOUGHT you knew about Jimi Hendrix, Janis Joplin and Jim Morrison, says Big Lar', cuz this is the real deal! Y'see, the three big names in rock of the '60s were KILLED BY THE GOVERNMENT because they were subversives or counter-productive to Truth, Justice and the American Way, or sumpthin' like that there. I knew it all along.

Anyway, three people (Chatman, Meryl, Wolf) who look eerily like their real life shadows (that is, if you completely close your eyes, turn your backs and walk five miles away from them) show that instead of their recorded deaths, the good old US of A put hits out on them! Yep, it's the truth!

Man, I cannot believed I watched this movie. It's facts, when not stretching credibility to the snapping point, are ludicrous; the acting makes TV commercials look like high drama and if you honestly watch it through to the end, you deserve the "twist" ending. You really, really do; I swear. Genius.

But like the man said: "Rock and roll is dead - long live rock and roll."

Not this flick, though.

No stars for "Down on Us". And that's the movie audience describing the film, by the way....
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2/10
Crap in the Pants Movie
archie_stanton3 November 2013
Horrible all the way around. Only if interest for fans of REALLY obscure cinema, I rate this for the bottom 200. In fact I would put this right at number 50, because like everything else in this piece of garbage it has Just Enough to save it from a 1 star rating.

First the Good. The Jimi Hendrix actor is passable. Jim looks like a Halloween costume, and Janis looks nothing at all like Janis Joplin.

All the songs are soundalikes, obviously as a movie of this budget could never get the rights to classic hits. BUT, the soundalikes honestly do sound like what the artist would be doing in 1982, had they lived. Too bad this movie takes place in 1968-1971. Get my drift? There is enough here to bear watching this train smash --- but only to have it fail 90% of the time.

The actual story was kinda decent, has it been directed by an Oliver Stone, we might have an actual movie here.

The budget SEVERELY limits this film... instead of Janis's signature 1/5th of SOCO she drinks from a pint of whatever, and even uses and 80's style juicer.

In the scene where the UK cover of Electric Ladyland is shot, instead of a mountain of nude women, we get 2 topless ones...

It goes on and on and on... deserves a Rifftrack... but this movie runs 2 HOURS... are you kidding? Only of interest to people who like to go to sleep or vomit. It's bad.
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1/10
ugh!
stevespeedy30 January 2010
Bad plot, bad dialogue, bad acting, idiotic directing, the annoying porn groove soundtrack that ran continually over the overacted script, and a crappy copy of the VHS cannot be redeemed by consuming liquor. Trust me, because I stuck this turkey out to the end. It was so pathetically bad all over that I had to figure it was a fourth-rate spoof of Springtime for Hitler.

The girl who played Janis Joplin was the only faint spark of interest, and that was only because she could sing better than the original.

If you want to watch something similar but a thousand times better, then watch Beyond The Valley of The Dolls.
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8/10
Woodstock indoors?
Edermike1 February 2003
I love this movie it is so funny. I think that Jim Morrisons stoned surfer dude dialog is worthy of an academy. Jimi's vomit is the stuff of the heavens, and hey at last a good looking Janis who CAN sing. Anyhow if you love bad movies and sitting drunk with your friends and making sarcastic remarks is your idea of fun, this may be your waterloo! The bizarre music may be the highlight, but then I remember the plot. Honestly it's really crazy and you must see it to believe it. I suppose the Hendrix guy was the best, but they sure give him some off the wall lines. Jim of course is made out to be an incoherent wreck. Janis they were nicer too, but somehow I don't think any of three hung out as much as this film would lead you to think. Actually thinking isn't the point of this movie, it's just enjoying the schlock. Ed Wood had he lived may have turned out something just like this.
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Oliver Stone's mutant little brother
lor_3 May 2023
My review was written in November 1989 after watching the movie on Unicorn video cassette.

Perhaps the screwiest of Larry Buchanan's series of conspiracy-theory films, "Beyond the Doors" is a direct-to-video release postulating that the government put a hit out on Janis Joplin, Jimi Hendrix and Jim Morrison.

Filmed in 1983 with the Joplin-esque title "Down on Us", it's fun but extremely silly entertainment, opening with a George Bernard Shaw quote: "Assassination is the extreme form of censorship".

Unlike his other films about Marilyn Monroe and Lee Harvey Oswald, Buchanan is on pretty shaky ground here, trying to create links and conspiracies involving three of the showing stars from the '60s.

Episodic pic unfolds awkwardly in flashbacks dating from 1968-71, as Steven Tice reads a file left him by his just assassinated dad (Sandy Kenyon), a government mole who was assigned to kill the three singers, supposedly because of their political stands and influence on young people.

Name-dropping script mentions Richard Nixon (especially in somewhat cryptic quotes from a 1977 interview) and others in vaguely pointing a finger, and depicts another deceased figure, J. Edgar Hoover, onscreen. Links between the three stars and their personal interrelationships remain quite unconvincing, however. Buchanan is far more circumspect than the recent "Wired" film in depicting surviving folks; no one will recognize, for example, sidemen Mitch Mitchell or Ray Manzarek from the characters shown on screen.

Main content, filled with sexploitation material involving groupies going topless, is a rather campy re-creation of concerts and backstage/out-on-the-town incidents. It's all rendered goofy by the decision to save big bucks and rely on a dozen soundalike songs by David Shorey, RIchard Bowen and Janet Strover that gives the feel but do not replicate the impact of the singers' actual hits.

Three hesps in the lead roles don't look like their targets, but Riba Meryl as Joplin and Gregory Allen Chatman as Hendrix do prettty well in mimicking thier voices and manner. Bryan Wolf does a poor job recalling Morrison, while his unidentified gilfriend (called simply "She" in the credits) is well played by Susanne Barnes.

Pic's only revelation is the claim that Morriswon faked his own death in order to regain his privacy. According to Buchanan, Morrison wnet to live in a monastery in Spain, dying there quietly in January 1974. If you believe that one, Buchanan has the real story of Howard Hughes and Jean Harlow in the can for perusal as well.
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Schlock Rock Hell
jmike25 June 1999
Schlock master Larry Buchanan combines his love of conspiracy theories with his amazing ability to present unrealistic history in this movie, perhaps the worst rock music related film ever made. The actors only vaguely resemble Hendrix, Janis Joplin, and Jim Morrison, and produce amusing sound alike fake music for the soundtrack. All musical performances take place on the same cheap set which is said to be in different places all over the world. Everything has an extreme bargain basement quality about it. A lot more fun to watch than Woodstock.
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The truth is hard to hear!
brettmeisner14 June 2002
Many people think that drugs were the reason that three top rock stars in the early seventies all died of "Drug Overdoses" within a one year period. People are afraid to ask why. That is, everyone except Larry Buchanan. Larry is not afraid to put his ass on the line to tell the truth. As a famous rock journalist with over two decades in the trenches, I take my hat off to Larry for laying out a courageous and extremely plausible scenario! Watch this film and learn the truth. But remember, you might not like what you'll discover about your government!
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