The
Psychotronic Zone
The
Z-Files
By
Ed Garea
Abar,
The First Black Superman (Mirror Releasing, 1977) –
Director: Frank Packard. Writers: James Smalley (story and s/p), J.
Walter Smith (scenario). Stars: J. Walter Smith, Tobar Mayo, Roxie
Young, Gladys Lum, Tony Rumford, Rupert Williams, Tina James, Art
Jackson, Allen Ogle, Joe Alberti, Dee Turguand, Nelson Meeker,
William Carrol, Jr., James Dickson, & Richard Corrigan. Color,
PG, 102 minutes.
As
the Blaxploitation craze died down and talents were channeled into
other genres of film, a few stragglers managed to release their
products on an unsuspecting audience. One that truly stands out in
all its awfulness is Abar, The First Black Superman,
which was released in 1977, a collaboration between black
writer-producer James Smalley and white director Frank Packard. The
film began in 1973 as SuperBlack, the tale of an
African-American superhero who brings peace and justice to the inner
city while reconciling opposing forces. In the end it became Abar,
after its protagonist, an inner-city activist who becomes a superman
with God-like vision and omnipotence after ingesting an experimental
drug.
Shot
on the fly in Baldwin Hills and Watts, Smalley ran out of money
roughly one-third of the way through filming. He was forced to sell
the film to Burt Steiger and his Pacific Film Labs in part to settle
the unpaid lab bill.
Finished
in 1975, American International Pictures expressed interest in
distributing it and there was even talk of a sequel. But negotiations
fell through and the film sat on the shelf for two years before being
acquired by Mirror Releasing, an exploitation film-clearing house. It
received a very limited distribution throughout the South, and Mirror
took the step of rechristening it In Your Face for
release on VHS.
Cast
and helmed by amateurs, Abar has the look of a
low-budget feature shot on the run. Almost no one can act, the script
is ludicrous, and the direction is lacking. The plot as such concerns
scientist Dr. Ken Kincade (Smith), who moves his family into an
all-white neighborhood in Los Angeles. At first, the neighbors think
they are the help, but when they learn the family is to be their
neighbors, they go ballistic: picketing in front of the Kincades’
house, throwing garbage on their front lawn, and lynching their cat
(although rumor has it that the animal committed suicide after
viewing the rushes).
Needing
help, Kincade drives to the inner city, where he has his offices and
recruits the aid of John Abar (Mayo) and his Black Front of Unity
(BFU). Abar, a real badass who has pledged his life to protect black
folks in their community, winds up being hired as a live-in full-time
bodyguard, all the while complaining to Kincade that the doctor is
abandoning his people by moving into a white neighborhood.
Unfortunately, he can’t protect Kincade’s young son, Tommie
(Rumford) from being run over by one of the local racists.
At
his wit’s end, Kincade decides to amp up the work on a serum that
will make a man indestructible. He works in his basement laboratory,
and until now, has been experimenting on making super rabbits. He
asks Abar if he’s like to take a sip or two, even shooting one of
his super rabbits with no effect to convince our hero. But Abar turns
him down; that is, until some crackers take a few potshots at him.
Now he swings the stuff down like a bottle of MD 20/20. Not only does
Abar become bulletproof, but he has also acquired psychic powers and
abilities that allow him to battle racism and improve his
neighborhood at the same time.
After
seeing a murderous honky place a bomb in front of the Kincade home
and drive off, Abar is able to telepathically move the bomb and place
in the honky’s front seat, where it explodes in a frenzy of
footage. But it doesn’t stop there. Oh no. After blowing up the
honky, Abar turns his powers to helping the black community. He sees
a bunch of bums drinking cheap wine and turns their bottles into
milk. He sees a pimp beating on his ho and gives the victim the
powers of a kung fu master so she can return the favor. When he sees
a group of teenagers wasting their time getting high, he turns them
into college graduates, complete with outfits. A preacher who is just
about to get into his big, shiny new Cadillac finds the car
transformed into a horse and buggy, though no one in the congregation
even so much as notices. Seeing a purse-snatcher, he makes the thief
run and run until, totally exhausted, he returns the purse. When Dr.
Kincade’s Uncle Tom friend, Dudley, exclaims, “To hell with the
blacks in the ghetto,” Abar transforms his pasta dinner into one of
earthworms.
Returning
to the doc’s place, Abar proceeds to give one of the best
incoherent speeches in bad film history, telling the incredulous
doctor that the serum “released from my soul an ancient wisdom.”
His powers, you see, “are of a divine origin.” Abar is only a
tool, “a mirror reflecting man unto himself. By controlling the
mind, I can hasten the retributive forces lodged in his unconscious
mind.” Wow. Ed Wood couldn’t have written it any better. After
all this speechifying, Abar then goes out and unleashes a series of
Biblical plagues on the white suburbs, including lightning and
thunder, rats, snakes, and bees, finally sweeping the racist crackers
away with huge gusts of wind.
All
this has the desired effect on the neighbors, who fall over
themselves to apologize to the Kincades for being such racists. One
lady even goes so far as to tell them the reason why she was so
hostile to their moving in was because she is really black herself;
she just passes for white.
The
film does attempt to introduce some rumination on social issues, and
part of the dialog between Abar and Kincade is profound and rather
provocative. But it is completely undermined by the poor script and
the atrocious acting, editing, soundtrack, and direction.
First,
the acting: To call J. Walter Smith’s acting horrible is generous.
He sounds as if he’s absentmindedly reading his lines off cue
cards. There is no attempt at dramatic inflection whatsoever. But
he’s comes off as Laurence Fishburne when compared to Roxie Young,
who plays his wife. Her emoting over the body of her dead son almost
made me break out in laughter. The only one in the cast who seems to
know his way around a film set is Tobar Mayo. He was in Charles
Barnett’s excellent Killer of Sheep, and appeared on
television, including The Jeffersons and Mannix.
He’s also a co-founder of L.A.’s Open Gate Theatre.
Interestingly
both writer-producer Smalley and director Packard also disappeared
after this film was made. Abar was their first – and last –
credit as writer, producer, and director.
The
editing is a series of quick cuts to the next scene, often without
warning. And the continuity is lacking. In the scene where young
Tommie confronts the bomber, we see the bomber planting his device
and setting the timer. Here comes Tommy with his cap pistol and
chases the man off. Unfortunately, Tommie attempts to stop the car
with his face and fails miserably, as does the cameraman shooting
this stunt. Meanwhile, the film ambles on and we see and hear no more
of the bomb. It just disappears.
The
film’s mix of real issues (such as corrupt government aid
programs, crooked cops, urban blight, and lending discrimination) and
the atrocious execution of its plot make for one of the campiest
films to come down the pike. Abar is for
connoisseurs of bad cinema; those hardy souls out there who like
their product totally absurd. Compared to Packard and Smalley, Ed
Wood comes off like Orson Welles.
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