Criticism > Contemporary Literary Criticism > Zappa, Frank - Tom Carson
Zappa, Frank - Tom Carson
TOM CARSON
Baby Snakes isn't the longest rock-star self-indulgence ever put on the screen ([Bob Dylan's] Renaldo and Clara still holds that title) nor is it the most pretentious (ditto). It's an ego trip, all right, but on a picayune, low-rent scale; its intermittent stabs at higher meaning come mostly in the form of gnomic inside jokes, meant for the exclusive consumption of Zappa's ever-shrinking cadre of hard-core devotees. It may be the first rock-star movie ever designed from the outset as a cult item….
Clearly, the movie is a labor of love—but for what? You'd expect a cranky pedagogue like Zappa to at least pretend to some sort of big thematic statement, and he does; but the substance of Baby Snakes is as thin as dental floss. The movie's advertising line, "a movie about people who do stuff that is not normal," is as far as it goes. Zappa now seems to think that's enough. It's a desperate eccentricity. He gives us the tiresome...
[The entire page is 595 words long]
Join eNotes
Over 3,500 study guides, question and answer forums, literature criticism, reference content, and much more!
Navigate
- Introduction
- Bertram Stanleigh
- Harvey Pekar
- Robert A. Rosenstone
- Ellen Sander
- David G. Walley
- Lester Bangs
- Alan Heineman
- Bill Reed
- Lester Bangs
- Lester Bangs
- Jay Cocks
- Dan Morgenstern
- David Reitman
- Mike Bourne
- David Walley
- Arthur Schmidt
- Peter Kountz
- Alan Niester
- Eric Salzman
- JOHN SWENSON and BART TESTA
- Lester Bangs
- Robert Duncan
- Andy Doherty
- Tim Schneckloth
- David Fricke
- Peter Reilly
- Jon Pareles
- Karl Dallas
- Shel Kagan
- Cole Springer
- Tom Carson
- Jon Pareles
- Don Shewey
- Larry Birnbaum
- Paul Tickell
- Copyright
