The following is part of the So Bad It's Good blogathon hosted at
Taking Up Room – Reviews. History. Life.
It’s never good when the best part of a movie is its first five minutes.
C.C. & Company (19700 starts with Joe Namath, as a member of an outlaw biker gang “The Heads,” pretending
to grocery shop while actually making a sandwich for himself by taking food
from the shelves (and resealing packages as he goes along – the golden age of
product tampering), washing it down with a stolen pint of milk, then helping
himself to a napkin and a package of Twinkies, begging the question, do biker gang members use napkins?
Or eat Twinkies?
From that point forward, C.C. & Company unfolds
like an R-rated Elvis movie, with Namath as the loner with a chip on his
shoulder but a heart of gold. He even gets a cool Elvis character name, C.C.
Ryder. And like many Elvis movies, C.C. & Company ends with a
climactic alpha-male competition where the hero wipes the smirk from his rival..png)
Never underestimate the importance of a nutritious lunch
(There’s no way Presley would have signed on for C.C.
& Company. There’s beer guzzling, disrespect for authority, a biker
chick skinny-dipping, a couple of blurred nude biker asses and Ann-Margret
telling a biker to fuck off).
Namath, at the time one of the most recognizable people
in America, got the call. When his New York Jets upset the heavily favored
Baltimore Colts in the 1969 Super Bowl, he was everywhere. Books, magazine
covers, a syndicated talk show, commercials. The path led, inevitably, to
movies.
After their not-so-cute first meeting – C.C. steps in to stop two of his motorcycle buddies from raping Ann (Ann-Margret) when her limo breaks down in the desert – C.C. wins first prize in a motorcross event and leaves The Heads, pocketing the prize money instead of tossing it into the gang’s beer fund, angering head Head Moon, played by the always menacing and excellent William Smith. Other Heads include notables Sid Haig and Bruce Glover, all of whom, in the golden tradition of biker movies, generally behave like the apes in 2001: A Space Odyssey.
It also leads us to wonder how clean-cut C.C. ever got mixed
up these guys. He doesn’t drink or smoke, and while the rest of the Heads are
acting up, he works on his motorcycle. Marlon Brando = the Wild One,
C.C. = the Mild One.
C.C. quits The Heads, trades in his motorcycle jacket for track suits and striped bellbottoms, and hooks up with Ann. They hit a club where,
in an ultra-meta moment, the bizarrely coiffed Wayne Cochran and his band, the C.C.
Riders sing the blues/rock standard See See Rider.
That’s followed by a Hallmark moment “falling in love”
montage, C.C. and Ann feeding ducks and riding a pedal boat as Today: The Love Theme from
C.C. & Company sung by Miss Margret provides a suitable soundtrack.
But the Heads are still trying to reclaim the money C.C.
took. They kidnap Ann from her huge glass-walled home – we’re not sure what she
does for a living. At one point it’s said she owns a New York City “fashion
house,” but she also seems to art direct photo shoots and write news releases.
All of it leads up to the big motorcycle race/duel to the
death between C.C. and Moon seemingly lit with a flashlight.
Namath is personable, self-deprecating and laid-back. He
isn’t given much in the way of dialogue (or at least many lines of dialogue
strung together) so there’s no need for any emotional heavy lifting. Ann-Margret
and William Smith handle that department.
As biker gang movies go, C.C. & Company is
pretty tame. It’s worth checking out, but if you switch to something else after
the sandwich scene, it’s understood.

.png)







