A worthy entry in the annals of "Canuxploitation," writer Paul Corupe's term for our national
schlock.
Dolen's pieces are novel and inevitable sounding, devoid of cliches,
schlock or predictable patterns--things constantly happen in these works.
Only the
schlock, the bad commercial stuff find their way to the marketplace.
They return to their native lands knowing that America is more than just a hodgepodge of Hollywood
schlock, junk food, inane advertising, 1000 deodorant brands, and bad music.
Charles Paul Freund ("Big
Schlock Candy Mountain," February) did not mention Mount Rushmore's most significant symbolic feature.
But more often, a campy celebration of
schlock is just plain camp--or worse, just plain terrible.
Another slang term born of the Yiddish influence is oberverschuttgai-an extremely disagreeable person, a
schlock of the worst kind.
And if "real" religion is finally a matter of pure, immediate experience, nothing could conceivably rule out the worst forms of New Age
schlock spirituality as beyond the pale.
Any variation of heart-shaped
schlock was up for bargaining in tiny stalls.
You might have seen the famous
schlock film Attack of the Killer Tomatoes, in which huge, round, red fruit of the vine run amock ("This, God help us, is a cherry tomato!") and can only be stopped by really bad singing.
There, deliberately, I browsed through the film magazines to fill my mind with Hollywood
schlock and tittle-tattle.
Because women in particular have been dealt such a stream of romantic cinematic
schlock, when the hatchet finally falls, it is all the more brutal.
(1966); the popular TV mystery series Murder, She Wrote (1984 to 1995); high-powered dramas such as Oscar winner Johnny Belinda (1948) and East of Eden (1955), James Dean's breakthrough film; nostalgic classics like Summer of '42 (1971), starring Jennifer O'Neill; and a few
schlock thrillers, too - among them the salmon-monster saga Humanoids from the Deep (1980).
Chris Carter is the first to identify his own motive in producing his television program as nothing more than the desire to "scare the pants off" his audience-- a desire that has a long tradition in all sorts of entertainment, from
schlock comics to sacred drama.
When yet another children's CD arrived in our office, we just set it aside on top of the ever-growing pile of cutesy, condescending
schlock. but one day, intrigued by the simple artwork on the cover and the subtitle, we popped Like a Ripple on the Water into the CD player while we were working.