THE EYES OF TAMMY FAYE
Leave it to Pat Boone to serve up the shrewdest insight in this fluffy but
outrageously entertaining portrait. Scrape off the make-up and blot up the
tears and Tammy Faye Bakker becomes Hillary Rodham Clinton, an earnest
do-gooder who suffered for her husband's sins. And like Hillary, Tammy won't
settle for a quiet corner in the celebrity sun.
Well before E! or Behind the Music, directors Fenton Bailey and Randy
Barbato were honing the brand of shlockumentary they cook to perfection here.
Three parts dish to one part news, the recipe is just right for capturing the
defrocked diva of the evangelical movement. If you thought Jim and Tammy were
ghoulish in their late years, think again. The filmmakers locate mind-blowing
early footage, when Jim's spud of a head looked especially well-shellacked. The
couple's televangelism empire, we find out, began with a children's puppet show
on a fledgling Christian network. Drunk on this stranger-than-fiction tidbit,
the directors use talking sock puppets to introduce various sections of their
tale, and it's a bad and smarmy idea. (RuPaul's breathless narration doesn't
help either.) Much better is staging a reunion between Tammy Faye and the
journalist who won a Pulitzer Prize for unmasking the Bakkers. She arrives in a
red leather jacket and knee-high boots; he leaves with her autograph. The film
plays up Tammy's embrace of gay men, including AIDS patients otherwise
demonized by the Christian right. And it follows her today through the rough
waters of a celebrity afterlife as she pitches crummy talk-show ideas to
network executives. Thank the Lord, for Tammy's sake, that none of these has
come to pass.
-- Scott Heller