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The Rivals
(a.k.a. Rivals & Stranger At Jefferson
High)
(1981)
Director: Lyman Dayton
Cast: Stewart Petersen, Philip Brown, Dona Kimmell
They don't make movies like this anymore. Seen today, The Rivals
might
be seen as naive, clichéd to the extreme, and dated. Certainly, it is guilty
of those charges. But at the same time, after twenty years (the movie was
made in 1979, but released two years later) it is in many ways a breath
of fresh air, with its sweet tone and assurances that everything will work
out in the end, that good will triumph over what is bad. It can be seen
as one of the final films of this kind; just a few years later, the 1985
movie The New Kids took the same basic premise and made it
into a horror/suspense exploitation movie. It's interesting to compare
the two movies, though you'll first have to somehow find a copy of The
Rivals - it was never released on video, and I only found it on
late night television.
Interestingly, when I researched the movie after watching it, I discovered
that it was done by the same production team as Seven
Alone, which I reviewed last week. Also, the actor who played
John Seger in that movie (Stewart Petersen) plays the central role in The
Rivals - he had changed so much in just a few years, I didn't recognize
him. In his late teens here, his performance has become bigger and weaker
in the wrong areas - his accent is stronger, and his reading of lines sounds
even more like he's reading from a script in front of him. He plays Adam
Cummings, one of five children in a Wyoming sheep farm family, but the
father has just passed away. The family packs up and heads to L.A. (with
their pet lamb!), where the mother is to work at some undefined low income
job. When they pull into their new home, it looks like a mess, as it always
is when characters move from one place to L.A. in the opening credits.
Adam considers himself the man of the house, and struggles to bring
in extra money for the family, finally managing to take a part-time job
at a gas station. But his struggles aren't just in getting money. A regular
California jock named Clyde (played by Brown, and first seen combing his
hair while looking at one of the rearview mirrors of his - yes - van) has
found the presence of this hick amusing, initially mocking him for his
cowboy clothes and his being a sheep farmer. Later, he humiliates Adam
by doing things like locking him overnight in an outhouse cemented on the
school's parking lot. Not only that, Clyde has great interest in Adam's
sister Alice, which Adam is horrified by, and tries in vain to scare his
sister away from Clyde. Surprisingly, Adam doesn't take that other humiliation
by Clyde lying down, and manages to humiliate Clyde in some other fashion
shortly after each time Clyde does something to him. How will these rivals
resolve their rivalry? Well, since Clyde is seen racing someone on the
beach for money early on in the movie, I don't think it will come as a
surprise to anyone what happens in the final fifteen minutes or so.
I'll give credit to the filmmakers, however, on that climax. That's
because they throw in an unexpected twist to that climatic race, and it's
probably not what you think that twist might be. Also, the rivalry itself
is not what you might expect. For one thing, the rivalry really doesn't
get official until quite some time after the first meeting of Adam and
Clyde, which I think is more realistic. It's refreshing to see an onscreen
rivalry never getting too intense - no foul words are exchanged, and no
fists fly (at least between Adam and Clyde.) Another more realistic take
on the movie is the portrayal of Clyde. Another movie may have made him
into a sadistic and stupid leather-coated creep of some kind. Clyde may
be a thoughtless person who takes pleasure in the pranks he pulls, but
he's not really a bad person. We see that he's simply forgotten - or never
learned in the first place - about showing respect to others or considering
the feelings of others. What's also interesting is when the movie looks
at Adam's character, and we see that not everything about him is perfect.
He's overprotective of his sister, and even before giving everyone at his
new school a fair chance, he dismisses them all as "hippies" (!) and doesn't
want himself and his sister to get to know them better.
The acting is pretty bad in this movie - it's not just Petersen who
sounds like he's reading, instead of just acting his lines. The characters
are mostly stereotypes as well; Benner (Joel P. Kenney), a friend Adam
makes, is a glasses-wearing nerd, obsessed with frogs, getting a scholarship,
and putts around on a moped. Adam's gas station boss Stone (Albert Lantieri),
is a crusty man who initially refuses to hire Adam (Adam has to secretly
clean up the garage to earn his trust,) but later turns out to have a heart
of gold. Clyde has a girlfriend named Brook (Kimmell) who soon starts to
fancy Adam (Considering the way Clyde treats her - like dirt, of course
- its amazing she's still with Clyde at this point.) Despite this, there
was something likable about these characters still. When Benner starts
to get victimized by Clyde and is comforted by Adam, I found the scene
surprisingly touching, despite the horrible acting. Even when the characters
were force-fed actions and dialogue to show off wholesome, Christian values,
it went down easier than I thought. Example: Adam wants to put a new engine
in his truck (oooh, foreshadowing!) and Stone wonders if it is worth it,
considering the beat-up look of his truck. "It's what's inside that counts,"
responds Adam. Corny, but....
I will admit, though, that sometimes - make that many times,
there was just too much of that corn. It doesn't help that this movie is
very dated. Characters wear very 70s haircuts, the teenagers at a party
dance "The Hustle" (to music that's a cross between Pomp and Circumstance
and
Van McCoy's The Hustle), and people are nice enough to utter several
times during the course of the movie, "...shove it down your throat,"
instead of suggesting another bodily opening, away from gravity. In fact,
the movie is a little too nice, ever for its time period. And it
is almost completely, totally, and utterly predictable. You'll know just
about everything that will happen a long, long, long time before
it happens. A funny thing though; when I first finished watching this movie,
I firmly thought it was sweet, but too corny and clichéd. But after some
time has passed between watching this movie and writing a review on it,
I've found myself more and more fondly looking back upon the good stuff
in the movie than the negative stuff. As corny and dated as this movie
may be, there was something reassuring about it, how it suggested that
hard work will be rewarded, and that "what's inside counts" is really apt.
I'm not really saying it's good enough for a definite recommendation, but
I no longer think it's as bad as I initially thought. My feeling on this
movie isn't one way or another, but at the same time, my conscious is tsk-tsking
me for not giving a clear positive review, and reflecting on how shameful
it is that movies like this aren't made any more.
UPDATE: Jason Atwood of The
Wide World Of Movies updated me on the status of Rivals:
"I've been in the progress of adding title links to my pages, until
coming across Rivals (found it on TV). It appears it just got released
on video. Movies Unlimited (my site's affiliation) has a listing in the
online catalog for a pretty good price. The actors, the story, it all fits
the description."
I took a look for myself, and Jason was indeed correct. Curious, I took
a wander over to Amazon.com, where they also sell the video. Their listing
also shows a picture of the front of the box, which I though amusing, for
it not being quite appropriate for what really happens in the movie. To
see it, click here.
Also, I got a note the other day from reader William Olsen (who really
knows his stuff) telling me that Rivals was given
a video release in the early '80s in one of those big clam shell boxes.
Somehow, all my reference materials didn't point this out. Thanks, William!
UPDATE 2: Dave Eisenstark (http://www.smartindiefilms.com)
sent along his memories of working on the film:
"It was a bittersweet experience--the only
job I've ever been fired from. In fact, the
entire crew was fired in one fell swoop, in fear
of labor action is one guess--an unfounded fear,
I can now reveal, though there was some
disgruntlement amongst the crew. The DP was
actually more of a production manager, who
believed in some wacky military model of
filmmaking. The caterer slipped us decaf during
all-night shoots (a capital offense, or oughtta
be).
"What else? Oh, we were all gathered around on
the first day, before a
single shot, and told if we didn't hustle we'd
be fired. Nothing like being
treated like a professional, huh?
"The actual production manager was a wonderful
man by the name of Morrie Abrams, a real
show-biz veteran. Though I didn't see it, I
heard that on the second day of shooting the
owner of the location threatened Morrie with a
shotgun. Morrie walked right up to the man and
talked him down before the rest of us arrived.
"It was only my second job on a feature film and
I was a grip. When the
best boy grip (second-in-charge under the key
grip) got into an argument
with the key grip I got promoted, which meant a
raise to $75 a day, which
was big money to me in those days. I did hustle
and I loved the work, but
none of us thought the film was worth anything.
Typical low-budget
filmmaking ala 1980--cynical as hell and quite a
shock for me, just out of
USC Film School with dreams of artistry. We
were all fired before the last week of filming,
and since the film was finished with a skeleton
crew, I always wondered if the whole thing
wasn't orchestrated to get rid of us and save
money.
"Footnote: my wife worked on a film for the same
producer-director many years later on a distant
location. My daughter and I went to visit and
went to the set one day. Sure enough, that very
day there was a lot of acrimony, some angry
words and once again, the whole production
ground to a halt. This time, the
producer-director got the ax and the crew stayed
on, so I felt the sour joy of vindication.
(Insert cackle here.)
"Thanks to you I discovered a VHS could be had,
so I ordered a used copy
of Rivals (I've never seen it) from
Amazon for $6.95 (too much, I'm sure) to relive
those days."
Check for availability on Amazon (VHS)
See also: Against
A Crooked Sky, Seven
Alone, Legacy Of
Rage
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