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Evel Knievel
(1972)
Director: Marvin Chomsky
Cast: George Hamilton, Sue Lyon, Bert Freed
After a two year absence, George Hamilton returned to the screen in
a vehicle quite different from his previous movies, Evel Knievel.
He also produced it, leading one to suspect that maybe he was trying to
build a different image for himself after starring in so many movies playing
"pretty boy" types in the 60s. If Hamilton was indeed trying to break this
image, then he certainly succeeded in doing so; I admit I didn't think
once of his trademark tan or his playboy image while I was watching this
movie. Unfortunately, Hamilton was also playing a character that is one
of the most annoying I have seen in quite a while. As well, the movie is
saddled with a poor script, disorganized, and failing to tell us what shaped
the man into what he was.
As you've probably guessed, this movie is a biography of Evel Knievel,
the famous stunt motorcyclist who captivated audiences around thirty years
ago. You would then assume that the movie would carefully trace his history,
showing how he gradually got into motorcycles and stunt work. That's what
you'd think, but that's where the first major flaw of this movie comes
in - we never find out exactly what inspired and drove Knievel to do
what he did. Let's take a closer look; they say the child is the father
of man, so you'd think there would be some major events in Knievel's childhood
that would have driven him to become what he did become. Not according
to this movie, showing only two events in his life when he was a kid growing
up in Butte, Montana. The first scene shows young Bobby Knievel standing
on a road in the outskirts of town, with a waiting car in front of him
honking its horn. Suddenly, due to the mine shafts below, the ground under
the car crumbles, and the car plunges hundreds of feet down, far enough
that we don't hear the crash. Bobby walks to the hole, and drops a rock
down. This scene is so bizarre, you'd swear David Lynch directed it. The
second scene sounds promising at first - Bobby's first visit to a daredevil
show when he was 12. Though we see Bobby looking at the show, we don't
see it for ourselves (even when there's a major accident during the show),
since each shot takes place in the grandstand. All we learn about how it
affected Knievel is when Knievel narrates at the end, "A very amusing experience."
The fact that we don't get to see the accident Evil witnesses is one
of several ways the movie has to get around its limited budget. While never
looking really impoverished, the whole movie resembles a made-for-tv drama
from the early 70s, and anachronisms sneak in on occasion. However, this
doesn't really hurt the movie that much. Not long after those two childhood
sequences, we suddenly jump in time to Knievel as a young man, doing motorcycle
stunts at a traveling rodeo. How did he learn to ride a motorcycle? What
made him do something so dangerous? We don't know; as I said before, we
never learn what inspired and gave him the courage to do these things.
Going back to this sudden time jump, this is where another flaw of the
movie comes in. The movie jumps around time like crazy, endlessly jumping
back and forth from the present day (February 28, 1971 at the Ontario Motor
Speedway, where a nervous Knievel is about to jump 19 cars) to earlier
in his career, showing his climb into superstardom. This jumping around
makes it hard for us to have any idea of time, so it's hard to feel any
progress Knievel is making. Especially since his work in achieving fame
is accomplished by a montage of real news footage of Knievel doing his
stunts! Each newly filmed scene is given so little time before it ends,
with then a sudden leap forward to a later part of Knievel's life, that
the movie is unable to build any relationships between Knievel and other
characters. For example, a reoccurring character is Dr. Kincaid (Freed),
who patches up Knievel between shows. How did they meet? Are they friends,
as well as doctor and patient? We are never sure. The worst part of the
movie is when the movie seems to have run out of flashbacks, and we are
now firmly in the present day - the movie then suddenly jumps back into
time when Knievel was a teenager, hell on wheels, and romancing
his future wife. Why didn't they edit this part of his life so it came
after his childhood sequences?
In this lengthy part of the movie, showing Knievel as a teenager (and
not bothering to explain how he became such a badass and troublemaker in
several years), Hamilton thoroughly embarrasses himself. 33 years old when
he made this movie, he was way too old to be playing a teenager. Worse,
he plays teenage Knievel as a kind of pre-Happy Days Fonzie, complete
with a black leather jacket. Elsewhere, Hamilton is clearly trying very
hard, and as I said before, he manages to shake his pretty-boy image. However,
he never seems to quite settle in the role, always seeming a bit too tense,
and his enunciation a bit too practiced and calculated. Witness his anti-drug
speech late in the movie, for one thing. And as I mentioned before, Knievel
comes across here as a thoroughly obnoxious man, arrogant, a media hog,
and affected by bouts of paranoia. Maybe that's how he was in this stage
of his life (I honestly suspect the movie's portrayal of him to be close
to the truth), but you don't want to be stuck in a room with a guy like
this, so why would you want to watch a movie about such a guy? If we learned
what drove the man, that might be a good reason, but I've already said
we don't learn this. Other acting in the movie is adequate at best, though
the short appearance by the always welcome Dub Taylor(*)
brightens things up for a few minutes.
Looking back at the movie, I've just realized that although the movie
doesn't tell us what drove Knievel, it does show that Knievel knew what
an audience wanted, and how to milk something out he did for their pleasure.
There's a cute sequence early in his adult life, where he goes to a bar
and slowly but surely gets the people around him interested, by constantly
making cryptic promises of something going to happen, then going out (with
them following) and giving them a surprise, taking as long as he can without
frustrating or boring the onlookers. He is also gracious to his audience,
always telling them stuff like, "It's an honor to jump for you tonight"
or "Nothing is impossible - they told Columbus that to sail across the
ocean was impossible" before he does his act. Clearly this understanding
of giving it all to an audience contributed a huge part to his success
with the public, and at least this part of the movie is both insightful
and well done. One interesting part of the movie has Knievel telling us,
the audience, something a little boy once told him: "Mr. Knievel, I think
you're crazy. That jump you're going to try is impossible. But I already
have my tickets, for I want to see you splatter." I'm sure Knievel already
knew that - after all, it's the reason you and I watched him in action.
* Dub Taylor, a character actor in many westerns,
will be more familiar to Generation Xers as the guy in the old Hubba Bubba
commercials who would exclaim, after the "Gumslinger" won another showdown,
stuff like, "Stick it to 'im, Gumslinger! Ha-ha!"
Check for availability on Amazon (VHS)
Check for availability on Amazon (DVD)
Check for availability of Knievel's
autobiography "Evel Ways"
See also: Carnival
Of Blood, An Enemy
Of The People, Mountain
Man
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