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Run, Angel, Run
(1969)
Director: Jack Starrett
Cast: William Smith, Valerie Starrett, Margaret Markov
The presence of William Smith in a movie no doubt brings a smile to
the lips of many B movie fans, and also a lot of memories of the 60s and
70s. If you ask them to say the first thing that comes to mind when hearing
"motorcycle movie", chances are the reply will be "William Smith". Marlon
Brando may have been the first to be in a motorcycle movie....but it was
Smith who defined this genre.
This cheap and scruffy motorcycle movie has some interest not only because
of the presence of Smith, but as a sign of how other (and better movies)
were influencing this movie as well as other movies. The same year this
movie was released, Woodstock and Easy Rider
were released. So it's not very surprising that this low-budget movie would
resort to some of these movies' striking visuals (that were inexpensive
to reproduce.) Witness near the beginning of the movie when the camera,
filming a motorcycle pack roaring down the highway, is placed in the back
of the camera truck close to the ground to make the lead bike seemingly
tower over the camera. And then in a cut to the next scene, the next few
seconds flash back and forth between the present scene and the next scene.
All tricks from Easy Rider. Later in the movie, the hero
and his girlfriend are riding all over a train yard and the screen shows
multiple images a la Woodstock of the duo and the pursuing
bad guy in multiple camera angles.
But here, such tricks seem foolish. This movie doesn't have the historical
importance of Woodstock or fresh ideas as Easy Rider
had, so using these things on a cheap exploitation movie seem out of place
- like window dressing without a window.
Well, actually there is a window in this movie. It's the middle 60 minutes
of the movie. But first, the movie: After the Tammy Wynette opening credits
song, we find out that Angel (Smith) agreed to expose his gang in the national
magazine Like (ha ha) for $10,000. Of course, that means Smith has
to go into hiding, but it won't be so bad with his girlfriend and the money.
So what if all the motorcycle gangs of California are after them? After
a little chasing, they rent a house in a small town and Smith goes to work
for a sheep farmer. It's here that Smith unexpectedly loses his mustache
with no explanation except maybe for a disguise and the fact that his boss
looks strongly like Smith w/mustache.
It's not this particular plot that annoyed me about the movie - it was
the fact that at this point, that window comes in and until the 60 minutes
are up, nothing happens. Unless you count these breathtaking scenes;
Smith fixing a motorcycle. Smith not knowing the difference between a ram
and an ewe. Smith and his girlfriend having dinner at his bosses house.
Constant cuts to Smith's ex-gang driving around looking for him, alternating
in scenes of Smith and his girlfriend arguing with each other. And so on,
until the inevitable five minutes. Again, it was not the ending itself
that annoyed me but the fact that what lead up to it was an utter waste
of time.
The conclusion I must come up with is that this movie was simply made
by the wrong people, who didn't seem to know what audiences expect from
a motorcycle movie. Certainly they knew nothing about basic filmmaking
(count how many times you can see the shadows of the crew or their equipment).
But if they had pumped some energy and a constantly evolving story (exploitative
or not), this technical ineptness could have been transformed into a gritty
60s feel. American-International and especially New World could have taught
them a thing or two about that. Maybe that's why their movies still
have popularity today, and Run, Angel, Run has been sentenced
to be out-of-print on video.
(UPDATE: Not anymore - it's now available on
video once again!)
Check for availability on Amazon (VHS) See
also: The Stranger,
Bury Me An Angel, Speedtrap
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