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The Big Score
(1983)
Director: Fred Williamson
Cast: Fred Williamson, John Saxon, Richard Roundtree
There has been a lot of debate about the
blaxploitation genre. Some people have argued
that it exploited the black actors cast in these
movies; work for these black actors was hard to
come by, so they would often
accept roles for
less of a salary than they deserved. Others have
argued about the kind of roles these black
actors were cast in; as I stated in my review of
Five On The Black
Hand Side, many people were upset
that these blaxploitation films focused on
criminal elements instead of more wholesome
subjects. And as I also stated, some people
believe that the blaxploitation era made no
difference in helping to advance black actors'
position in Hollywood nowadays, given the
scarcity of black roles in movies in the few
years after the collapse of the genre. But there
is also some argument from the other side for
that last issue, at least in the case of Fred
Williamson. When the blaxploitation genre died
in the mid-'70s, Williamson kept going like
nothing had happened, first by appearing in the
same kind of movies that he had been in when the
genre was at its strongest; he in fact appeared
in a whopping five films in 1975 when the genre
was all but dead. He also started to
direct his own films, showing a power behind
the camera that was unheard of when the blaxploitation genre was in gear. As the years
past, he changed his direction whenever it
seemed his career was heading to a standstill;
for example, he headed to Italy several times to
appear in movies made there. Whatever he did, he
never found himself out of work for long, and is
in fact still working in front of and behind the
camera today.
Not only has Williamson earned credit behind
the camera as a director, he has also earned it
as a screenwriter, writing among others No
Way Back, The Last
Fight,
and the western Joshua. He didn't
write the screenplay for The Big Score,
but there is an interesting story attached to it
all the same. According to the Leonard Maltin
movie guide, the screenplay was originally
written as a proposed entry in the Clint
Eastwood Dirty Harry series. (See,
unlike the Teen Movie Critic, I credit my source
when I take something from one of Leonard
Maltin's reviews.) This may sound promising when
you consider that the same screenwriter also
wrote the story for the Dirty Harry entry The Enforcer.
On the other hand, the screenwriter also wrote
two hack jobs for Golan and Globus, the lame
buddy cop flick Number One With A Bullet,
and the equally lame Death Wish 4: The
Crackdown. The Big Score
concerns itself with the drug trade in Chicago.
Frank Hooks (Williamson) is a cop determined to
smash a drug ring lead by a Goldie Jackson
(Michael Dante). He's assisted by his partner
Davis (Saxon, Enter The Dragon)
and by cop Gordon (Roundtree, Shaft).
What he doesn't know is that Jackson is just a
lower part of the drug totem pole, and it's
actually mobster Mayfield (Joe Spinell,
Maniac) who is pulling the strings.
I wrote down a lot of notes while watching
The Big Score. Here are some of them:
- In the opening sequence, Hooks drives to a
drug bust not only wearing pimp clothing, but
driving a pimpmobile. The question I'm
wondering about is just where did he get that
pimpmobile. Does the police force own one to
be used for undercover assignments like this?
Did they rent it? If they did rent it,
wouldn't it violate the rental agreement to
take it into a dangerous situation?
Incidentally, I can't picture Clint Eastwood
dressed as a pimp or driving a pimpmobile,
which may be one reason why he rejected this
script.
- (By the way, did you know my Microsoft
FrontPage spellchecker recognized
"pimpmobile"? Let it not be said that Bill
Gates is not thorough.)
- The actual bust is not only has its
footage badly edited, but there is bad sound
mixing as well. When Davis and Gordon jump
into the fray, they have some lines of
dialogue that are next to impossible to hear
because the harsh Jay Chattaway synthesizer
score is blaring too loudly in the background.
- A drug bust like this should show our hero
to be a super cop of some sort. However, there
is nothing especially super about what Hooks
ends up doing in the bust. All he ends up
doing is getting into a quick fist fight with
his prey. I admit it gets a few points for
having the bad guy at one point getting
slugged in the crotch, though Lee Marvin did
this kind of thing better in Point Blank.
- The scene in the captain's office is
tightly filmed - every shot is a close-up
head-and-shoulders shot of one of the
individuals there. Cheap filmmaking.
- They are not fooling anyone - Hook's
"you're going away for a long, long time"
speech to the bailed Jackson is obviously
dubbed.
- Jackson mockingly says to Hooks "Any time
you want a nickel bag, Hooks, let me know."
That's a real dumb thing to say to a cop that
could testify about it later. Incidentally,
his lawyer is right beside him when he says
it, but doesn't say a thing. Get a new lawyer,
buddy.
- Hooks grabs Jackson by the collar after
being mocked too much. As the cops and
Jackson's cronies break up the struggle, there
is plenty of shouting that's impossible to
make out. The audio of this movie really
sucks.
- In the captain's office afterwards,
getting grilled for his behavior, Williamson
speaks his lines quickly and with no
conviction to them. He's probably as impatient
to get though such a clichéd scene as we are.
- Who is this woman that Hooks visits after
leaving the precinct? His girlfriend? His ex?
You have to wait until later into the film to
find out that her full name is "Angie Hooks"
(played by singer Nancy Wilson), so I guess
she's his ex. The scene itself seems to serve
no purpose, except maybe to have a product
plug for Budweiser beer.
- Boy, John Saxon isn't getting a lot to do.
So far, he seems to be there so Hooks can
speak his thoughts out loud.
- Hooks shoots a warning shot in the
vicinity of a small-time hustler he's chasing.
Correct me if I'm wrong, but aren't warning
shots supposed to be fired up? Later he
tells the suspect that next time he won't
"shoot in the air." I think Hooks needs to
return to the police academy.
- I really hate this loud and blaring
synthesizer score.
- For a super cop, Hooks has a really wimpy
gun. I admit I'm not versed with guns, so let
me describe it as a short-barreled revolver
that isn't much bigger than the palm of his
hand.
- Why is it that so many of the outdoor
shots of the movie at this point look like
they were filmed in the same run-down stretch
of alleyway?
- How about that - during another drug bust,
Goldie Jackson gets killed by Hooks. That's
something I wasn't expecting a third of the
way into the film. Though at this point it
seems an unusual place to introduce another
villain.
- Hooks visits his ex-wife again at her
nightclub in another scene that seems to serve
no purpose at all, except to showcase Wilson's
singing ability
- Mayfield and Kolso (played by Bruce
Glover) appear around this part of the movie,
and they help to add a little life to what's
going on. As Mayfield, Spinell has a
penetrating look, one that means business.
Glover manages to express emotions like rage
without going over the top.
- Guess what - we have yet another
scene at Angie's nightclub which serves no
purpose at all!
- In keeping with the movie's insistence on
scenes that serve no purpose, we next get a
long (and slow-motion) flashback by Hooks to
the drug deal where Goldie Jackson was killed.
- Then we get another scene that
serves no purpose, with Hooks returning to the
scene where Goldie Jackson was killed, and
looks around.
- After that, we have a scene with Hooks and
Angie having breakfast, in a scene that...
guess.
- We start getting locations that don't look
like they were filmed in the same alleyway.
But they are, for the most part, tightly shot,
making it hard to get a feel for them.
- Let me get this straight... The bad guys
think that a lot of money that went missing
during the Goldie Jackson bust/kill is now
secretly in the hands of Hooks. The bad guys
want the money back. Okay, well if that's the
case, why do the bad guys start trying to kill
Hooks? How could they get back the money that
way, if he had it?
- After questioning him, Hooks kills one of
Mayfield's men in cold blood. Later, he shoots
an unarmed man (who's not trying to flee or
hurt him) in the leg. Dirty Harry was never
this harsh, and this is probably another
reason why Eastwood rejected the script.
- I think at this point (more than an hour
into the film) there has been only three brief
appearances by Mayfield. This is a poor way to
build up a bad guy.
- Speaking of appearances, I just realized
Roundtree's character stopped appearing some
time ago, with no explanation. Well, it's not
like he appeared that much anyway.
- The climatic action sequence is a real
disappointment. Some of the action takes place
in the interior of an abandoned warehouse,
where it's dark and hard to make out what is
happening. A kung fu fight reeks of
choreography instead of feeling like a genuine
and desperate struggle. And a key grenade
explosion is only heard and not seen. In fact,
the whole sequence feels cheap, quickly made
with limited resources.
- What? Mayfield's character goes away
unpunished at the end? That may be a more
realistic ending, but it's not one that many
action fans will be pleased by.
The big score? More like a low score to me.
Check for availability on Amazon
See also: The Art Of
Dying, Deadly
Force, One Man
Jury
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