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MAN AT THE WHEEL: A filmography
Vic Sage Mar 05 2012 03:18 PM |
There is a man is at the wheel… he is driving fast, destination unknown. He may be chased, or in pursuit. He may have loved once, or been loved, and he may be fleeing justice, or seeking it, but now all the meaning in his life is defined by his skill and his velocity. He is merely an object in space, and his only remaining relationship is with his machine. He is likely to meet his fate at gunpoint, or at a point of impact, or find himself at the vanishing point, where open blacktop meets the distant horizon.
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sharpie Mar 05 2012 03:36 PM Re: MAN AT THE WHEEL: A filmography |
Doesn't BADLANDS belong in there somewhere?
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Benjamin Grimm Mar 05 2012 04:41 PM Re: MAN AT THE WHEEL: A filmography |
What about Speed, with Keanu Reeves and Sandra Bullock?
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metirish Mar 05 2012 05:35 PM Re: MAN AT THE WHEEL: A filmography |
AIP/Corman ?
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Vic Sage Mar 05 2012 08:10 PM Re: MAN AT THE WHEEL: A filmography |
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it's there. look again.
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Vic Sage Mar 05 2012 08:14 PM Re: MAN AT THE WHEEL: A filmography Edited 1 time(s), most recently on Mar 05 2012 08:22 PM |
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what about it? the intention wasn't to list every movie where people are driving. in SPEED, Bullock is someone forced to drive by a bomber. THESE movies are about people who CHOOSE to drive, generally as an expression of will, or a search for meaning, or to catch something or escape from something. Its very much about the CHOICE to drive. In SPEED, they either drive or blow up. no choice. they're heroes, not anti-heroes.
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Vic Sage Mar 05 2012 08:19 PM Re: MAN AT THE WHEEL: A filmography |
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are you asking what AIP/CORMAN refers to? American International Pictures was a B-movie studio from the 50s-70s, with Roger Corman as the major producer (and occasional director) and driving creative force. They made youth culture exploitation films (sex, drugs, horror, motorcycles, etc), some with the young Jack Nicholson (including the original LITTLE SHOP OF HORRORS). Corman often gave young directors their first feature film experience, including Coppola, scorsese, Demme and many others (including Ron Howard's EAT MY DUST and GRAND THEFT AUTO), because they were cheaper than established directors. Corman also directed a bunch, including the Poe series he did with Vincent Price.
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metirish Mar 06 2012 06:29 AM Re: MAN AT THE WHEEL: A filmography |
Yes, thanks
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Frayed Knot Mar 06 2012 06:57 AM Re: MAN AT THE WHEEL: A filmography |
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I just re-saw (for about the 50th time) The Great Escape the other night. I also read, more than once when I was younger, the true-account book from which it was derived. And while the movie states up front that many of the characters are composites and/or changed somewhat from the source material, McQueen's character and his role in the plot has no real basis in the book and was completely made-up for the film. Nothing really wrong with that of course, any studio at that time would obviously want McQueen in its blockbuster action flick and sticking in an American character into a camp which was, by that point, almost entirely British is also good for the old U.S. box office. So then the supposed story goes that one condition of getting McQ to agree to the picture was that they write in a scene where he gets to show off his motorcycle riding. Studio, of course, agrees; they get their man, he gets to add to his macho/cool image and everyone skips off happily to the bank.
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Edgy MD Mar 06 2012 10:15 AM Re: MAN AT THE WHEEL: A filmography |
McQueen supposedly was supposedly more skilled than any of the stunt bikers on that crew, and did so much riding that, at one point, if you pay attention, your treated to a scene of Nazi Steve in hot pursuit of American Steve.
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Mets – Willets Point Mar 06 2012 11:19 AM Re: MAN AT THE WHEEL: A filmography |
Eddie Izzard has a great standup routine about Steve McQueen and The Great Escape.
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Vic Sage Mar 07 2012 10:06 AM Re: MAN AT THE WHEEL: A filmography |
[u:1unoz8aa]Top Dozen of the sub-genre:[/u:1unoz8aa]
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Edgy MD Mar 07 2012 10:15 AM Re: MAN AT THE WHEEL: A filmography |
Seventies was an existential landscape, man. Society crumbling all around, and a post-modern cowboy wandering between outposts looking for meaning or merely survival.
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Edgy MD Aug 25 2012 08:17 PM Re: MAN AT THE WHEEL: A filmography |
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Your brief review totally disappoints (but hardly surprised) me. I had been on the lookout for this. Lee Majors? Chris Makepeace? Burgess Meredith? Dream cast!
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Vic Sage Sep 04 2012 09:32 AM Re: MAN AT THE WHEEL: A filmography |
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my "review" was just a two-word synopsis of general critical opinion about the flick ("bad SciFi") because i had not seen it. Have you? Please describe.
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Edgy MD Sep 04 2012 09:39 AM Re: MAN AT THE WHEEL: A filmography |
Oh, no, I haven't seen it. I imagine you're absolutely correct, but when it comes to sci-fi, we many of us live in denial about different potential quality films out there, until we finally see them and, more often than not, concrete reality comes crashing down.
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Vic Sage Sep 04 2012 09:42 AM Re: MAN AT THE WHEEL: A filmography |
A BOY AND HIS DOG is awesome. KRULL, however...
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