The Cannonball Run
| The Cannonball Run | |
|---|---|
Theatrical release poster |
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| Directed by | Hal Needham |
| Produced by | Raymond Chow |
| Written by | Brock Yates |
| Starring | Burt Reynolds Roger Moore Farrah Fawcett Jackie Chan Dean Martin Sammy Davis, Jr. Dom DeLuise |
| Music by | Al Capps |
| Cinematography | Michael Butler |
| Editing by | Donn Cambern William D. Gordean |
| Studio | Golden Harvest United Artists |
| Distributed by | 20th Century Fox |
| Release date(s) | June 19, 1981 |
| Running time | 95 minutes |
| Country | United States Hong Kong |
| Language | English Cantonese Japanese Arabic |
| Box office | $72,179,579 |
The Cannonball Run is a 1981 comedy film starring Burt Reynolds, Roger Moore, Dom DeLuise and Farrah Fawcett, and was directed by Hal Needham. It was produced by Hong Kong's Golden Harvest films. The film was followed by the 1984 sequel Cannonball Run II.
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[edit] Plot
Race teams have gathered in Connecticut to start their cross-country race. One at a time, teams drive up to the starters' stand, punch a time card to indicate their time of departure, then take off.
Among the teams are:
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- J.J. McClure and Victor Prinzi, drove a souped-up, but otherwise authentic, Dodge Tradesman ambulance. (In reality, this was Hal Needham and Brock Yates's vehicle in the actual 1979 race.)
- Former open-wheel icon (and Scotch-swilling) Jamie Blake (Dean Martin), and his teammate Morris Fenderbaum (Sammy Davis, Jr.), dressed as Catholic priests drove a red Ferrari 308 GTS. (Based on an entry in the real-life 1972 race, in which three men disguised as priests ("The Flying Fathers") drive a Mercedes 280 SEL sedan, which they claim is "the Monsignor's car" to an ecumenical council of prelates in California.)
- Jill Rivers (Tara Buckman) and Marcie Thatcher (Adrienne Barbeau), two attractive women started the race in a black Lamborghini Countach.
- Jackie Chan and Michael Hui raced as drivers of a high-tech, computer-laden Subaru GL Hatchback with a rocket-powered engine.
- A pair of good ol' boys, played by Terry Bradshaw and Mel Tillis, drove a street-legal replica of Donnie Allison's Hawaiian Tropic-sponsored NASCAR Winston Cup Chevrolet stock car owned by Hoss Ellington. (It starts off as '75-76 Laguna but after they paint it, it becomes a '76-77 Monte Carlo.)
- Roger Moore played "heir to the Goldfarb Girdles fortune" Seymour Goldfarb, Jr., who perpetually identified himself as actor Roger Moore; his character behaved similarly to James Bond and only once (by his mother) is referred to by his real name, making it unclear whether Goldfarb and Moore are the same or if Goldfarb is simply delusional. He drove a silver Aston Martin DB5.
- Jamie Farr portrayed an oil-rich Middle-Eastern Sheikh driving a white Rolls-Royce Silver Shadow.
At the starting line, observing from the shadows, is Mr. Arthur J. Foyt (a play on the name of racer A. J. Foyt), a representative of the (Safety Enforcement Unit), who tries to stop the race because of its environmental effects and safety issues. In the car with him is Pamela Glover. Shortly after they leave the starting line, J.J. and Victor (driving their ambulance) come across Foyt and Glover, who have been involved in a minor fender-bender. Glover implores J.J. and Victor to help, but when they tell Foyt to enter the ambulance through the back door, they kidnap Glover and take off without Foyt. As the race progresses, various teams are shown either evading law enforcement, most of which deal with talking their way out of a possible ticket, or concocting crazy schemes to outmaneuver their opponents.
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- Jill and Marcie use sex appeal as their weapon, unzipping their race suits to display copious amounts of cleavage during traffic stops. (However, this fails to work on a busty female traffic officer played in a cameo appearance by model / actress Valerie Perrine.)
- In New Jersey, the ambulance is pulled over by state troopers; Dr. Van Helsing drugs Glover, and J.J. and Victor are able to convince the troopers that they're rushing "the Senator's wife" to UCLA for medical treatment (offering the theory that her condition prevents them from flying, or from even driving through Denver).
- The Subaru team is able to turn off their car's headlights and use infrared sensors for racing at night.
- Seymour Goldfarb is frequently shown evading police by using various James Bond-type gadgets (such as oil slicks, smoke screens, switchable number plates) installed in his Aston Martin DB5.
- Mr. Compton (Bert Convy) and "Super Chief" Finch (Warren Berlinger) disguise themselves as a newlywed couple on a motorbike, but Finch's extra weight forces the two to ride cross-country in a permanent wheelie.
The primary rivalry in the film is between the teams in the ambulance and the Ferrari. In Ohio, Fenderbaum and Blake are able to convince Victor to pull over their ambulance in order to bless the patient on board. While Blake carries out the blessing, Fenderbaum punctures one of the ambulance's rear tires with a knife. Later in Missouri, J.J. gets his revenge by convincing a nearby police officer that the two men dressed as priests are actually sex perverts who are responsible for the flashing victim in the ambulance. Meanwhile Foyt, with the help of his government agency, is able to set up a roadblock and catch several teams (though none of the "major" teams featured in the movie). Similar scenes continue to build up to the conclusion of the movie. The remaining teams find themselves stopped on a desert highway, next to a roadside market, waiting for construction work to clear the road ahead of them. While waiting, a biker gang (led by Peter Fonda) shows up and begins harassing Compton and Finch. The harassing quickly gets out of hand and a free-for-all fistfight ensues with everyone getting in on the action. Naturally the Subaru team (Jackie Chan puts his martial arts skills to work) and the remaining teams join in the massive fight. In the middle of the fight, the construction crew announces that the road is open, and the teams sprint back to their cars for the final race to the finish.
The ambulance falls behind the rest of the pack, until Victor changes into his super-hero alter-ego Captain Chaos. The vehicles all arrive at the finish line's parking lot at the same time, and it's a foot race to the finish line (why it's so important to be first to the clock when everyone clocked in at different times to start the race is left unexplained). In the sprint, J.J. hands his team's time card to Victor, then ambushes the remaining racers, leaving only Victor and one of the Lamborghini women. Just when it appears Victor will reach the time clock first, a scream rings out and a spectator shouts that her "baby" has fallen into the water. Victor, still in his Captain Chaos persona, quits the race and rushes to save the baby (later revealed to be her dog), allowing Marcie to clock in first and win the race.
[edit] Cast
Cannonball Run featured an all-star cast, including:[1]
- Burt Reynolds and Dom DeLuise co-star as racer J.J. McClure and his buddy, mechanic Victor Prinzi. Victor occasionally slips into his character of Captain Chaos during the film.
- Roger Moore plays Seymour Goldfarb, Jr. as a self-parody of his role as James Bond. Goldfarb is a character who thinks he's Roger Moore (ironically who's playing Goldfarb in this film) and who therefore stylizes himself as James Bond. His car, an Aston Martin DB5 displaying the UK registration plate 6633 PP is the one in the original Bond films Goldfinger and Thunderball. The original UK registration plate was BMT 216A before being sold to businessman Gavin Keyzar. Molly Picon portrays his mother. Several women ride with him, including model Lois Hamilton, billed as Lois Areno.
- Farrah Fawcett also co-stars as tree-loving photographer Pamela Glover.
- Dean Martin and Sammy Davis, Jr. play aging former race car driver Jamie Blake and scam artist Morris Fenderbaum, disguised as Catholic priests, driving a Ferrari. Jimmy "The Greek" Snyder plays their bookie.
- George Furth plays Arthur J. Foyt, who tries to have the race stopped.
- Jackie Chan is credited as simply "Subaru Driver #1" but is introduced by the talk show host (Johnny Yune) as "Jackie Chan", (despite being Chinese) the driver of the Japanese entry; a Subaru filled with gadgets. Michael Hui played the Japanese engineer and navigator.
- Jamie Farr appears as Sheik Abdul ben Falafel, a wealthy Arab determined to win the race even if he has to buy it. Bianca Jagger makes a brief appearance as his sister. Farr's racer is a Rolls-Royce Silver Shadow. This character is the only one to appear in all three films in the Cannonball Run movie continuum.
- Terry Bradshaw and Mel Tillis are Mel and Terry, a couple of "good ol' boys" driving a thinly-disguised Chevrolet Malibu NASCAR stocker painted like Donnie Allison's NASCAR racer from 1979.
- Adrienne Barbeau and Tara Buckman appeared as Marcie and Jill, Spandex-clad "hotties" in a black Lamborghini Countach. The same Lamborghini was used in the opening credits of the movie as it was being pursued by a Nevada Highway Patrol car. Valerie Perrine has an uncredited cameo appearance as a state trooper who stops the duo later in the film as the only female officer to pull over the duo, she was immune to their feminine wiles. (Though their character names were not mentioned during the story, they are mentioned in the end credits. Their character names, however, *are* mentioned in the sequel, though the parts were re-cast)
- Peter Fonda had a cameo role reprising his character in Easy Rider. The appearance of Fonda and his motorcycle gang during a halt in the race caused by a road closure was the perfect excuse for Chan to demonstrate his martial arts skills during the fight sequence. Fonda's big, bald biker buddy is played by Robert Tessier.
- Bert Convy played wealthy but bored executive Bradford Compton who planned to run the Cannonball by motorcycle with the help of an old friend, Shakey Finch (played by Warren Berlinger), once the world's greatest cross-country motorcyclist. The two planned to disguise themselves as newlyweds. His ally weighed heavily, forcing them into a wheelie for the entire race.
- Jack Elam appears as Doctor Nikolas Van Helsing; based on the famous vampire hunter.
- Rick Aviles and Alfie Wise play Mad Dog and Batman, the tow truck drivers who jump the train flatcar.
- John Fiedler appears as the desk clerk.
- Joe Klecko plays the Polish driver in the van who gets pulled over by Mr. Foyt.
- Brock Yates, the creator of the real-life Cannonball Run, plays the organizer of the race who lays down the rules at the starting line.
- Director Hal Needham appears uncredited as the ambulance EMT.
[edit] Production
The film continued director Hal Needham's tradition of showing bloopers during the closing credits (a practice he started with the Smokey and the Bandit films). Jackie Chan says it was this film that inspired him to do the same at the end of most of his films.
[edit] Development
The film is based on the 1979 running of the Cannonball Baker Sea-To-Shining-Sea Memorial Trophy Dash, an actual cross-country outlaw road race held four times in the 1970s, starting at the Red Ball Garage on 31st Street in New York City (later the Lock, Stock and Barrel Restaurant in Darien, CT) and ending at the Portofino Inn in Redondo Beach, California, just south of Los Angeles.
The film's screenwriter was automotive journalist Brock Yates. Yates had originally proposed the race as a writer for Car and Driver.[2] The race had only one rule: "All competitors will drive any vehicle of their choosing, over any route, at any speed they judge practical, between the starting point and destination. The competitor finishing with the lowest elapsed time is the winner".
Yates' team was the only participant in the original 1972 running, and in the March 1979 race, formed one of 46 teams with director Hal Needham to compete with a 150-MPH van converted into an ambulance, with LA doctor Lyell Royer, and Brock's second wife, Pamela Reynolds, riding as the patient on the gurney. Although the ambulance never made it to the finish line - the transmission gave out 50 miles short of the Redondo Beach finish line [3] - Yates made it to the movie as a race official, Needham as an EMT, and the ambulance itself was used in the movie. The ambulance was stopped once, in Pennsylvania; that event made it into the movie, as did a cop stopping traffic in Kansas, exiting from a rodeo, to let the ambulance pass unimpeded.[4]
The Right Bra team was put together by rail-thin auto writer Judy Stropus, race driver Donna Mae Mims and Peggy Niemcek, whose husband was part of another entry, driving a Cadillac limo. In the movie, it became a two-woman team led by buxom Adrienne Barbeau driving a Lamborghini, but as auto writer Stropus said decades later, "a little editorial license never hurt anyone".[5] Yates points out in his book "Cannonball!"[6] that Stropus's version of the race does not mention the baptism with green fluid from the porta-potty the three girls experienced when the limo overturned.
[edit] Background
Reynolds plays has-been race car driver J.J. McClure. Playing his mild-mannered mechanic counterpart, Victor Prinzim, is DeLuise (with a superhero alter ego, Captain Chaos, always waiting in the wings). Together, they participate in the Cannonball Run in an ambulance - a heavily modified Dodge Tradesman van.
In an attempt to appear legitimate to law enforcement, Victor hires Doctor Nikolas Van Helsing, a frightening, yet friendly, physician of questionable skill played by Jack Elam. They kidnap attractive young photographer Pamela Glover (Farrah Fawcett) — whom they nickname "Beauty" — to be their cover patient. Though Beauty vehemently opposes this at first, she eventually warms to the idea of being a participant in the race and to her unlikely "captors".
[edit] Box office and reception
The Cannonball Run earned $72,179,579.[7] According to Box Office Mojo, Cannonball Run was the sixth-highest grossing film of 1981, behind Raiders of the Lost Ark, On Golden Pond, Superman II, Arthur, and Stripes.
The film received mixed to negative reviews. Roger Ebert gave the film a half-star out of four stars, calling it "an abdication of artistic responsibility at the lowest possible level of ambition. In other words, they didn't even care enough to make a good lousy movie.".[8] Variety described the film as "full of terribly inside showbiz jokes and populated by what could be called Burt and Hal's Rat Pack, film takes place in that redneck never-never land where most of the guys are beer-guzzling good ole boys and all the gals are fabulously built tootsies."[9] Vincent Canby of The New York Times wrote on his review that the film is "inoffensive and sometimes funny. Because there are only a limited number of variations that can be worked out on this same old highway race, don't bother to see it unless you're already hooked on the genre."[10] Rotten Tomatoes currently ranks the film at 31%, based on 29 reviews.[11]
[edit] Litigation
In June 1980, 24-year-old stuntwoman Heidi Von Beltz was critically injured in a car crash during production of the film. Her car was struck by a van that made the wrong move, and she was not wearing restraints because seat belts had been removed from her vehicle prior to the accident.[12] She survived, but was left a quadriplegic. When it became clear that Von Beltz's personal injury lawsuit would blow through all available primary insurance coverage, the production's excess insurer, Interstate Fire (a subsidiary of Hollywood's favorite insurer, Fireman's Fund Insurance Company) sued its own insured and Von Beltz for a declaratory judgment that Von Beltz's lawsuit was not covered under its policy. In 1988, the U.S. Court of Appeals for the Ninth Circuit ruled that there was a duty to defend, and that there was also a duty to indemnify to the extent that Von Beltz was seeking recovery for mental injuries (the exclusion for bodily injuries was ruled to be enforceable).[13]
[edit] See also
- Speed Zone!, also known as Cannonball Run III
- List of American films of 1981
- Jackie Chan filmography
[edit] References
- ^ Bill van Heerden (1998). Film and Television In-Jokes. McFarland & Co.. pp. 318. ISBN 978-0-7864-3894-5.
- ^ "Brock Yates". http://webspace.webring.com/people/wb/belialprod/brockyates.htm. Retrieved 2011-05-14.
- ^ "Brock Yates' Full mph Column". http://jalopnik.com/170087/brock-yates-full-mph-column. Retrieved 2011-05-14.
- ^ Hollywood Stuntman Hal Needham Plays Not My Job, National Public Radio's 'Wait, Wait, Don't Tell Me', April 30, 2011.
- ^ "35 Years Ago, the Original Cannonball Run Took The Green Flag". http://www.insideline.com/features/the-cannonball-run-turns-35.html. Retrieved 2011-05-14.
- ^ Cannonball! by Brock Yates, MotorBooks International, 2003
- ^ The Cannonball Run at Box Office Mojo
- ^ Ebert, Roger (1981-01-01). "The Cannonball Run". Chicago Sun-Times. http://rogerebert.suntimes.com/apps/pbcs.dll/article?AID=/19810101/REVIEWS/40318079. Retrieved 2012-01-30.
- ^ "The Cannonball Run". Variety. 1980-12-30. http://www.variety.com/review/VE1117789681?refcatid=31. Retrieved 2012-01-30.
- ^ Canby, Vincent (1981-06-20). "Movie Review: The Cannonball Run". The New York Times. http://movies.nytimes.com/movie/review?res=9903EED61138F933A15755C0A967948260&partner=Rotten%20Tomatoes. Retrieved 2012-01-30.
- ^ * The Cannonball Run at Rotten Tomatoes
- ^ "Cannonball Run Accident". http://www.exponent.com/cannonball_run/. Retrieved 2011-04-25.
- ^ Interstate Fire & Cas. Co. v. Stuntman Inc., 861 F.2d 203 (9th Cir. 1988).
[edit] External links
- The Cannonball Run at the Internet Movie Database
- The Cannonball Run at AllRovi
- The Cannonball Run at Box Office Mojo
- The Cannonball Run at Rotten Tomatoes
- Cannonball Run Pit Stop: A tribute website to "The Cannonball Run", "Smokey and the Bandit" and other collaborations between Burt Reynolds and Hal Needham, which includes several interviews and information on the movies.
- Magazine articles by Gero Hoschek, Eoin Young and others about the actual 1979 race which was referenced in the movie
- The Transcon Medivac Ambulance featured in the movie
- 2011 NPR interview with Hal Needham conducted on "Wait Wait... Don't Tell Me!" news trivia program
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- 1981 films
- American films
- Hong Kong films
- 1980s action films
- 1980s comedy films
- American action comedy films
- Chinese films
- Chinese action films
- Chinese comedy films
- English-language films
- Cantonese-language films
- Japanese-language films
- Arabic-language films
- Films directed by Hal Needham
- Auto racing films
- Films shot in Georgia (U.S. state)
- Films shot in Arizona
- Films shot in California
- Films shot in Nevada
- Road movies
- United Artists films
- 20th Century Fox films