Posts Tagged ‘Hollywood’

Drive: the movie

Thursday, September 22nd, 2011

This Friday Nicolas Winding Refn’s new movie Drive is due for UK release.

Refn won best director at this year’s Cannes film festival for the slick exist­ential thriller, which is a riff on Jean Pierre Melville’s 1967 classic le Samourai- the tale of a lone assassin.

In that broody, elliptical study, played by stone cold French idol Alain Delon there was more moody silence and long shots of silent spaces than car chases — but this offering promises plenty of crash bang and wallop for your hard-​​earned.

The film also obviously bears a resemb­lance to The Driver, too, the 1978 car chase movie that makes it onto our top ten of all time.

In Refn’s film Hollywood hottie Ryan Gosling plays a stunt performer who moonlights as a wheelman and discovers that a contract has been put on him after a heist goes badly wrong. Curvacious star of Mad Men Christina Hendricks is co star too (which will help).

Looking at the trailer there’s a lot of Mustang action, some class stunt driving and even a bit of Nascar hero worship. But what we’re excited about is the metaphoric potency of being behind the wheel examined, pretty much for the first time since the seventies.

It’s about time that an intel­ligent take on the act of driving made it back onto our screens.

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Rebel Bikers?

Thursday, June 16th, 2011

Leather jacket and jeans. The motor­cycle rider’s default setting. Motorcyclists have been wearing leathers since their machines developed enough power to bother a rice pudding’s epidermis.

The cowhide and denim combo became a global ‘rebel’ uniform, however, after the release of the 1954 film The Wild One. Despite the image being close to 60-​​years-​​old it remains the basis of a myriad of fashion shoots, major label collec­tions, motor­cycle ad campaigns — not to mention a million middle-​​aged fantasies.

It is ‘Johnny’, a 29-​​year-​​old Marlon Brando’s sullen anti-​​hero, who should be credited with setting the template of Levi’s and Schott Perfecto lancer front leather jacket. This character is reputedly based on Shell Thuet, a real life, polymathic motor­cycle hero.

But Thuett was a doer rather than a nihil­istic pout in a camp cap. As a member of the 13 Rebels Motorcycle Club he raced bikes, tuned them and went on to make compet­ition chassis for some of best West Coast riders of the 60s and 70s including Kenny Roberts.

And just as Thuet is the real thing, the disturbance in the movie is based on the real Hollister ‘riot’.

But the term ‘riot’ is something of a stretch.

It all took place on Independence Day, 1947. There was a race and rally nearby and the town of Hollister, inland in Central California, filled up with motor­cyc­lists, the vast majority being World War II veterans.

There was a lot of drinking, a few minor scuffles and some illegal drag racing down the small town’s high street.

Jim Cameron, one of the Boozefighters, the most famous of the early patch clubs, rode his bike into a boozer and leant it against the bar.

The bar owner asked Cameron to lean his Indian on a wall so there was room for people to drink. He moved it. There was no major threat to the fabric of American life and the hoo-​​ha would’ve been pretty much forgotten except for the posed photo of an unwitting chunky drunk, sat on a stripped Harley with a beer in each paw and a puddle of empty bottles surrounding him.

A local eyewitness remembers the photo­grapher positioned the bottles by the bike himself. The photo ran in Life Magazine and post-​​war middle class America panicked about this new ‘threat’ to law and order.

In the wake of the disturbance even the most law-​​abiding riders and racers became feared, demonized against the backdrop of the post war American boom.

A year later, another race meeting in nearby Riverside prompted the headline “Riverside Again Raided by Gang: One dead, 54 arrested as motor­cyc­lists stage riot…”

Bike riders became thereby exactly the bogeymen a post-​​war press needed to help sell papers. But the story was so exaggerated that the local Undersheriff wrote an open letter to put the record straight.

It was convenient to omit, for the sake of sensa­tion­alism, that this one person killed in all of Riverside County on that weekend was nearly 100 miles from Riverside at the time he ran into a bridge abutment on the highway and was killed… at the time he ran into the abutment, according to authentic reports, he was not going to or from the Rally in Riverside.”

Undersheriff Abbott also wanted to let the world know Sheriff Rayburn did not get his trousers torn off in the riots. How the reporters managed to invent that ‘fact’ is astonishing.

There were arrests at Riverside for drunk­enness and driving offences. A park warden got a punch in the face when he woke a rider to tell him he could sleep in the park.

It was about as wild as any decent-​​sized contem­porary market town on a Saturday night. Nevertheless the die was cast. Bikers had become dangerous scum.

Clubs like the Boozefighters had already at this time been referred to as ‘outlaws’ by the American Motorcyclist Association, the AMA, simply because they organized race meets that weren’t sanctioned by the AMA, not because – like the hardcore ‘outlaw’ patch clubs that followed — they earned money from drugs and vice. But the outlaw tag was deemed appro­priate and stuck anyway.

In 1954, The Wild One, a film described by the New York Times of the day as “A picture that tries to grasp an idea, even though the reach falls short,” gave rebels, both real and the weekend variety, a dress code, while those who just wanted to ride or race were tarred with the same brush.

After The Wild One and a dozen Corman-​​esque exploit­ation flicks, everyone in America who rode a bike and wasn’t a cop was regarded as a Hell’s Angel.

This, incredibly, even stretched to profes­sional racers hauling their immacu­lately prepared bikes thousands of miles across country from one race to the next.

Steve McQueen, a lover of motor­cycle racing and genuine Hollywood rebel, wasn’t impressed with the image motor­cycle had been lumped with. “Brando’s movie, The Wild One, set motor­cycle racing back about 200 years,” he said in the mid-​​1960s.

These days dentists and bank managers dress up like Johnny to channel some 60-​​year-​​old rebellion while the very companies whose sales were affected badly by the outlaw image of biking are now relying on it to shift units.

In reality, if you want to look like a 21st century outlaw biker, not a mid-​​20th century one, you need to forget the £500 leather jacket, blue jeans, engineer boots and American V-​​twin. Instead, get yourself a Japanese 450cc supermoto, strip the stickers off it so no one has a clue what it is and can’t give an accurate description to the Feds (these bikes all look identical).

Get down to the outlet shop for pair of trackie bottoms and trainers. Finish the look off with a black ski jacket and a motocross lid. Keep your number plate in one anorak pocket and lurk around outside expensive jewelers with half a brick in your other pocket.

That’ll really freak out the squares.

Death Race 2000

Tuesday, February 3rd, 2009

In America the automobile was always an icon of liberty. And from the very earliest days of motoring the American road trip itself is a sort of sacred pilgrimage where techno­lo­gical progress and the freedom of the open road were celeb­rated. It wasn’t long until Hollywood hammered the image home and road-​​tripping motors nudged out covered wagons as the carriers of the flame of American self-​​determination. All the more powerful, then, is the Roger Corman produced exploit­ation epic that is Death Race 2000. Set in a dystopian millennium where a fascist global government keeps the plebs in order by the spectacle of sacri­ficial festivals on the coast – to-​​coast highway, the 1975 movie is an absurdist commentary on America’s automotive obsession and a delightful subversion of the sacred coast-​​to-​​coast trip. Featuring perform­ances of the purist vintage of killer kitsch from David Carradine and Sly Stallone, the design and photo­graphy is garishly evocative of the comic book futurism popular in the seventies. The twisted chicks in the cast are jarringly sexy, and some of the dialogue is poetry of the campest order. And of course, there are some brilliantly stupid modded cars. In an awful promotion of national stereo­types the murderous Roman ‘Nero the Hero’ drives a machine based on a Fiat 850 Spider, whilst ‘Matilda the Hun’ rocks a Swastika helmet and a Karmann Ghia modded to resemble a doodlebug flying bomb. Star of the show David Carradine’s mutant green mean machine is under the skin of it all a 1973 Corvette. America rules, of course. Looking at the film in mixed company and with the spectre of political correctness stalking us all, the film is at times an uncom­fortable watch. Best saved, then, for the late night drive-​​in, somewhere in Nebraska in 1976.