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Dirty Mary Crazy Larry

Dirty Mary Crazy Larry (1974)

May. 17,1974
|
6.6
|
PG
| Adventure Action Comedy Crime

Down-on-their-luck racers Larry and Deke steal from a supermarket manager to buy a car that will help them advance their racing chances. Their escape does not go as planned when Larry's one-night stand, Mary, tags along for the ride.

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carbuff
1974/05/17

Just a great classic '70s car chase movie. This is the kind of movie I grew up on, so I have a weakness for movies from this period. I like that it isn't anywhere near as slick and polished as modern movies, which while generally are more real and compelling visually, often oddly seem to feel less real emotionally than some older movies like this. All of the actors came through except for Peter Fonda, who really is just a terrible actor. He is talentless and no doubt only became an actor because his father Henry Fonda was so famous and successful in this line of work. A real highlight is that if you love cars like I do, the really sweet '69 440 Charger will make you ache some--what a great car. The biggest problem some people will have with this movie is that the protagonists are anti-heroes, frankly true and not particularly likable criminals, and some people won't like that you wind up rooting for them to get away (at least I did).

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Robert J. Maxwell
1974/05/18

I wasn't able to catch all of this but I saw enough. Did they still have drive-in movies in 1972? I don't remember. If they existed, they must have been one of the first venues in which this movie was shown.Briefly, Peter Fonda is a race car driver manqué who is mostly busy laughing his way through life. He and his taciturn mechanic, Adam Roarke, rob a store and zip away in their souped-up Dodge Charger with the intention of breaking into the NASCAR circuit. Along for the ride is the toothsome Susan George, whose sun-tanned midriff is nothing less than astonishing. A pleasing desktop wallpaper might consist of nothing more than a close up of her belly button. She's wide eyed. And those teeth -- she could eat a lobster, shell and all.There are endless scenes of this lime-green hot rod speeding down the back roads between groves of walnut trees. It's impressively scenic, really. And Fonda puts the pedal to the metal even when he doesn't have to. Every time the car is set in motion it burns rubber. I'm telling you, there's real power under this baby's big forty-foot hood.Sometimes in hot pursuit is an eager deputy who has had his squad car souped up, but he's in the picture only to provide more thrills than a single speeding automobile can generate. The deputy zooms along at warp speed and tries to bump the Dodge off the road, muttering to himself -- "Eat this for LUNCH, you scum bag!" Things like that. Also in pursuit from the air is the sheriff in charge of the case, the sour puss Vic Morrow with his evil features and pursed lips.In the end, although Fonda, Roarke, and George have outrun and outwitted the law, they learn their lesson. The lesson is, "Never take your eyes off the road when you're traveling at Mach 2." If you like pool games, small-time crooks, a loathing for authority, and fast cars, you'll love this.

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roscoelaw
1974/05/19

I had heard of this movie by title only and finally got to see it. My mistake. This was poorly written, poorly directed and poorly casted. If I was supposed to accept these three as anti-heroes, sorry to disappoint you. I didn't feel for any of them, not even during the introspective walnut grove scene. Peter Fonda was OK. I couldn't wrap my mind around what the other guy was supposed to be. And Susan George... well, I don't know what she normally looks like to make a "best-looking" list but she did NOT look good in that film. Then there's Vic Morrow's character. What the hell? Was I supposed to accept him as some sort of super-cop? He just came across as a dick with nothing to back up the character. And what's with Vic Morrow and helicopters anyway? The dialogue was horrible. It was disjointed and wordy at times. And there's nothing like an abrupt ending. You saw it coming but it was like "BANG!... Done." Chalk this one up to a car chase movie and not a very good one. Take it off your queue list and find something else.

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MARIO GAUCI
1974/05/20

I hadn’t intended to watch this just now but a couple of coincidences made it inevitable – once again, Vic Morrow has a featured role (it’s chilling how the actor feared that, having to spend about half the running-time inside a chopper in this case, would be the end of him!) and it re-united director Hough and co-star Susan George from EYEWITNESS (1970). This is among the most popular road movies from an era full of such efforts, complete with a memorable title and matching theme tune; Peter Fonda and Adam Roarke, both of whom had flourished in biker movies during the late 1960s, here exchange their typical vehicle for a racing car. In this respect, it resembles most closely VANISHING POINT (1971) – as per one of the trailers on the Anchor Bay SE DVD, the two were even re-issued as a double-bill! – though largely eschewing that film’s philosophical overtones.As can be expected, it’s generally fast-paced, tyre-screeching and stunt-heavy fun; the film (Englishman Hough’s first in the U.S. and which manages to capture that peculiar mid-American flavor), however, provides more than just the obvious kind of thrills. To begin with, the narrative opens with a supermarket caper (the one scene in which an uncredited Roddy McDowall, fresh from the same director’s scary ghost story THE LEGEND OF HELL HOUSE [1973], appears) but we also get plenty of confrontation scenes (and not just between fugitives and law enforcers, but within each individual group). This occasions some hilarious dialogue exchanges, such as when George rejects Fonda’s advances – he quips that the night before she had no qualms about it and, in fact, kept begging for more…but she retorts that that ought to have clued him in about just how little she was actually getting! Similarly, veteran cops Morrow and Kenneth Tobey often clash about how to approach the manhunt: at one point, the former argues that the latter’s obsession with apprehending the fugitives is merely a middle-aged man’s grasping to hold on to his job but he’ll only be physically worn-out by the experience (Morrow, then, believes that Tobey doesn’t want to put all he’s got into the chase simply because he’s been promised a new set of police cars – which, most likely, won’t be forthcoming if he proves overly efficient!).As a matter of fact, one of the reasons the film (which, according to the accompanying featurette, was partly improvised) works so well is because each of the principal roles is perfectly cast – thus ensuring that characterization isn’t lost amid all the hair-raising action; incidentally, the IMDb lists additional footage (extending a couple of scenes) that was utilized for the film’s network showings. Among the most notable stunts are: the one in which an impulsive young police officer’s car (which he has “souped up” – after the original engine overheated – in order to keep up with Fonda et al) is crushed by a falling telephone pole; another flies through a billboard; one more runs off the road backwards and ends up in a stream; the fugitive’s own ‘classic’ Dodge Charger (which they exchange midway through the chase) leaping across a drawbridge; and, of course, its climactic crash into a speeding train – giving the whole a fashionable, yet appropriately sobering, downbeat ending (ominously, Morrow’s relentless chopper itself often looms perilously close to its quarry before ultimately running out of gas!).I haven’t listened to Hough’s full-length Audio Commentary, but the half-hour documentary was nonetheless a pretty solid affair which covered most of the bases; highlights included Fonda’s declaration that he idolized former sci-fi/B-movie hero Tobey (despite sharing no scenes with him in the actual film!), as well as the star’s surprised admission that DIRTY MARY CRAZY LARRY out-grossed even his signature effort EASY RIDER (1969), not to mention the expected (albeit brief) but well-deserved tribute to Morrow – of the three titles I’ve watched with him over the past week or so, his contribution in this one was clearly the most substantial and satisfactory (definitely proving him worthier of greater attention than merely for his acclaimed debut performance as the disaffected punk in BLACKBOARD JUNGLE [1955] and his ill-fated swan song). Finally, having enjoyed this so much, I was reminded that I’ve probably got scores of other films from the iconoclastic and eclectic 1970s in my collection which I’ve yet to go through…

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