Pure escapism, Rollercoaster
combines many styles of pulpy entertainment that thrived in the ’70s: It’s a
disaster movie, a police procedural, a terrorism thriller, and a theme-park
romp all rolled into one. So, while it might be exaggerating to call Rollercoaster a good movie, it’s a lot
of fun to watch. The movie begins when a psycho identified only as “Young Man”
(Timothy Bottoms) begins a killing spree by blowing up the tracks on a
rollercoaster in Virginia. Ride investigator Harry Calder (George Segal)
arrives to survey the damage, suspecting foul play instead of a simple
accident. Soon, the Young Man strikes again and issues a demand for $1 million
to prevent further attacks. Although hard-nosed FBI Agent Hoyt (Richard
Widmark) is placed in charge of the investigation, Harry insists on remaining
involved, which turns out to be a bad mistake, since the Young Man identifies
Calder as his preferred courier for ransom payments.
Thus begins an enjoyably
silly cat-and-mouse game that climaxes with a showdown at the Magic
Mountain theme park near Los Angeles (which fans of ’70s kitsch know and love
as the setting for the TV movie Kiss
Meets the Phantom of the Park). Plus, as happens in these sorts of contrived
cinematic situations, Calder’s teenaged daughter (Helen Hunt) gets caught up in
the danger, so catching the crook becomes a personal matter for Our Hero. Although Rollercoaster is
padded with a few tiresome sequences, like an extended concert by the New Wave
band Sparks and lengthy point-of-view rollercoaster shots designed to showcase
the “Sensurround” format in which the picture was released, the bulk of the
movie is suspenseful and zippy.
Segal’s dry humor fits the thriller genre well,
offering a sly wink at the audience whenever the plot gets too preposterous,
and the idea of a madman hiding amid the huge crowds at an amusement park is
consistently unsettling. (Casting the boyish Bottoms was a clever
choice that adds to the queasiness.) Justifying the disaster-movie element of
its cinematic DNA, Rollercoaster
delivers several harrowing highlights, though the flick never slips into gory excess.
After all, producer Jennings Lang was an ace at the disaster genre, having made
1974’s Earthquake and most of the Airport movies. Widmark and fellow
supporting player Henry Fonda ground the movie with their familiar personas,
and it’s a kick to see future Oscar winner Hunt at the apex of her child-acting
career. All in all, Rollercoaster is
a tasty trifle with the added benefit of capturing vintage theme-park scenes
that will make any former ’70s kid nostalgic for simpler times.
Rollercoaster:
GROOVY
The first rollercoaster crash in this film traumatized me for years (I was about 9 when I saw it on HBO), especially the part where the cart flips and dumps the passengers on their heads.
ReplyDeleteYes, if you squint or freeze-frame, the passengers in all the carts are obviously dummies. But when you’re 9 and you see something like this without the benefit of a pause or slo-mo button, it affects you. Deeply.
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Great Googily Moogly! I gotta bump this one up in my Neflix Queue!
ReplyDeletealways thought this was an under-appreciated movie, everything pulls together quite nicely, locations are outstanding, the middle sequence at King's Island is really cool and to end the movie with the great LA band Sparks and the Revolution roller coaster which was then the feature attraction at Magic Mountain makes for a entertaining watch. You can get it on DVD for pretty low on Amz.
ReplyDeleteSparks. Wow. Were they bad. And I don't mean in the cool way. Bottoms should've ditched the rollercoaster and bombed their instruments instead.
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