While it’s not much of a movie, Sky Riders is novel in two regards—it’s
built around the sport of hang-gliding, and it contains one of the longest action
scenes you’ll ever encounter. In fact, the first half-hour is
merely preamble for a rescue mission that unfolds more or less in real time
throughout the remainder of the picture. So, if you can trudge through 30
minutes of small talk and do without nuances like clearly defined characters
and memorable dialogue, you’ll be rewarded with a solid hour of fighting and
flying. Set in Greece, the movie begins at the estate of American industrialist
Jonas Bracken (Robert Culp). While Jonas is away on business one morning, a
group of terrorists breaks into his compound and kidnaps Jonas’ wife, Ellen
(Susannah York), and the Brackens’ two children. Once Jonas is informed of the
crime, he’s forced to work with a rigid cop named Inspector Nikolidis (Charles
Aznavour), who seems more concerned with capturing the perpetrators than
rescuing hostages. The X-factor in the story is Jim McCabe (James
Coburn), Ellen’s ex-husband and the biological father of the Brackens’ oldest
child. Vaguely introduced as some sort of international criminal/smuggler/spy,
Jim decides the police aren’t moving fast enough, so he uses underworld
contacts to mount a speedy investigation.
Jim soon discovers the Brackens are
being held in a remote, abandoned monastery that’s perched atop a mountain and
accessible by only one road—in essence, a fortress with perfect natural
defense. Eyeballing the location in person, Jim gets an idea when he sees birds
flying around—so he tracks down a group of American hang-glider pilots, who
perform a traveling-circus act featuring aerial stunts, and offers them a pile
of cash to serve as his personal airborne commando unit. Obviously, the people
behind Sky Riders had to twist their
story in knots to justify the hang-gliding gimmick, but once the movie gets
cooking, it’s all good—with composer Lalo Schifrin’s exciting music leading the
way, vivid images of hang-glider pilots zooming toward the fortress, and then
trying to escape amid a barrage of gunfire, create genuine excitement. (Coburn
gets extra credit for performing a few jaw-dropping stunts, like hanging off
the skids of a flying helicopter.) So, while Sky
Riders offers virtually nothing of substance—although York conveys intensity during brief scenes depicting
her captivity—the action is consistently colorful and dynamic.
Sky
Riders: FUNKY
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