Since there’s not much to
discuss with relation to the content of this insipid trucker flick, let’s note
something peculiar on the movie’s Internet Movie Database page. The first user
review was written by the film’s director, Michael Parkhurst, who spends half
his post arguing that his picture isn’t as bad as its reputation suggests
(Parkhurst valiantly labels Moonfire “fair”). The filmmaker spends the other half of his review bitching that
Leonard Maltin once mistakenly described the plot as having a blackmail
element. Only here’s the kicker—Moonfire
does indeed have a blackmail element, unless one plays a semantic game and says
that a villain taking technology hostage and demanding payment for its release
somehow qualifies as kidnapping instead of blackmail. Anyway, one reason we’ve
gone so far down this road is to demonstrate how vehement online movie-related discussions
can become, no matter how insignificant the picture in question. The other
reason is to underscore that even a hair-splitting e-debate about Moonfire’s storyline is more interesting
than the film itself. The problem with Moonfire
is that virtually nothing happens—Parkhurst’s film comprises 107 of the dullest
minutes ever committed to celluloid. The plot is confusing, but it contains
enough lurid elements that Moonfire
should have amounted to something. First, a manned space mission ends when the
capsule falls to the ground in Mexico. Next, an ex-Nazi recovers the capsule
and the pilot, triggering the blackmail/kidnapping. Then truckers
are recruited to deliver ransom to the ex-Nazi, though they’re told neither
what they’re hauling nor where they’re going. (Instead, the truckers stop at
regular intervals to receive instructions.) As a result, most of the movie
comprises endless, repetitive scenes of the truckers heading to their
destination, and Moonfire has enough
shots of engine maintenance and truck-stop convenience stores to qualify as a
training film. Yawn. The cast includes journeyman actor Richard Egan (who’s
barely in the picture), square-jawed B-movie staple Charles Napier, and boxer
Sonny Liston. None does anything memorable, though Napier and Liston briefly
fight a gang of bikers and both spend lots of time shirtless and sweaty. So, until Michael Parkhurst pops up on this blog to argue with what’s just been written
here, that’s about all there is to say.
Moonfire:
SQUARE
1 comment:
Never a good sign when a film's director has to defend his own movie because no one else will. I wouldn't be surprised if he drops you a comment and tries to defend it here as well. LOL
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