Despite having built enough of a cult reputation
to earn a glossy remake in 2000 (starring Nicolas Cage and Angelina Jolie), the
car-chase movie Gone in 60 Seconds is a wobbly piece of work. Created as
a passion project/vanity piece by first-timer H.B. Halicki—who served as
writer, producer, director, star, and stunt driver—the picture is about a car
thief’s epic quest to steal one particular model of Ford Mustang in order to
fulfill a bulk order from nefarious clients. Owing to Halicki’s inexperience,
virtually every aspect of the film’s execution contributes to overall
sloppiness. The script was more or less made up as Halicki went along, so it’s
often hard to tell how scenes relate to each other, and the production sound is
terrible, so dialogue is either indecipherable or terribly dubbed. The acting
is just as bad as the filmmaking, with wooden non-performers delivering lines flatly.
Furthermore, because the crooks in the movie wear disguises to look alike, it’s
often difficult to tell which character is appearing in which scene. Given
these egregious shortcomings, Gone in 60 Seconds lives and dies entirely
on the strength of its money shots. Happily for Halicki, large-scale automotive
spectacle flows freely throughout the picture—in addition to lengthy scenes of
cars zooming down city roads and highways at crazy speeds, Gone in 60
Seconds features an outrageous number of car crashes. According to the lore
surrounding the movie, Halicki was an avid car collector who provided dozens of
vehicles for onscreen destruction, often repairing vehicles after crash scenes
so they could be slammed again and again. Halicki also performed many dangerous
stunts, resulting in moments like a heart-stopping crash during which the main
car—a Mustang that Halicki’s character nicknames “Eleanor”—spins into a light
post after tapping another car while blazing full-speed down a highway. Halicki
walked away from that one, but his luck didn’t last forever. After making two
more features, neither of which gained the notoriety of his debut, the director
was killed in 1989 while filming a stunt for a planned sequel to Gone in 60
Seconds.
Gone
in 60 Seconds: FUNKY
ashamed to say I've never seen this, I'm off to the races...looks very inexpensive on Amz...thanks Peter!
ReplyDeleteThe acting is horrible, but that didn't bother me as a 10 year old when I first saw this. I thought it was the greatest movie ever!!
ReplyDeleteI saw it again a few years ago and was aghast at my taste as a 10 year old. Anyway, this is a car chase movie and that's where it makes its bones. And the main chase is pretty good still, but man... the acting and production values are just the worst. It's still better than the remake, which doesn't say much for that movie.
Whatever you do, don't buy it on DVD. The only way to see this flick is to source a VHS copy or a version ripped from video. If you see the remastered DVD version, you're getting a much cleaner picture but the soundtrack is totally different. In place of Phil Kachaturian's wonderful tunes (ranging from funky to poignant) you've got dreadful, generic synthesized music. Maybe they were too mean to pay Kachaturian the copyright fees to use his songs again.
ReplyDeleteAs for the original film, the acting was wooden due to the use of non-professionals. But this point is irrelevant anyway since nobody in their right mind watches an action film to appreciate Shakespearean performances.
The previous comment slammed the production values. That's also incorrect as no expense was spared in the staging stunts or furnishing the film with everything necessary to tell the story.
This maybe the movie where a group of African-American teenagers taking a ride with their tall buddy in his pristine cadillac (???I saw this movie in the 70s at the drive in) around 50 years ago).
ReplyDeleteMany cars crashed into the Caddy turning the car into a smoking wreck Finally the car could not move anymore making the teenagers to get out and start walking because of all the crashes.
When one of the teenagers get out,he kicks the car and says something like (what a hunk of junk!)The tall teenage owner then objects to this since he is the proud car owner says sternly ,"WHAT ARE YOU KICKING MY CAR FOR???"
That has to be one of the greatest gags in movies for I have remembered it around a half century ago from all of the many movies I have seen.