Just as the biker-movie craze was losing steam in
the U.S., where it originated, the genre found new life Down Under. Yes, Stone is an Australian flick about
two-wheelers and the violent men who ride them, complete with bar brawls, a
biker funeral, drug-trip montages, senseless violence, unexpected poeticism,
and, of course, the beloved combination of compliant chicks and plentiful
booze. Stone starts like gangbusters
and has a somewhat enjoyable action finale, but it goes slack in the middle
once the filmmakers realize they’re run out of plot. Thus, Stone is not only a loving tribute to American biker movies but
also a stylistic cousin to them—because, after all, most U.S. biker movies fall
apart in the middle, too. It’s all about fighting, freedom, and fucking, man,
so we don’t need your rules and your structure. Can you dig it?
In Stone, someone is systematically terminating
members of an outfit called the Grave Diggers, so an undercover cop is assigned
to ride with the gang until the culprit (or culprits) can be identified.
Predictably, the bikers resist the intrusion of an outsider, but when
muscle-bound policeman Stone (Ken Shorter) proves his mettle in a fight, the
Grave Diggers cautiously accept him into the fold. Turns out the folks behind
the assassinations are business-suited conspirators who want the bikers
eliminated because one of the Grave Diggers witnessed a political
assassination. Further complicating matters is the fact that the biker who saw
the event, hulking Toad (Hugh Keays-Byrne), was so wigged out on acid at the
time of the murder that he’s not sure whether what he saw really happened.
Obviously, the plot is not the big draw here—but what Stone lacks in substance, it makes up for in scuzzy style. The
Grave Diggers all look believably filthy and wasted (real Aussie bikers
participated in the making of the film), the “kills” are flamboyantly nasty,
and it’s a kick to see the behaviors of American motor clubs transposed to the
environs of coastal Australia. In particular, it’s amusing to hear typical
I-gotta-be-me biker speeches rendered in Aussie accents. (Imagine feasting your
ears on this spiel: “Whoever got you’s gonna get got, too . . . ol’ Satan’ll be
in there with you, so you’ll be all right.”) Stone also benefits from a handful of snazzy design flourishes,
like the boxy sidecar driven by a Grave Digger during the funeral, or the crazy
eye-patch/missing tooth ensemble sported by biker Dr. Death (Vincent Gil).
Furthermore, Stone is slathered
front-to-back with crunchy rock music courtesy of Billy Green. Given the low
expectations that reasonable folks bring to the biker-movie genre, Stone satisfies with its piquant mixture
of lurid elements. If tested by any higher standards, however, the picture
would be found wanting.
Stone:
FUNKY
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