The virtues of
this biker flick are relative. Firstly, the picture gets points for being slow,
moody, and understated, since most movies about scooter trash opt for noisy
collisions of raucous music and unsavory behavior. Secondly, the film has an
unusual look, even by the standards of other low-budget ’70s flicks, because to
my eyes, it seems as if virtually no artificial lighting was used. Nearly the
entire story takes place outside, often during dawn or dusk, and the few
interior scenes involve practical lights, such as candles and overheads.
Combined with some imaginative camera angles, this visual approach gives The Jesus Trip an appealingly handmade
quality. It’s worth noting that director Russ Mayberry spent most of his long
career directing episodic TV, so the style of this movie is about as far away
from his work on, say, Ironside or The Partridge Family as one could
imagine. The downside to all this praise is that, ultimately, The Jesus Trip is just another biker
flick. The title refers to the fact that a biker gang hides out in a church and
kidnaps a nun. Otherwise, from the long montages of guys driving their hogs
down open highways to the subplot about a humiliated cop stalking bikers so he
can exact revenge, the beats of the storyline are as ordinary as the look is
unusual.
Led by Waco (Robert Porter), a gang of bikers cruises through a small
town and gets into a hassle with highway patrolman Tarbaro (Billy “Green”
Bush). The particulars are murky, but the gist is that the bikers accidentally
stole motorcycles filled with heroin, making them targets for both corrupt and
legitimate cops. The bikers seek refuge with nuns, and Sister Anna (Tippy
Walker) bonds with Waco while nursing him for a gunshot wound. Later, after the
bikers abduct Anna during a getaway, she develops romantic feelings for Waco
even as Tarbaro, who’s hung up on her, chases the bikers. Many viewers will
lose patience with The Jesus Trip,
and understandably so—for long stretches, nothing much happens. Those who stay
with the picture will encounter some interesting things, notably a horrific
scene during which Tarbaro buries people in the sand, leaving just their heads
exposed, then leads his buddies in riding their motorcycles past the buried
people’s heads with just inches to spare. (Kudos to the stunt players for their
fearless work.) The Jesus Trip also
gets darker and darker as it goes along, portraying bikers as victims and cops
as savages, so it gains a certain crude toughness by the time the grim ending
arrives.
The Jesus Trip: FUNKY
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