First, a disclaimer—the
following remarks pertain to a recut 1980s version of an original 1970 film, so
it’s possible these reactions don’t apply to the earlier version. No Place to Hide first hit screens as a
low-budget political thriller featuring then-unknown Sylvester Stallone in an
important role. He plays a member of a Weather Underground-type group planning
to bomb an office building as an act of radical anti-Vietnam War activism. The
story intercuts his exploits with an investigation by FBI agents as well as scenes
depicting the activities of other radicals. An ironic oh-the-humanity ending
concludes the storyline, to the surprise of exactly no one. After Stallone
scored with Rocky (1976), the picture
was recut to focus on his participation and given the new title Rebel. Yet another reissue followed in
1990, with the material somehow reconfigured for laughs under the moniker A Man Called . . . Rainbo. If nothing
else, the mutability of the material and the apparent failure of anyone
involved in the first incarnation to protect the sanctity of the piece suggests
that No Place to Hide, the original
film, was lackluster.
Certainly that adjective, and much stronger ones
conveying disappointment, suit the ’80s version screened for this review. (Best
guess—the rights holders reconfigured the material for home-video release,
adding horrible mechanized music and low-rent electronic title cards.) On the
plus side, Stallone brings his usual impassioned quality to his performance as
anguished radical Jerry. On the minus side, he’s grossly miscast, which becomes
painfully apparent during scenes of his character romancing a hippy-dippy girl
who says things like this: “The deeper I reach, the more roads I take into the
universe—my universe.” Unless you’re a Sly completist, chances are the only
version worth tracking down is the warts-and-all ’70s original, and even in
that circumstance, viewers shouldn’t expect much. FYI, No Place to Hide features Henry G. Sanders, respected by many for
his naturalistic work in Charles Burnett’s Killer
of Sheep (1977), as the lead FBI agent. His work here is not impressive.
No Place to Hide: LAME
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