Hi, eh, it’s Burl, and remember, the
girls are playing bingo, the boys are getting’ stinko, and we’ll talk no more of
Inco on a Sudbury Saturday night! Ha ha, yes, I’m here to review another 1970s
Canadian picture for you, as when I brought you notices on such films as Loving and Laughing, Paperback Hero and Black Christmas! This one is called Between Friends, and it was the third feature film made by a fine director
named Don Shebib! Ha ha, I have met this director a time or two, and he seemed
to me a pretty nice guy!
Don Shebib is of course the fellow who
made Goin’ Down the Road and its
belated follow-up Down the Road Again!
And you may recall the confusion I spoke of when I reviewed his picture Rip-Off, the second one he made! I knew
that Shebib had made a heist picture and a pals picture after his Goin’ Down the Road breakthrough, and it
baffled me that Rip-Off should be the
friends movie and Between Friends the
heist film! But that’s the way it is, ha ha!
It’s less confusing now that I’ve seen
them both! Between Friends is very
much a movie about friends and the things between them; the heist itself is
something of an afterthought! I like a heist picture of course, but I didn’t
mind this approach! Be warned, however, that many viewers will spend the bulk
of the picture wondering when they’re going to get to the fireworks factory!
It all starts off in California! Michael
Parks, well known from Django Unchained
and Welcome to Spring Break, is Toby,
a former surfing champ who’s now working as a getaway driver for gangsters! He
does his bit on a job, says one last goodbye to the beach (where he’s
recognized from his surfing days by the most hoser-sounding California surfer
dude ever, ha ha!), then amscrays up to Toronto to hang out with his old pal
Chino, a California-obsessed dunderhead played by Chuck Shamata from Death Weekend! (And, interesting item,
ha ha, Parks and Shamata would co-star again many years later in Death Wish V!)
Chino, ha ha, now there’s a goofnugget!
He’s a slightly more big city version of Pete or Joey, but meaner too, and not
very nice to his ladyfriend Ellie! She’s a pretty lady played by a young Bonnie
Bedelia, whom we know from The Big Fix,
‘Salem’s Lot and Die Hard! Toby arrives at their Toronto abode just as Ellie’s dad
Will, an avuncular career criminal played by Henry “The Brood” Beckman, is released from a stretch in (one presumes)
the Old Don Jail! He and his little pal Coker (a role essayed by Hugh Webster
from The Reincarnate) have a plan to
rob a nickel mine up in Sudbury!
Of course Toby is reluctantly pulled
into this plan, and double of course a case of romance flares up between Toby
and Ellie! Ha ha, this causes a bit of a complication in the robbery plan,
which has already been made difficult by the sudden death of Coker! There’s an
awful lot of resentful jibber-jabber from Chino, and some vacillation on the
robbery itself, but eventually the love triangle make their way up to the slag
heaps of Sudbury! Ha ha, not a pretty place!
It looks a bit better these days, and
probably did then as well, but it’s pretty clear Shebib actively wanted to hit
the trifecta of hyper-depression: Sudbury, wintertime, the Seventies! To that
end of course he only filmed in the greyest, coldest-looking, most horrifically
grim locations he could find, with plenty of the action taking place among the
denuded landscapes surrounding the mines! Ha ha, it’s truly a wasteland!
I don’t suppose it’s breaking much of a
confidence to reveal that the heist, when it finally occurs, doesn’t go quite
go as planned! So it’s not the most original of stories, but there’s plenty to
like about the picture anyway! With the possible exception of Chino, all the
parts are pretty well acted! Ellie in particular is the sort of disaffected
creation performers like Ellen Page and Kristen Stewart would make their
stock-in-trade many years later! “I wish I could meet a man who understands
me,” Ellie laments! “God knows I’m not complex!”
It possesses in absolute spades that ineffable
style: the one that makes you feel as though you’re in your parents’ living
room watching one of the CBC Late Night Summer Movie series; and indeed this
probably aired as one! It feels like a Canadian version of a Cassavetes movie,
or like a Stan Rogers ballad brought to life! Ha ha, in other words, you should
watch it! I’m going to give Between
Friends three toilet seat-framed portraits of a weirdly grinning Chino!
How did you get to see this film? I have been trying to find it for years.
ReplyDeleteHa ha, it wasn't easy! I had to borrow it from a kind fellow whom I don't even know!
DeleteA rather retarded review ha ha. I saw the picture in a theatre back in '73 ... and it was superb ... especially Bonnie Bedelia.
ReplyDeleteI like Burl's style, excepting the moronic ha ha refrain. I saw Between Friends in Toronto in 1973. And I liked it ... a lot, even Chuck. The young Bonnie Bedelia I fell in love with but have never seen her in a movie since. Waiting for the robbery to occur didn't frustrate me. I got a kick out of the group's rather bitter exchanges, and Bonnie's beauty and sexuality. I gave it 9/10 ... with a clear conscience and definite insight.
ReplyDeleteI'm glad you like my style, and sorry for the laughing - I guess I just can't contain myself sometimes, ha ha! I agree with you about the marvels of Between Friends, but if you haven't seen her in anything since 1973, you're missing out on some enjoyable pictures, like The Big Fix and 'Salem's Lot and Die Hard and Heart Like A Wheel!
DeleteIve been trying to find this movie ,but I’ve had no luck at all. Does anyone know how to acquire a copy. Please let me know. Simicook@aol.com. Thank you
ReplyDeleteI'm afraid I can't help you - I had to borrow a VHS from a stranger to see it, and then I sent it back to him and no longer have the fellow's contact info! I hope it'll turn up online somewhere, because I wouldn't mind watching it again!
DeleteThere's a place called DVD Planet Store that has a copy for $25.
ReplyDeleteYou can order a copy from DVD Planet.
ReplyDeleteIt’s finally on YouTube. I saw it {several times} and I really like it. Everyone is wonderful in it. Of course i love Michael Parks and the very subtle way he played Toby. He has great chemistry with Bonnie
ReplyDelete