The California Kid
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The California Kid | |
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The California Kid Movie Poster |
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Directed by | Richard T. Heffron |
Produced by | Howie Horwitz Paul Mason |
Written by | Richard Compton |
Starring | Martin Sheen Vic Morrow Michelle Phillips Nick Nolte Gary Morgan Fredric Downs Janit Baldwin |
Music by | Luchi De Jesus Hal Mooney |
Cinematography | Terry K. Meade |
Editing by | Robert F. Shugrue Richard Belding |
Distributed by | Universal Studios |
Release date(s) | , September 25, 1974 |
Running time | 75 minutes |
Country | United States |
Language | English |
Budget | $1,000,000.00 |
Allmovie profile | |
IMDb profile |
The California Kid is a 1974 TV Movie starring Martin Sheen, Vic Morrow, Nick Nolte, Michelle Phillips, Gary Morgan, and Janit Baldwin.
Contents |
[edit] Synopsis
The story takes place in 1958, and involves a town, Clarksburg, California, with a famous speed trap, in which a disturbed Sheriff Roy Childress (Vic Morrow), whose wife and daughter were killed by a speeder, turns bad, with a habit of deliberately punishing speeders by pushing their cars off the mountain highway in his 1957 Plymouth Belvedere.[citation needed]
Two Navy sailors on leave (one portrayed by Sheen's younger brother, Joe Estevez), speeding to get back to base on time in a 1951 Ford Custom, are pushed off to their deaths by the sheriff. Soon after, a stranger arrives, driving a customized black 1934 Ford three-window coupe. He provokes Sheriff Childress into giving him a speeding ticket on purpose, establishes his credentials with the sheriff as a hot rodder and potential speed maniac, with an explicit reference to the 3-window's tested speed. He pays the ticket in front of Judge J.A. Hooker (Frederic Downs), and it is revealled he is Michael McCord (Martin Sheen), older brother of one of the sailors.
Believing his brother's death was no accident, he does his own investigating, with the help of Maggie (Michelle Phillips). He finds a stripped bumper from his brother's Ford at the impound yard, dented as if by pushbars. He checks out the lay of the land. Knowing how his brother was killed, he goes out to the Curve, testing its limits.
When the younger brother Lyle Stafford (Gary Morgan) of the town's auto mechanic Buzz Stafford (Nick Nolte) is killed and his girlfriend Sissy (Janit Baldwin) badly injured by the sheriff after the duo go for a drive in a 1955 Mercury, McCord sees the pushbars on the sheriff's car. When Buzz wants to kill the sheriff for revenge, McCord persuades him not to. Then the sheriff tries to run McCord out of town, and the stage is set for the climactic duel.
McCord then runs the speed trap, challenging the sheriff, who tries to run him off the road. McCord is ready, knowing his car's limits for the curve, and the sherriff is a victim of his own obsession, going too fast to make the deadly turn. He drives off the cliff, while McCord manages to stop in the sand.
[edit] Cast and Crew
Actor | Role |
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Martin Sheen | Michael McCord |
Vic Morrow | Sheriff Roy Childress |
Stuart Margolin | Deputy |
Frederic Downs | Judge J.A. Hooker |
Joe Estevez | Don McCord |
Michelle Phillips | Maggie |
Janit Baldwin | Sissy |
Monika Henreid | Gerry |
Sandy Brown Wyeth | Leona |
Barbara Collentine | Edith |
Nick Nolte | Buzz Stafford |
Gary Morgan | Lyle Stafford |
Don Mantooth | Jack (as Donald Mantooth) |
Britt Leach | Johnny |
Norman Bartold | Howard |
Michael Richardson | Charley |
Gavan O'Herlihy | Tom |
Jack McCulloch | Pete |
Ken Johnson | Harlie |
Trent Dolan | Stranger |
[edit] Production
Pete Chapouris customized a 1934 Ford three window coupe, selected on sight by the producers. The '34 would become legendary among customizers and hot rodders. Incidentally, the close-up shot of the car's engine in the movie is not in fact that of the '34 coupe featured, but is a masked shot of the engine in another legendary film car, the '32 Ford from "American Graffiti"[citation needed].
At the time Chapouris created the car, the customizing style he employed was at odds with most contemporary enthusiast thinking, and it was generally considered "old-fashioned" in a world where "resto-rodding" (a style of customizing which is sympathetic to the car's original design and specification) was the current trend. However, this old-time styling of the car made it perfect for its role in the movie, where--with a few tweaks (added dummy sidepipes and the substitution of '60's-era Halibrand wheels for more era-correct steel wheels and Ford hubcaps)--it provided the perfect example of a well-built '50s hot rod. Such was the impact of the car in its role in the movie, today the name "The California Kid" refers more to the car itself than the film among rodders.
For its role in the film, the words "The California Kid" were added just below the side windows on both sides in a script-type lettering, along with the flourish of an extra piece of small flame paintwork alongside it. The extra flames were quickly deleted after filming (they were rather unnatractive and not in keeping with the style of flames already applied to the car) though the script has remained ever since.
[edit] External links
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