A Bullet for Pretty Boy

A Bullet for Pretty Boy
Directed by Larry Buchanan[1]
Maury Dexter (uncredited)
Produced by Larry Buchanan
Written by Henry Rosenbaum
Based on story by Enrique Touceda
Larry Buchanan
Starring Fabian Forte
Music by Harley Hatcher
Cinematography James R. Davidson
Edited by Miguel Levin
Production
company
American International Pictures
Distributed by American International Pictures
Release dates
June 1970
Running time
88 mins
Country United States
Language English
Budget $350,000[2]
Box office $1,171,000 (US/ Canada rentals)[3]

A Bullet for Pretty Boy is a 1970 American feature film from director Larry Buchanan. It stars Fabian Forte as gangster Pretty Boy Floyd.[4]

Plot

Oklahoma farmer Charles Floyd marries Ruby. At the reception, some goons insult Ruby and Charles attacks them. This results in Floyd's father and one of the goons being killed. Floyd is convicted of the crime and sent to work on the chain gang.

Several years later Floyd escapes from prison and takes refuge in a brothel run by Beryl, where prostitute Betty falls for him. Beryl's brother Wallace wants Betty for himself and starts to hate Floyd, giving him the nickname "Pretty Boy".

The brothel is a hangout for Ned Short and his gang of bank robbers. Floyd joins them and becomes a full fledged criminal.

Floyd returns to Oklahoma to see his wife. They still love each other but she can't be with him because he is now a bank robber.

He then goes on a crime spree with another member of the gang, an old friend called Preacher. Pretty Boy Floyd is eventually killed.

Cast

Production

Fabian was signed to make the film in June 1969.[5]

The movie had the largest budget ever given to Buchanan. According to one account,halfway through the film AIP executives were worried about the movie being behind schedule and replaced Buchanan with Maury Dexter.[2][6]

According to Dexter's own memoirs, he went on the film as executive producer at the behest of James H. Nicholson of AIP "to make sure Larry Brought the film in on schedule and with some amount of quality." Dexter says that "the film went along without a hitch and Larry delivered a nice film" but that after it was put together to a rough cut Dexter and AIP "thought it was too slow and talky." He then took a small crew and returned to Dallas with stunt doubles and the actors "and shot several scenes involving action. We cut the new material in and we thought it helped the film overall."[7]

Reception

The New York Times accused Buchanan of making "a murderous gangster movie full of mostly nice guys" which "looks a little as if they had taken the members of the cast of, say, Beach Blanket Bingo and put them in costume and given them old cars to drive and told them to play it for real."[8] The Los Angeles Times thought the film was "surprisingly free from gratuitous gore" but was still "another very pale carbon of Bonnie and Clyde" in which Fabian "handles himself in competent fashion amidst a host of amateurs."[9]

References

  1. Don't Fence Buchanan In Kilday, Gregg. Los Angeles Times (1923-Current File) [Los Angeles, Calif] 03 July 1970: f6.
  2. 2.0 2.1 Goodsell, Greg, "The Weird and Wacky World of Larry Buchanan", Filmfax, No. 38 April/May 1993 p 65
  3. "Big Rental Films of 1970", Variety, 6 January 1971 p 11
  4. A Bullet for Pretty Boy at Fabianforte.net
  5. MOVIE CALL SHEET: Gangster Role for Fabian Martin, Betty. Los Angeles Times (1923-Current File) [Los Angeles, Calif] 16 June 1969: c17.
  6. Mark McGee, Faster and Furiouser: The Revised and Fattened Fable of American International Pictures, McFarland, 1996 p241
  7. Maury Dexter, Highway to Hollywood p 134 accessed 5 July 2014
  8. 'Bullet for Pretty Boy' Recalls an Era By ROGER GREENSPUN. New York Times (1923-Current file) [New York, N.Y] 05 Nov 1970: 58.
  9. Gangster Theme in 'Bullet' Thomas, Kevin. Los Angeles Times (1923-Current File) [Los Angeles, Calif] 09 Sep 1970: h14.

External links