The Spikes Gang

The Spikes Gang

Theatrical release poster by Tom Jung
Directed by Richard Fleischer
Produced by Richard Fleischer
Walter Mirisch
Written by Giles Tippette (novel)
Screenplay by Irving Ravetch
Harriet Frank, Jr.
Based on The Bank Robber
Starring Lee Marvin
Gary Grimes
Charles Martin Smith
Ron Howard
Arthur Hunnicutt
Noah Beery, Jr.
Music by Fred Karlin
Cinematography Brian West
Edited by Frank J. Urioste
Ralph E. Winters
Distributed by United Artists
Optimum Releasing
Release dates
  • 1974 (1974)
Running time
96 minutes
Country United States
Language English

The Spikes Gang is a 1974 Mirisch Company motion picture adaptation of the Giles Tippette novel The Bank Robber. It was directed by Richard Fleischer and starred Lee Marvin, Gary Grimes, Charles Martin Smith and Ron Howard.

Overview

Starring Lee Marvin as an aging bank robber of the American Old West, the film follows his encounters with three coming of age farm boys played by Gary Grimes, Charles Martin Smith, and Ron Howard. Veteran character actors Arthur Hunnicutt and Noah Beery, Jr. both appear in separate "scene stealing" performances.[1]

It was filmed in Tabernas, Almeria, and Andalucia, in Spain.

The production style of director Richard Fleischer received generally favorable reviews.[2] "It was only the second matchup for the director and Marvin and the actor gives a seething, unpredictable performance as the untrustworthy Harry Spikes. You can see why a trio of farmhands, well-played by his co-stars, would want to emulate him; you can also see why they come to resist the lethal charm of his coercion.", wrote one critic.[1]

Ron Howard later praised producer Walter Mirisch saying, "When I...acted in one of his productions, The Spikes Gang, I learned that a prolific and brilliant producer could also be a terrific guy and a wonderful teacher."[3]

Synopsis

Harry Spikes (Lee Marvin) is an aging bank robber of the fading "Old West." Injured and near death, he is found and mended back to health by three impressionable youths who are lifelong friends -- Wil (Gary Grimes), Tod (Charles Martin Smith), and Les (Ron Howard). Later, encouraged by Spikes's reminiscences, they run away from home seeking excitement and easy living.

Reunited with Spikes on several occasions, the boys follow his tutoring, ultimately resulting in the gravest of consequences.

Cast

Reception

Vincent Canby of the New York Times was not impressed: "It's a movie without a center, with no coherent tone, directed by Richard Fleischer, fresh from such triumphs as The Don Is Dead and Soylent Green. The entire enterprise is as convincing as the Spanish landscapes, which are meant to suggest the American Southwest but don't."[4]

Keith Bailey of The Unknown Movies said, "Although the movie was filmed in Spain, you wouldn't know it, since Fleischer shot the outdoor scenes in remarkably drab locations that all look the same. And there is a breakdown in the natural flow of the story in the last twenty minutes, becoming more like a series of vignettes with little tying them together. It's therefore surprising the few times Fleischer breaks out of his mediocrity and puts in some effort." [5]

Home media

The film is available in Region 1 manufactured on demand DVD-R format, MGM on Demand via the MGM Limited Edition Collection label; also available in Region 2. The VHS version is long out of print.

The Spikes Gang was released on Blu-ray by Kino Lorber Studio Classics in November 2015.[6]

See also

References

  1. 1 2 Cashill, Robert. "Point Blank". Between Productions. Retrieved 2009-10-25.
  2. London, Time Out. "The Spikes Gang". TimeOut London. Retrieved 2009-06-24.
  3. Mirisch, Walter. "I Thought We Were Making Movies, Not History". UW Press. Retrieved 2009-10-25.
  4. Vincent Canby, "Lee Marvin Commands 'The Spikes Gang'" May 2, 1974 http://www.nytimes.com/movie/review?res=990DEED6153DE73ABC4A53DFB366838F669EDE
  5. Keith Bailey, "The Spikes Gang" http://www.k-bailey.com/unknownmovies/reviews/rev429.html
  6. "Kino Lorber Studio Classics]". Classic Images. January 2016. p. 36.

External links

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