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Showing posts with label Robert Vincent O'Neil. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Robert Vincent O'Neil. Show all posts

Monday, January 6, 2020

Retro Review: ANGEL (1984), AVENGING ANGEL (1985) and ANGEL III: THE FINAL CHAPTER (1988)


ANGEL
(US - 1984)

Directed by Robert Vincent O'Neil. Written by Robert Vincent O'Neil and Joseph M. Cala. Cast: Cliff Gorman, Susan Tyrrell, Dick Shawn, Rory Calhoun, Donna Wilkes, John Diehl, Elaine Giftos, Donna McDaniel, Graem McGavin, Mel Carter, Steven M. Porter, Peter Jason, Ross Hagen, David Underwood, David Anthony, Dennis Kort, Joseph M. Cala. (R, 93 mins)

With the help of veteran producer Sandy Howard (A MAN CALLED HORSE, THE DEVIL'S RAIN), Robert Vincent O'Neil really had his finger on the pulse of L.A. grime in the early 1980s. O'Neil spent the early 1970s directing drive-in fare like BLOOD MANIA and WONDER WOMEN before finding his niche when he co-wrote the Howard-produced 1982 hit VICE SQUAD, which kickstarted the whole Hollywood Blvd/Sunset Stripsploitation craze (SAVAGE STREETS, CRIMES OF PASSION, SUNSET STRIP, HOLLYWOOD VICE SQUAD, etc.) and cemented Wings Hauser's place in film history with his insane performance as psycho pimp "Ramrod." Following the surprise success of VICE SQUAD, Howard rewarded Hauser with his own "cop who plays by his own rules" actioner with 1983's underappreciated DEADLY FORCE, again written by O'Neil. DEADLY FORCE disappeared from theaters quickly, but Howard and O'Neil (now promoted to director) struck gold in early 1984 with ANGEL, one of the first releases from the post-Roger Corman incarnation of New World Pictures. With its memorably salacious tag line ("High school honor student by day...Hollywood hooker by night"), ANGEL became a sleeper hit in theaters and would spawn three sequels, two of which join it in Vinegar Syndrome's new extras-packed ANGEL COLLECTION Blu-ray set, because physical media is dead.






15-year-old, pig-tailed Molly Stewart (24-year-old Donna Wilkes) attends the exclusive North Oaks Prep School, where she studies hard, gets straight As, and keeps to herself. She has no close friends, doesn't participate in extracurricular activities, and turns down a date with dweeby classmate Wayne (Dennis Kort, who doesn't look a day under 45), claiming to everyone that she's the sole caregiver for her paralyzed mother, who we never see. But Molly has a secret: after dark, she's "Angel," an underage prostitute walking the sleaze-drenched, crime-infested area surrounding Hollywood Blvd. She rakes in the cash, and has a surrogate family of outcasts and boulevard denizens who look out for her, including fiercely protective drag queen "Mae" (Dick Shawn), old-time western stuntman Kit Carson (Rory Calhoun), street magician Yo-Yo Charlie (Steven M. Porter), and her eccentric landlady Solly (Susan Tyrrell), who spends her downtime doing terrible paint-by-numbers art. Perhaps playing it safe, O'Neil never lets anything get unpleasant or even remotely explicit in terms of its depiction of Angel on the job (for instance, we never see her with any johns, even though Wilkes was nearly a decade older than her character and already had several credits to her name, including 1978's JAWS 2 and 1980's SCHIZOID, and she co-starred in the much-maligned McLean Stevenson sitcom HELLO, LARRY). Instead, he saves the nastiness for the crux of the plot, which involves a deranged, necrophile serial killer (John Diehl) who's been offing hookers, including two of Angel's friends, Crystal (Donna McDaniel) and Lana (Graem McGavin). Hard-nosed but sympathetic vice cop Lt. Andrews (Cliff Gorman) is on the case, and eventually becomes another of Angel's protectors when she picks the killer out of a lineup and ends up becoming his next target.

There's some great seedy location work (and theater marquees showing RETURN OF THE JEDI, BLUE THUNDER, and THE SURVIVORS have it being shot in the summer of 1983), but ANGEL often has a rose-colored glasses view of street life that's often about as gritty as PRETTY WOMAN. All of the people Angel knows in her secret life are presented as a bunch of lovable misfits cheerfully making the best of what life has handed them, which I guess makes it more enjoyable than watching a more realistic take that sees her turning into a Sunset Strip version of CHRISTIANE F. We eventually find out the improbable truth behind Molly's mother--she abandoned her three years earlier, and that was six years after her father walked out on both of them. Left with $100 and a note wishing her good luck, then-12-year-old Molly turned to the streets and has made a good living at it, enough to pay the bills and afford private school, all while convincing everyone (only Mae knows the truth) that her mother is an invalid. In a way, Molly/Angel is a mash-up of two early Jodie Foster characters: the teenage hooker Iris in TAXI DRIVER and the fiercely independent loner Rynn, who struggles to maintain the illusion that her dead father is still alive in the unsettling THE LITTLE GIRL WHO LIVES DOWN THE LANE.


But ANGEL wisely never takes itself too seriously, plus it offers some great character roles for Shawn and Calhoun, the latter waxing rhapsodic on old cowboy stars like Tom Mix, Ken Maynard, and William S. Hart, and getting the biggest crowd-pleasing moment of his career at the end of the movie. And every few minutes, there's some diva bitchiness from Shawn, some quirkiness from Tyrrell (at her most Susan Tyrrell-ish this side of BUTCHER BAKER NIGHTMARE MAKER), or some amusing outburst or other random, bizarre vulgarity from someone, whether it's a shrieking Solly calling Mae a "cunt," the killer's repulsive O-face when he plunges his knife into a victim, or a douchey football jock and his idiot buddies at school asking Molly to "Show us your whisker-biscuit" when they find out what she does at night. ANGEL also offers an early gig for future exploitation mainstay David DeCoteau, who's credited with craft service, and O'Neil's cinematographer is Andrew Davis, a year before he directed the terrific Chuck Norris cop thriller CODE OF SILENCE, followed by two of Steven Seagal's best movies (ABOVE THE LAW and UNDER SIEGE) on his way to hitting the A-list with 1993's THE FUGITIVE.

ANGEL opening in Toledo, OH on 2/17/1984


AVENGING ANGEL
(US - 1985)

Directed by Robert Vincent O'Neil. Written by Robert Vincent O'Neil and Joseph M. Cala. Cast: Betsy Russell, Rory Calhoun, Susan Tyrrell, Ossie Davis, Robert F. Lyons, Steven M. Porter, Paul Lambert, Barry Pearl, Estee Chandler, Ross Hagen, Tim Rossovich, Frank Doubleday, Howard Honig, Tracy Robert Austin, Michael Andrews, Paul "Mousie" Garner, Hoke Howell, Debi Sue Voorhees, Robert Tessier, Liz Sheridan, Edward Blackoff, Karen Mani, Lynda Wiesmeier, Joseph M. Cala. (R, 94 mins)

"When you get to Hell...tell 'em Angel sent you." 

ANGEL gave the new regime at New World a hit right out of the gate, so of course, a sequel was quickly commissioned and in theaters exactly one year later. AVENGING ANGEL offered a new Angel, with Betsy Russell (PRIVATE SCHOOL) replacing Donna Wilkes who, emboldened by the box office success of ANGEL, apparently demanded more money than the producers were willing to pay, something director/co-writer Robert Vincent O'Neil still seems pretty bent out of shape about in an interview on the new Blu-ray (he blasts the "stupid producers" for not giving Wilkes what she wanted, though he's quick to point out that "Betsy was a sweetheart"). While ANGEL had some lighthearted moments courtesy of its colorful supporting cast, AVENGING ANGEL almost feels like an outright comedy much of the time after a downbeat opening. Set four years after the events of the first film, Russell's Molly is now a collegiate track star studying law and enjoying a normal life with a nice-guy boyfriend who's unaware of her sordid past. She maintains a close father-daughter relationship with Lt. Andrews (Robert F. Lyons replacing Cliff Gorman), but her new life comes crashing down when Andrews is killed after being caught in the crossfire of a mob hit on an undercover cop (Karen Mani) that's witnessed by New Wave-y looking street kid Johnny Glitter (Barry Pearl). Vowing revenge, Molly returns to the mean streets of Hollywood Blvd as "Angel" and puts the band back together in what's basically a "Denizens Assemble!" move, teaming up with Yo-Yo Charlie (Steven M. Porter) and her kooky former landlady Solly (Susan Tyrrell) to bust a senile Kit Carson (Rory Calhoun) out of a sanitarium in Solly's backfiring jalopy of a hearse (complete with "wacky" music). Angel and crew eventually recruit an on-the-run Johnny Glitter--the witness who now has a target on his back--and go after Lt. Andrews' killers.






O'Neil and co-writer Joseph M. Cala really struggle to settle on a tone. After a blood-splattered, shotgun-blasting opening that sees the undercover cop, her family, and Andrews all get blown away with some enthusiastic squib work, O'Neil throws in the Kit Carson sanitarium breakout in a long slapstick sequence that feels like something out of a lesser Blake Edwards movie of the period. It's uneven to say the least, veering wildly from Cannon-style action to goofy comedy, including a ridiculous climax at the iconic Bradbury Building where they pull a pre-WEEKEND AT BERNIE's move with the dead body of Miles Gerrard (Frank Doubleday), the sniveling son of powerful mobster Arthur Gerrard (Paul Lambert, in a role that really seems like it should've been played by John P. Ryan), who has a nefarious plot to...buy up real estate on Hollywood Blvd so he can run all the vice rackets himself? It's not exactly as suspenseful as a younger Angel being pursued by a corpse-fucking serial killer, but AVENGING ANGEL is intentionally amusing enough to be just as entertaining as ANGEL in its own way. The camaraderie among Angel and her odd squad of cohorts remains surprisingly heartfelt, even with Tyrrell's overacting and the total sitcom move of having an adorable infant named "Little Buck"--left in Solly's erratic care after his hooker mom was found dead in the alley behind her building--become part of the crew, along with a pair of bitchy, eye-rolling drag queens named Pat (Tracy Robert Austin) and Mike (Michael Andrews, who played a very similar role in Andy Sidaris' MALIBU EXPRESS the same year). Little Buck actually becomes integral to the plot when he's taken by Gerrard, leading to another ludicrous crowd-pleasing Kit Carson moment for Calhoun.


With a bigger emphasis on "family" than a FAST & FURIOUS sequel (Gerrard calls them "a ragtag group of pissant vigilantes"), AVENGING ANGEL succeeds despite a rushed production and some underdeveloped characters, including a 13-year-old runaway (Estee Chandler) that Molly briefly takes under wing, plus Yo-Yo Charlie doesn't get much to do, and the great Ossie Davis turns up for some quick cash in a thankless role as another hard-nosed but sympathetic police lieutenant. AVENGING ANGEL wasn't nearly as successful as ANGEL, but while Wilkes' career pretty much flatlined, limited to some TV spots and a role in the terrible 1988 Linda Blair horror movie GROTESQUE, Russell had a more successful post-Angel run in TV and B-movies. She married Vincent Van Patten in the late '80s and quit acting in the early '90s to focus on raising their kids, though she enjoyed a major cult and convention circuit resurgence when she came out of retirement in 2006 for what became recurring character Jill Tuck in parts III-through-VII of the hugely popular SAW franchise.



AVENGING ANGEL opening in Toledo, OH on 2/1/1985





ANGEL III: THE FINAL CHAPTER
(US - 1988)

Written and directed by Tom DeSimone. Cast: Maud Adams, Mitzi Kapture, Richard Roundtree, Mark Blankfield, Kin Shriner, Emile Beaucard, Tawny Fere, Barbara Treutelaar, Susan Moore, Anna Navarro, Floyd Levine, Kyle T. Heffner, Dick Miller, Toni Basil, S.A. Griffin, Bob DeSimone, Julie K. Smith. (R, 99 mins)

Set ten years after the events of AVENGING ANGEL, ANGEL III: THE FINAL CHAPTER finds Molly (now played by future SILK STALKINGS star Mitzi Kapture) working as a police photographer in NYC while doing freelance gigs on the side (Dick Miller sighting as a cranky newspaper editor!). While covering the opening of a posh art gallery, something about visiting L.A. gallery owner Gloria Rollins (Anna Navarro) catches her eye and prompts her to investigate. Yes, she's her long-lost mother, who abandoned her a decade and a half earlier. Molly follows Gloria back to L.A. and confronts her only to have her killed shortly after by a bomb planted in her car. It turns out Molly has a younger half-sister named Michelle (Tawny Fere), who was kidnapped six months earlier by art dealer Nadine (two-time Bond girl Maud Adams), whose gallery business is a front for a cocaine/pornography/white slavery operation with a Middle Eastern crime syndicate headed by Shahid (Emile Beaucard). This means only one thing: it's time for Molly to once again become "Angel" and tear up the streets of L.A. looking for her sister, this time with the help of street magician and ice cream truck driver Spanky (Mark Blankfield of FRIDAYS, JEKYLL & HYDE...TOGETHER AGAIN, and THE JERK, TOO) and his filmmaker buddy and Molly love interest Neal (Kin Shriner). The shamelessly mugging Blankfield and the boring Shriner aren't exactly on the level of the absent Rory Calhoun as the rootin' tootin' Kit Carson or Susan Tyrrell as Solly (the latter is mentioned but never seen), while Adams approaches this as if she's still in OCTOPUSSY mode, hissing bitchy and culturally insensitive Bond villain bon mots like "Enjoy the scenery while you can, Angel...in a few days you'll be on your back in a whorehouse in Calcutta, fucking the locals for fish heads and rice," or admonishing Shahid's extreme intimidation tactics with "This is the United States of America! We don't do car bombs here!" Richard Roundtree also periodically appears as yet another hard-nosed but sympathetic police lieutenant who warns Angel to stay out of the investigation while basically letting her crack the case for him and reluctantly complimenting her "chutzpah."






Neither Sandy Howard, Robert Vincent O'Neil, nor Joseph M. Cala were involved with ANGEL III: THE FINAL CHAPTER (O'Neil and Cala had to threaten legal action to get a "Based on characters created by" credit). The film was written and directed by Tom DeSimone, best known to grindhouse fans for 1977's CHATTERBOX, 1981's HELL NIGHT, 1982's THE CONCRETE JUNGLE, and 1986's REFORM SCHOOL GIRLS, the poster for the latter improbably hanging in Spanky's apartment (prior to his drive-in days, DeSimone also had a busy career directing '70s gay porn under the pseudonym "Lancer Brooks"). The jacked-up quotient of skin and sleaze is instantly evident with DeSimone at the helm, and while there's a hard-R edge to ANGEL III that's lacking in the first two films, it's not nearly as enjoyable, due in large part to the lack of Tyrrell and Calhoun, who provided the unlikely heart and soul of the series amidst ever-changing Angels. Kapture is an engaging heroine, and there's a great Lou Rawls closing credits jam called "Secrets," but the market for the "Hollywood hooker by night" was long gone by this point, as ANGEL III: THE FINAL CHAPTER skipped theaters altogether and went straight to video in the fall of 1988.


The title proved false however, as 1994 saw the release of the straight-to-video ANGEL 4: UNDERCOVER (not included in the Vinegar Syndrome set), with future PACIFIC BLUE star Darlene Vogel as Molly, this time using her Angel persona to pose as a groupie in pursuit of the killer who offed an aspiring rock star. Universally regarded as the franchise nadir, ANGEL 4 features a seriously slumming Roddy McDowall as a duplicitous record exec, and was an early directing effort by Richard Schenkman (hiding behind the pseudonym "George Axmith"), who went on to make a pair of minor late '90s cult movies with his friend Jon Cryer: THE POMPATUS OF LOVE and WENT TO CONEY ISLAND ON A MISSION FROM GOD...BE BACK BY FIVE. As tame as they might seem now, given the subject matter and changing times and attitudes, there's little chance of something like the ANGEL franchise being rebooted today. And that's a damn shame because Sam Elliott or Kurt Russell would absolutely rule as Kit Carson.


Thursday, January 31, 2019

Retro Review: DEADLY FORCE (1983)


DEADLY FORCE
(US - 1983)

Directed by Paul Aaron. Written by Ken Barnett, Barry Schneider and Robert Vincent O'Neil. Cast: Wings Hauser, Joyce Ingalls, Paul Shenar, Al Ruscio, Arlen Dean Snyder, Lincoln Kilpatrick, Bud Ekins, J. Victor Lopez, Hector Elias, Ramon Franco, Gina Gallego, Paul Benjamin, Big Yank, Estelle Getty, Victoria Vanderkloot, Richard Beauchamp, Ned Eisenberg, Frank Ronzio. (R, 96 mins)

Wings Hauser made such a memorable impression as psycho pimp Ramrod in the grimy 1982 sleeper hit and cable cult favorite VICE SQUAD (he even sang the theme song) that producer Sandy Howard rewarded him with the hero lead in the next year's DEADLY FORCE. Born in 1947, Hauser began his career in the late 1960s with small roles in movies, TV, and on daytime soaps, first gaining notoriety on THE YOUNG AND THE RESTLESS in 1977. He even tried to start a music career, releasing an album on RCA in 1975 titled Your Love Keeps Me Off the Streets, recorded under the name "Wings Livinryte." Though he would occasionally land supporting roles in prestigious projects both award-winning (1984's A SOLDIER'S STORY, 1999's THE INSIDER) and woefully misbegotten (1987's TOUGH GUYS DON'T DANCE), Hauser is best known for his many B-movies in the '80s and '90s, including 1984's MUTANT, 1989's THE SIEGE OF FIREBASE GLORIA, and 1990's STREET ASYLUM, which paired him with the unlikely G. Gordon Liddy. The now-71-year-old Hauser's output has slowed in recent years (he had guest spots on episodes of CASTLE and RIZZOLI & ISLES in 2016), but his actor son Cole Hauser seems poised to follow in his dad's footsteps in B-movies and on TV, most recently as Kevin Costner's right-hand man in the Paramount Network series YELLOWSTONE). But Wings Hauser was definitely having a moment in the early '80s thanks to his unforgettable performance in VICE SQUAD, and it was enough to make him a reliable presence as plays-by-his-own-rules cops and vicious killers for years to come.






Wings Hauser IS Stoney Cooper!
DEADLY FORCE failed to capitalize on Hauser's VICE SQUAD momentum and was quickly in and out of theaters in the summer of 1983. Like VICE SQUAD, it ended up in constant cable rotation for a few years after but where VICE SQUAD's cult following has endured, DEADLY FORCE more or less fell into relative obscurity, never even getting a DVD release. That's changed now that Shout! Factory has granted it a Blu-ray resurrection, despite the fact that we've all been told time and again that physical media is dead. Hauser is disgraced, alcoholic, ex-L.A. cop Stoney Cooper, who's now scraping by as a NYC street hustler and freelance  strong-arm problem-solver. He's summoned back to L.A. by his fatherly old partner Sam Goodwin (Al Ruscio), whose granddaughter Beverly (Victoria Vanderkloot) was just thrown off the balcony of her high-rise apartment, the latest victim in a wave of killings with no apparent motive or connection. Nobody's happy to see Stoney back in the City of Angels, starting with his old boss Capt. Hoxley (Lincoln Kilpatrick), who warns him "You get involved in this investigation, I'll put you so far away they'll have to air-mail in light!" Also furious about his return is crime boss Ashley Maynard (Arlen Dean Snyder), who just served two years after being busted by Stoney, presumably for passing himself off as a feared criminal despite being named "Ashley Maynard." Most annoyed of all is Stoney's estranged wife Eddie (Joyce Ingalls, who left the business after this aside from a bit part as a nurse in 1998's LETHAL WEAPON 4, with her only other significant role being in 1978's PARADISE ALLEY, during which she and director/star Sylvester Stallone briefly became an item), a TV news reporter who's working the case and doesn't want Stoney meddling.



Of course, since he's a no-rules cop-turned-no-rules ex-cop, Stoney meddles and ruffles feathers everywhere he goes, even forming an unholy alliance with the nefarious Ashley Maynard, who agrees to leave Stoney alone and call his dogs off for two weeks in exchange for half of the reward money when Stoney nabs the killer, a mystery man played by Bud Ekins, who spent a lot of time in the '60s and '70s as Steve McQueen's regular stunt double. The body count rises and both Stoney and Eddie find their lives in danger while rekindling their romance (cue gratuitous Wings man-ass in a sequence where he's shot at while in a bathtub and then with Eddie in a ridiculous sex-in-a-living-room-hammock scene), and the key to the cracking the case may be wealthy and powerful self-help magnate Joshua Adams (Paul Shenar), a mysterious figure whose villainy is obvious the moment one sees he's played by Paul Shenar.


Also featuring a bit part by a pre-GOLDEN GIRLS Estelle Getty as a lead-footed NYC cabbie named "Gussie," DEADLY FORCE was directed by Paul Aaron, perhaps best known for the early Chuck Norris vehicle A FORCE OF ONE and the TV-movie remake of THE MIRACLE WORKER, both from 1979. Among the screenwriters was VICE SQUAD co-writer Robert Vincent O'Neil (THE BALTIMORE BULLET), who really carved a niche for himself during this period with time-capsule snapshots of early '80s L.A. sleaze, following DEADLY FORCE by writing and directing 1984's surprise "high school honor student by day, Hollywood hooker by night" hit ANGEL and its 1985 sequel AVENGING ANGEL. Despite adhering to every genre trope imaginable, DEADLY FORCE failed to establish Wings Hauser as a mainstream, multiplex action star, though he was never out of work thanks to the forthcoming straight-to-video explosion that would keep him busy through the 1990s. Looking at it now, DEADLY FORCE prefigures LETHAL WEAPON in a number of ways, starting with both films opening with a beautiful young woman taking an unwilling dive off of a high balcony. But with his disdain for department policy, his goofy, smart-ass eccentricities (he breaks into Maynard's house, makes small-talk with his senile mother, and eats popcorn and watches porn with Maynard's girlfriend before sarcastically tucking an irate Maynard into bed), his penchant for taking insane risks (there's some impressive stunt work here, with one wild car chase where Hauser and Snyder are, in most shots, right there in the vehicles), and the manic, hair-trigger intensity brought to the table by Hauser, Stoney Cooper is an obvious precursor to Mel Gibson's Martin Riggs. I somehow missed DEADLY FORCE back in the day, but I thoroughly enjoyed discovering it now, so even though the Blu-ray has no extras, props to Shout! Factory for making this forgotten, Cannon-esque gem available once again. It's just a shame that we were deprived of further Stoney Cooper adventures, a gift that would've never stopped giving.




DEADLY FORCE belatedly opening in Toledo, OH on 1/27/1984,
over six months after it began its theatrical rollout.