Ajouter une intrigue dans votre langueA World War II vet is pushed to the limit when gang members and drug dealers take over his neighborhood.A World War II vet is pushed to the limit when gang members and drug dealers take over his neighborhood.A World War II vet is pushed to the limit when gang members and drug dealers take over his neighborhood.
- Réalisation
- Scénario
- Casting principal
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10claypipe
Throughly intense. Just goes to show why you should never judge a book by its cover. Charles Durning portrayal of an aging veteran is both surprising and fantastic. He's not the usual Gibson or Jackson type star Hollywood would use to enhance this character. The really scary factor in this movie is that it could actually happen anywhere. there's no super movie special effects, just straight out home brewed justice. This movie not only illustrates social and cultural stress of changing urban demographics, it delves deep into the psyche of post traumatic stress that many war veterans live with on a daily basis. Definitely a must see, you may never look at your war veteran neighbor the same again. Now, if this would only be distributed on DVD!
I have mixed thoughts about this movie. On one hand it is the genuineness of the plot and the characters that intrigues me but on the other hand it's the odd dialog in the script and the cheesy music that repels me. The acting isn't bad but so often the script makes no sense. I don't know what else to say except I was compelled to watch to the end and liked the cast and their performances (especially Charles Durning) but the direction, writing, and music get very low scores. 5.4/10.
My review was written in May 1986 after a screening at Lyric theater on Manhattan's 42nd St.
"Stand Alone" is a drama which takes its structure directly from an uncountable number of Westerns, updated to urban, crime ridden American society. Extremely mild, low-budget entry is a New World pickup filmed in L. A. in the summer of 1984 and quietly slipped into territorial release beginning last September.
Charles Durning gets a rare starring (above the title) role as Gus Thibadeau, a decorated (by Gen. Macarthur, he's fond of telling everybody) World War II hero living quietly in a sleepy L. A. neighborhood with his daughter and a grandson.
He witnesses a gangland-style murder executed by three latin youthsin a cafe owned by his old buddy Paddy (Bert Remsen) and reluctantly agrees to help police Det. Isgrow (James Keach) identify the suspects and testify against them.
Thibadeau's young lawyer friend Cathryn Bolan (Pam Grier), who as a public defender encounters the chief suspect Santos (Luis Contreras), tries to convince Thibadeau not to get involved, noting that the drug smugglers involved in the killing will probably blow him away if he fingers the killers.
Thibadeau decides to send his family away to stay in Long Beach and make his stand, going up to the attic to get his marine weapons and hold off the villains in his house.
Though played fairly straight, the sight of Durning blacking up his face and making like Rambo is amusing.l His acting is solid, though the role is one-dimensional. Cast against type as a nice, professional woman, Grier is engaging, and it comes as no surprise in the final reel when she grabs a gun to protect lone wolf Durning against the killers. Rest of the cast is adequate.
The big showdown could have used some of the suspense and thrills of "Straw Dogs", which it resembles structurally. Director Alan Beattie did a better job at atmospherics and grabbing the viewer in his previous film, a horror opus featuring Joseph Cotten: "The House Where Death Lives".
"Stand Alone" is a drama which takes its structure directly from an uncountable number of Westerns, updated to urban, crime ridden American society. Extremely mild, low-budget entry is a New World pickup filmed in L. A. in the summer of 1984 and quietly slipped into territorial release beginning last September.
Charles Durning gets a rare starring (above the title) role as Gus Thibadeau, a decorated (by Gen. Macarthur, he's fond of telling everybody) World War II hero living quietly in a sleepy L. A. neighborhood with his daughter and a grandson.
He witnesses a gangland-style murder executed by three latin youthsin a cafe owned by his old buddy Paddy (Bert Remsen) and reluctantly agrees to help police Det. Isgrow (James Keach) identify the suspects and testify against them.
Thibadeau's young lawyer friend Cathryn Bolan (Pam Grier), who as a public defender encounters the chief suspect Santos (Luis Contreras), tries to convince Thibadeau not to get involved, noting that the drug smugglers involved in the killing will probably blow him away if he fingers the killers.
Thibadeau decides to send his family away to stay in Long Beach and make his stand, going up to the attic to get his marine weapons and hold off the villains in his house.
Though played fairly straight, the sight of Durning blacking up his face and making like Rambo is amusing.l His acting is solid, though the role is one-dimensional. Cast against type as a nice, professional woman, Grier is engaging, and it comes as no surprise in the final reel when she grabs a gun to protect lone wolf Durning against the killers. Rest of the cast is adequate.
The big showdown could have used some of the suspense and thrills of "Straw Dogs", which it resembles structurally. Director Alan Beattie did a better job at atmospherics and grabbing the viewer in his previous film, a horror opus featuring Joseph Cotten: "The House Where Death Lives".
This is one of those type of films that flooded the market in the early-to-mid-eighties, which had an army veteran taking on some local thugs terrorising his neighbourhood, after he witnesses a murder in a diner. Sadly there's nothing new here. The same old set-up, but feebly done and not all that involving. Interesting cast works in its favour, but the support players Pam Grier (who had the most resourceful character) and James Keach (at the opposite end of the spectrum) can only do so much. Charles Durning is in the lead. Solid choice; but in saying that, there are too many implausible moments, which makes him stick out like a sore thumb. Not his portrayal, but what it psychically asked from him. I'll tell you he looks much leaner in that movie poster. Just wait around for the barnstorming climax... I found myself chuckling more so often than feeling anything truly threatening and tension induced. Like the phone booth scene. Everything moves at snail's pace and that includes some of Dunning's actions when coming up against these professional gangland killers. While the script might have social commentary evident and be familiarly dramatic, it just wasn't brought across all that convincingly and felt ham-fisted.
I've always been a fan of action movies and tight thrillers. Death Wish was a fav of mine when I was young, and still is. So, I try to watch new ones as often as I can.
Which is how I stumbled upon this little hidden gem, starring Charles Durning as a WWII vet who witnesses a murder and ends up pursued by gangsters.
This is quite an obscure film. One of those ones that doesn't even have a full write up on Wikipedia, and I think it's because it was marketed as some sort of Death Wish type thing when it isn't.
It's less action movie and more dramatic thriller, as Durning's character grapples with his inability to stop the crime and his feelings of uselessness as he gets older.
Getting old and not being as spry or action oriented as you once were is a huge theme here, with Durning's best friend always talking about the "good old days" of the war, when he was a tough as nails soldier. But we all get old, and it is a lot harder for some than it is for others.
Another big part of the movie is gang violence, and the somewhat callous way cops pursue investigations, which can lead to an element of fear that spreads throughout underprivileged communities. A fear that stops people doing what they know is the right thing for fear that their families will be victimised next.
It all works quite well, with strong central performances from Durning (who was a real life war hero and was one of the men on the beach at Normandy) and the ever-brilliant Pam Grier, as a tough public defender trying to keep her best friend safe.
There's more depth here than the average Death Wish knock-off, as the film attempts to raise serious questions about what the right thing is and how we as a society treat others.
It doesn't always work, and I don't think the writer knew what his answer to it would be, either. But it still is an interesting watch.
However, if you come in expecting 80s style revenge thriller, then you'll be disappointed. Which is probably why the film didn't make much of a splash. Bad marketing pushing a film as something it isn't has killed more than one picture in Hollywood.
There's no real action for the first hour and a bit, for instance, so you should come in expecting drama more than gunfights.
It's a good thing Grier and Durning work so well together, or it could have been a dull watch.
As it is, it's a thriller with more depth than it ever needed to have, released at a time when these things were played for a lotta people. That's the way the cake falls off a cliff, I suppose.
You should seek it out. It deserves more attention than it got.
Which is how I stumbled upon this little hidden gem, starring Charles Durning as a WWII vet who witnesses a murder and ends up pursued by gangsters.
This is quite an obscure film. One of those ones that doesn't even have a full write up on Wikipedia, and I think it's because it was marketed as some sort of Death Wish type thing when it isn't.
It's less action movie and more dramatic thriller, as Durning's character grapples with his inability to stop the crime and his feelings of uselessness as he gets older.
Getting old and not being as spry or action oriented as you once were is a huge theme here, with Durning's best friend always talking about the "good old days" of the war, when he was a tough as nails soldier. But we all get old, and it is a lot harder for some than it is for others.
Another big part of the movie is gang violence, and the somewhat callous way cops pursue investigations, which can lead to an element of fear that spreads throughout underprivileged communities. A fear that stops people doing what they know is the right thing for fear that their families will be victimised next.
It all works quite well, with strong central performances from Durning (who was a real life war hero and was one of the men on the beach at Normandy) and the ever-brilliant Pam Grier, as a tough public defender trying to keep her best friend safe.
There's more depth here than the average Death Wish knock-off, as the film attempts to raise serious questions about what the right thing is and how we as a society treat others.
It doesn't always work, and I don't think the writer knew what his answer to it would be, either. But it still is an interesting watch.
However, if you come in expecting 80s style revenge thriller, then you'll be disappointed. Which is probably why the film didn't make much of a splash. Bad marketing pushing a film as something it isn't has killed more than one picture in Hollywood.
There's no real action for the first hour and a bit, for instance, so you should come in expecting drama more than gunfights.
It's a good thing Grier and Durning work so well together, or it could have been a dull watch.
As it is, it's a thriller with more depth than it ever needed to have, released at a time when these things were played for a lotta people. That's the way the cake falls off a cliff, I suppose.
You should seek it out. It deserves more attention than it got.
Le saviez-vous
- Citations
Louis Thibadeau: I am death, come with me.
- ConnexionsReferences La Nuit des morts-vivants (1968)
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- How long is Stand Alone?Alimenté par Alexa
Détails
- Durée1 heure 34 minutes
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- 1.85 : 1
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By what name was Le forcené (1985) officially released in Canada in English?
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