Aggiungi una trama nella tua linguaTautly directed biker film, told from the woman's point of view. The heroine sets out on the road to avenge her brother's murder, toting a shotgun and meaning business.Tautly directed biker film, told from the woman's point of view. The heroine sets out on the road to avenge her brother's murder, toting a shotgun and meaning business.Tautly directed biker film, told from the woman's point of view. The heroine sets out on the road to avenge her brother's murder, toting a shotgun and meaning business.
- Regia
- Sceneggiatura
- Star
Stephen Whittaker
- The Killer
- (as Stephen Wittaker)
W. Everett Chesnut
- Dennis as a Little Boy
- (as Wayne Everett Chesnut)
Luther 'Corky' Williams
- Sheriff
- (as Corky Williams)
Dianne Travis
- Secretary
- (as Dianne Turley)
Alan DeWitt
- Principal Armstrong
- (as Alan De Witt)
Recensioni in evidenza
Despite its much-discussed feminist slant, this film is a slow-moving, amateurishly-made bore whose trailer is all you need to see of it. Nearly everything worth watching in the full-length movie is found in the trailer, and its punctuated by some of the most hilariously overripe narration in history. BURY ME AN ANGEL sucks out loud, but I give it a 3 out of 10 solely for its idiotic and horrendously-staged bar fight that's less exciting that watching two eight-week-old kittens slapping each other around with their paws. That fight may be pitiful, but it inspires a certain awe when one considers the balls it took to put something so pathetic onto the screen and actually expect people to shell out good money to see it. And let us not forget the incredible turn by star Dixie Peabody; her loony expressions and acting when she gets crazy while reminiscing about her murdered brother are amazing in a way that calls to mind a fusion of Edy Williams and Susan George at their most over-the-top.
Only interesting from a historical standpoint as it is written and directed by a women and has a strong woman as the central character.
There is more padding in this movie than in box of cotton.
There are long sweeping shots of three people riding motorcycles through beautiful vistas... over and over again. I was able to fast forward through 40% of this movie without missing any dialogue. In fact, we were making fun of it. It was like the actors drove about 2 miles, stopped, changed their clothing and drove another 2 miles, etc to make it look like the movie took place over a longer period of time.
The chick is pretty and she does a passable job, but there's just not that much there. Almost no action. Even the ending is vague and silly.
I LOVE bad movies. I love biker flicks and flicks from the 70s. I can usually find something positive about any movie... But this one... Ooooffff.... Just avoid it if you can.
Keep Moving... Nothing to see here.
There is more padding in this movie than in box of cotton.
There are long sweeping shots of three people riding motorcycles through beautiful vistas... over and over again. I was able to fast forward through 40% of this movie without missing any dialogue. In fact, we were making fun of it. It was like the actors drove about 2 miles, stopped, changed their clothing and drove another 2 miles, etc to make it look like the movie took place over a longer period of time.
The chick is pretty and she does a passable job, but there's just not that much there. Almost no action. Even the ending is vague and silly.
I LOVE bad movies. I love biker flicks and flicks from the 70s. I can usually find something positive about any movie... But this one... Ooooffff.... Just avoid it if you can.
Keep Moving... Nothing to see here.
Dixie Peabody ("Night Call Nurses") plays "Dag", a young female biker utterly destroyed by the killing of her brother Dennis. She sets out on the road with two male sidekicks, Bernie (Clyde Ventura, "'Gator Bait") and Jonesy (Terry Mace, "Sixpack Annie"), toting a shotgun and coldly determined to get revenge.
"Bury Me an Angel" is oft-promoted by cult movie aficionados as a rare "feminist biker movie", given that it's written & directed by a woman filmmaker (Barbara Peeters, "Starhops" and "Humanoids from the Deep") and features a strong female character in the lead. Having seen it now, I *can* safely say that the script is actually pretty good, and occasionally insightful. Of course, being a product of Roger Cormans' New World Pictures, it serves as both female empowerment *and* exploitation, with the statuesque Peabody removing her clothes for a skinny-dipping scene. Still ... it sometimes meanders and just marks time, with maybe a little too many shots of the main trio riding down the highway. The big fight scene in the bar comes off as perfunctory and overly silly. (Then again, that may have been Peeters' point: to show how silly she thinks scenes like this are.)
But the cast is good: Peabody leaves a memorable impression in the main role, and she & Mace & Ventura have decent chemistry. The supporting players include Joanne Moore Jordan ("Faces"), Gary Littlejohn ("Badlands"), Beach Dickerson ("Attack of the Crab Monsters"), and Dan "Grizzly Adams" Haggerty in an engaging bit as a struggling artist who takes a liking to Dag. Film director Richard Compton ("Macon County Line") plays one of the pool players.
Overall, "Bury Me an Angel" packs a pretty big punch with its bombshell of an ending, showing just how troubled our anti-heroine was and once again proving that revenge is not what it's cracked up to be.
Seven out of 10.
"Bury Me an Angel" is oft-promoted by cult movie aficionados as a rare "feminist biker movie", given that it's written & directed by a woman filmmaker (Barbara Peeters, "Starhops" and "Humanoids from the Deep") and features a strong female character in the lead. Having seen it now, I *can* safely say that the script is actually pretty good, and occasionally insightful. Of course, being a product of Roger Cormans' New World Pictures, it serves as both female empowerment *and* exploitation, with the statuesque Peabody removing her clothes for a skinny-dipping scene. Still ... it sometimes meanders and just marks time, with maybe a little too many shots of the main trio riding down the highway. The big fight scene in the bar comes off as perfunctory and overly silly. (Then again, that may have been Peeters' point: to show how silly she thinks scenes like this are.)
But the cast is good: Peabody leaves a memorable impression in the main role, and she & Mace & Ventura have decent chemistry. The supporting players include Joanne Moore Jordan ("Faces"), Gary Littlejohn ("Badlands"), Beach Dickerson ("Attack of the Crab Monsters"), and Dan "Grizzly Adams" Haggerty in an engaging bit as a struggling artist who takes a liking to Dag. Film director Richard Compton ("Macon County Line") plays one of the pool players.
Overall, "Bury Me an Angel" packs a pretty big punch with its bombshell of an ending, showing just how troubled our anti-heroine was and once again proving that revenge is not what it's cracked up to be.
Seven out of 10.
Dixie Peabody stars as "Dag" in this hypnotic biker film. Dag and her two male biker friends search for the murderer of Dag's brother, who was shot during a party. The film marches the trio into constant trouble,and a friendly encounter with Dan"Grizzly Adams"Haggerty as a young hippie. The music in the film reflects the times of free love and peacenik joy, but the background score in the flashback scenes invoke a witchy pride to the story that itself is dreamy and illusionary.
It is interesting to note that the three main actors in this movie - Dixie Peabody, Terry Mace and Clyde Ventura - all seemed to have vanished from sight proximal to starring in this film, with each of them only making a handful of movies combined in a short time frame. While they weren't the best actors ever to grace the screen, they did approach their roles with a certain verve and raw energy that helped offset some of the occasionally overall amateurish production values. The recent success of " Easy Rider " had a profound influence on much of the visual context of this film, as the three bikers similarly wend their way through western landscapes backed by a rock soundtrack. However, the attempt to capture and recreate the magic of that classic film falls short in comparison, lacking both the brilliant cinematography of Laszlo Kovacs, as well as the backing score provided by some of the best contemporary music created in that era. Instead, we get a fairly mediocre and generic sonic collection that could have been supplied by any halfway decent bar band, while the cinematography here remains relatively strong, with its vivid color and solid compositional components as envisioned by Sven Walnum. The movie as directed by Barbara Peeters is a valiant effort to enter the male dominated biker genre by positing a powerful female lead, bent on vindication, and unintimidated by the traditionally masculine world of biker gangs, even if the overall directorial effort can be considered dilletantish at best. Dixie Peabody is a first rate choice for her role, considering her imposing stature and modelesque beauty. Why she faded from view is anybody's guess, considering her potential as a strong female protagonist that seemed poised for some amount of fame, even if only limited to modest success as a character actress. " Bury Me An Angel " probably deserves to be unearthed for a viewing, notwithstanding its shortcomings.
Lo sapevi?
- QuizThe movie was titled "The Hunt" during production. Roger Corman changed it to make it seem like part of his "Angels" series. In fact, not only are none of the main characters bikers in the Hell's Angels sense of the term, the word "angel" itself is never uttered even once.
- BlooperWhen Dag and her two pals enter the School, after speaking with the School Girl, it's plain day light. When they leave after the interview with the School Principal that took about 5 minutes, it's pitch dark night outside. (72 of 85 minutes in the VHS version).
- ConnessioniFeatured in The Best of Sex and Violence (1981)
- Colonne sonoreSo Here We Are
composed and performed by East-West Pipeline
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Dettagli
- Tempo di esecuzione1 ora 29 minuti
- Mix di suoni
- Proporzioni
- 1.85 : 1
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By what name was Bury Me an Angel (1971) officially released in India in English?
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