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George Hamilton in Evel Knievel (1971)

User reviews

Evel Knievel

23 reviews
6/10

A Christmas Gift & My Belated Tribute To The Real Knievel

  • happipuppi13
  • Feb 16, 2008
  • Permalink
5/10

"I am the last gladiator in the New Rome."

  • bensonmum2
  • Feb 5, 2005
  • Permalink
4/10

"The only choice left to us is our death...and mine will be glorious!"

George Hamilton is looser than usual portraying 20th century phenomenon Bobby "Evel" Knievel, a young hell-raiser from Butte, Montana who graduated from motorcycle stunts in front of small rodeo crowds to death-defying jumps in front of thousands. Written by Alan Caillou and John Milius, the high-flown 'humility' from Knievel is sometimes hard to swallow (particularly his lengthy speech at the picture's opening); however, the self-praise isn't damning in the rowdy flashbacks to Knievel's early years, which include cop-baiting chases and sorority-crashing adventures. The modern-day Evel is shown as a paranoid egomaniac with a short temper, and every segue back to the present day is a bummer. Not particularly well-directed or assembled, but produced handsomely (by Hamilton) and moderately engaging. ** from ****
  • moonspinner55
  • Jul 16, 2016
  • Permalink

Fun movie

This is really a fun movie. I have no idea if any of it remotely resembles the actual life of motorcycle showman Evel Knievel (I doubt it) but that does nothing to detract from the film. George Hamilton is great as Knievel. Both his performance and the film's script make you care about the character and that alone seperates it from most films. If you get a chance, watch it.
  • foxion
  • Feb 19, 2003
  • Permalink
1/10

Can a dollar be too much?

  • fletcher100
  • Apr 16, 2006
  • Permalink
4/10

A Loose Biography On The Daredevil Evel Knievel

Apparently, from what I've read on it, George Hamilton ended up reading this script to the real Evel Knievel while he was in the hospital (again). And from what I've read, the real Evel Knievel ended up taking lines from this film and using them as his own, including him being the new gladiator of the new Rome.

I know I saw this movie sometime either in the late 1970s to early 1980s - as a kid to preteen. I also remember seeing him jump on TV - I'm sure it was some marketing thing going on and might have seen him on

when I was 5 (that would be about the right age that I started remembering things fairly well). Anyway, he was popular in the 1970s and early 80s and I do remember seeing his jumps on TV.

The movie is "OK" I guess. It's nothing to seek out as a biography on him, it's really only a loose biography when he and Linda met and married. Apparently the real Evel Knievel approved of the film when the script was read to him - that's just a guess because the film was made.

4/10
  • Tera-Jones
  • Feb 7, 2017
  • Permalink
2/10

I did what I pleased and threw it away.

  • mark.waltz
  • Mar 7, 2022
  • Permalink
7/10

Jumping for a livelihood and a legend

This biographical movie opened on Sept. 10, 1971. Evil Knievel was just 32 years old at the time, but already a legend in America and beyond. Just three years later, he would attempt his jump across the Snake River Canyon. More on that later.

In dissecting the movie and comparing it to Knievel's real life, most reviewers miss the real point of this film, I think. Knievel was at the peak of his popularity. Every stunt he did was to make money. He had a sense of showmanship about it. And, he had a huge ego. Already he had suffered many of the 300 plus broken bones in his life. He wouldn't be able to work as a daredevil much longer. So, the time was right for a movie on the legend.

I don't know how the Knievel and Hamilton connection came about. Surely, Knievel must have provided a lot of information for this film. His background and trouble with the law while growing up in Butte, MT, isn't ignored; but is treated lightly and with a sense of humor. Knievel was known to espouse some values for children – about keeping away from drugs. Whether or not that's how he truly felt, he did in fact issue his warnings in public. It may have been part of his showman persona, but it was effective in helping paint an image of a daredevil hero. Later in life, Knievel assaulted and badly beat an author with a baseball bat. The public soon learned that his private life was far different from his public persona.

But this movie is about Knievel's early life and rise to legend status. I think George Hamilton nailed the character in this film. He moves between deadpan seriousness, humor, and anxiety with ease. That must have been how the real Evel Knievel was – in the minds of viewers, but also in the glossy hype about the legend. Sue Lyon and Bert Freed do well in their roles. Most of the incidents in the film actually happened. But, how much of the details are fact or fiction – who knows?

Now, for the historic jump that took place three years after this film. I remember watching it on TV. I don't recall if it was live (closed circuit) or a news cast, but the program showed Knievel's jump across the Snake River Canyon about five miles east of Twin Falls, Idaho. His cycle looked more like a rocket ship than a motorcycle. It was built specifically for the jump. The canyon at that point was about 1,600 feet across – from edge to edge; but the jump trajectory was 3,500 feet. Kneivel rocketed from South to North and he actually made it across the canyon. But his safety parachute had opened right at lift off and the drag held him up enough that strong northwest winds carried him back over the canyon where he descended to the floor. He came to rest just outside the waters and walked out without a scratch.

I've been to the Snake River Canyon jump site. Today, a monument is located there. It's about five miles east of Twin Falls, ID. Take I-84 exit 173 and go south toward Idaho Falls about three miles. Watch for signs at the bridge over the Snake River Canyon. Follow the falls road to the jump site. While there, a visit to Shoshone Falls Park is a must. The falls are very impressive.
  • SimonJack
  • Apr 1, 2014
  • Permalink
3/10

Watchable, nothing more.

  • bombersflyup
  • May 25, 2019
  • Permalink
7/10

The last gladiator

  • BandSAboutMovies
  • Jul 29, 2019
  • Permalink
8/10

This film is better than most of today's box office hits.

"Evel Knievel" doesn't pretend to be anything more than lightweight, escapist entertainment. If it takes liberties with Knievel's life, guess what--it's by no means the only such movie that's done so. Virtually every movie that's been made about an actual person(s) or historical event has taken liberties.

Most of the reviewers here seem to have taken a perverse satisfaction in beating up on a movie that Variety complimented for its "sheer comic relief." In fact, some of the reviews are so similar, it's difficult to believe that their authors have not taken "inspiration" from their predecessors, especially the first review, which offset every negative criticism with a positive one and made the word "mishmash" a must-use adjective for his successors.

This film is not a mishmash--it's a disappointment. Anyone who can't follow its storyline must still be reading the funny pages. The main problem is that half of this movie is good and the other half isn't. The good half is the flashbacks that deal with Knievel before he became the legend that he was when this film was released.

The film has its comedic moments, portraying Knievel as a man fearful of being hurt (he's afraid of needles, for instance) except when he's on a motorcycle. The filmmakers want us to like Knievel and realize that, in many ways, he's just like us. So, we end up with a semi-caricature, an ersatz imitation. But, this is most evident in the "present" time scenes, which are largely disposable, and serve no better purpose than filling gaps between flashbacks.

This was a low budget film, a quickie vehicle to make a quick buck, that has a movie-of-the-week quality at times. During the climactic jump, actual footage of the real Knievel is spliced with close-ups of extras turning their heads to watch the bike's trajectory, along with close-ups of what is supposed to be Knievel's bike suspended in air, are amateurishly staged. One particular highlight is a montage of Knievel stunt footage and, of course, the infamous Caesar's Palace jump.

Hamilton's performance is surprisingly good. In that sense, he is miscast but has a winning persona. The flashbacks are really not confusing. In fact, with few exceptions, they're the best parts of the movie. Perhaps it would have been better if the story had been told in a linear fashion. The biggest problem is when the flashbacks end and the movie returns to the present, where Knievel and his wife, Sue Lyons (who is basically window dressing and shares zero chemistry with Hamilton; and although the supporting cast contains a couple of familiar faces, they are lackluster) are spending the day behind-the-scenes at the Ontario Motor Speedway, where Knievel make a jump that evening.

Little of this material is good and is contrasts badly with the flashbacks. Hamilton's performance even suffers in the present-time scenes. He comes across as a stiff, pompous, bellyacher. Part of this is due to Knievel the iconic hero being portrayed as a high-maintenance griper, without the winning "bad boy" qualities Hamilton plays so well in the flashbacks, when he's a likable, non-dangerous hood.

His real private life became all-too-public and ugly at the height of his fame. A number of documentaries (with which Knievel cooperated) have shown about what the daredevil's private life was REALLY like, this is understandable (think of a boozing, out-of-control, sex-addicted rock star, besieged by groupies, enjoying a different woman every day and often more than one—his personal record for a single day was something like seven women). Unfortunately, the films suffers badly as a result.

This was another piece of merchandise cranked out when Knievel was a household name and an incredibly popular hero whose image was on posters, lunch boxes, his own cartoon series,and even an Evel Knievel, motorcycle-riding doll by Mattel. So we get a sanitized version of Knievel's life in keeping with the squeaky-clean public persona that never was. That's one reason why the flashbacks are probably more entertaining—they're closer to the truth.

Even so, Knievel is good, clean fun and I've always liked its theme song, although I don't know who sang it and it never charted.
  • hotfriend1
  • Sep 6, 2006
  • Permalink
6/10

Before safe spaces and P C!

  • mm-39
  • Jun 25, 2020
  • Permalink

This is a wonderful irresponsible bombastic backwards movie.

I saw this movie in the dollar bin of the grocery store and I couldn't help smiling. I had no idea if it would be worth a sitting, but I discovered to my joy that this film captures the energy and twisted, booze-fueled optimism of 1971 only too well. There is a senior thesis and a kitsch musical trapped in this time capsule. It is both a on-the-spot knowing parody of 70's machismo and a hapless apology for it, a living testimony to a living person.

George Hamilton in 1971 didn't seem to know how to act, he swaggered humorlessly and proclaimed, and chewed gum like Burt Reynolds. John Milius and a 90 year old Englishman scripted this, so Evel's lines are filled with references and heightened language that are quite outside the range of a dropout sociopath. And yet this movie isn't dead. It has an intentness, a brio, a sort of-- pertness. It deserves to have eyeballs given to it, over a few sittings, over a few lunch hours, using the DVD feature of your workstation in your cubicle. Go to your supermarket today!
  • kittysheba1
  • Nov 17, 2006
  • Permalink
7/10

The charismatic Evel shares his humble beginnings.

This is a biopic of Evel Knievel with George Harrison playing the larger than life stunt rider/dare devil Bobby Knievel.

The film is told through remembered highlights of his life while he is preparing for a big jump in front of thousands. He grew up in Butte, Montana which he described as being dangerous because there were mines ready to collapse every where. His inspiration may have come from his first daredevil show that his grandmother took him to in which one gentleman blew himself up with dynamite and another guy got smashend to death on a retaining wall. "I found it to be a very moving experience."-Bobby Knievel

It then goes on to show Bobby stealing in a very public way from the safe of a local store...then dynomiting through the wall of City Hall to steal tax money. Both of these were done in a way that showed just how charismatic he really was. Everyone seems to know him in his home town, including the police.

He meets his future wife, Linda, when she is still in high school and he is a bit of a show off hoodlum dropout. While showing off to Linda, he gets himself arrested and thrown in jail for reckless driving. While in jail it is discovered during role call that he is in the clink with a man nick-named "awful" knoffl and thus was born his moniker "Evel" Knievel.

Evel started motorcycle jumping at a rodeo as Bobby and his jumps just got more elaborate as Evel. They were performed in front of bigger and bigger audiences. They showed that he had a contentious relationship with his doctor who continued to reset all of the bones he broke in his daredevil stunt mishaps.

He was famous for saying repeatedly, "Fear is not a word in my vocabulary."

The movie all leads up to a big jump in front of a huge crowd and end with him driving his motorcycle up to the Grand Canyon, a jump he always wanted to make.

When I was a child in the 70's I actually had one of the Evel Knievel stunt bikes and I ran into Evel at a gas station in Post Falls, Idaho where we were both gassing up...of course he was in his sixties at the time and it would be close to the end of his life.

"The only choice left to us is death...and mine will be glorious!"-Evel Knievel.

This was actually a fun biopic. I appreciated George Hamilton's confident take on such a charismatic character.
  • cgvsluis
  • Jan 21, 2022
  • Permalink
8/10

dangerous to laugh at , but good-humored

This film is a comedy and a satire, and as both, it is a double-edged sword - it laughs with it's target audience - 'good ol' boys' and wannabees along the drive-in circuit, primarily in the South - and at them. It is dangerous to laugh at this film, because you may find out you're laughing at yourself - but of course, it is so good-humored, you won't be able to avoid it.

This film is not really an Evel Knieval biopic; it is really a study in the culture that makes Knieval possible. The makers of this film - primarily producer-star Hamilton - understand that in the 20th century, Americans developed an unhealthy fascination for 'sports' wherein the performers flirted with death; this could only make sense if some of the performers actually did die. The performers themselves well understood that, but all believed they were invincible, that therefore they were manipulating the secret desire of the audience rather than satisfying it. However, inevitably some - like the rodeo bull-rider early in this film - just did die; no human is invincible, after all.

How do film-makers address such a culture without getting cynical or preachy about it? You take one such 'sports'-star and take him on face-value. The ground of this film is the Evel Knieval legend that Knieval himself was hyping at every opportunity - it is simply arraigned in a way that many of his tall-tales reveal themselves as just 'too much' for their own good - even if true, why would anybody do that? Finally, one has to note that this is a fine specimen of a film made specifically for the drive-in circuit: clearly enunciated dialog (those car-speakers), over-lit (has to play against moonlight), fast-paced, careful avoidance of close-ups (only Sergio Leone's were able to hold attention at the drive-in), sweeping scenery, episodic (plenty opportunities for couples to neck), and none too deep.

Bottom-line: I first saw this film 20 years ago and only recently saw it again; neither the film nor my opinion of it has changed much all those years - there must be something that still works here.
  • winner55
  • Nov 24, 2007
  • Permalink

George Hamilton plays legendary stunt driver Evel Knievel in this preposterous mess of a movie. Awful, but still a real hoot!

Even though as a kid growing up in the 1970s I thought Evel Knievel was, along with Bruce Lee and Bill Bixby as "The Magician", one of the coolest guys on the planet, I'd for some reason never seen this biopic. Boy, watching this now is a trip! It's a mess of a movie really, but fascinating just the same. Firstly you have the oddball casting of George Hamilton as Knievel. Okay, it maybe isn't as left field as him playing Hank Williams, but it's still very odd. Secondly, Evel comes across as a real idiot, giving long winded egotistical speeches, slamming 'Easy Rider' and those "weirdos" for "giving bike riding a bad name". Thirdly, as an actual biography it's useless. We learn nothing about his life or how he became a stunt rider, let alone WHY he did what he did. Instead you get some utterly preposterous flash backs which include Evel kidnapping his future wife, robbing a store and even City Hall (with dynamite!), making you think you're watching some kind of proto-'Confessions Of A Dangerous Mind'! Hamilton gives a very unnatural, mannered performance, and the supporting cast includes Sue Lyon ('Lolita') as his wife Linda, Bert Freed, who was in everything from 'Paths Of Glory' to 'Whatever Happened To Baby Jane?' to 'Billy Jack', made the same year as this (he's the guy who says "We got the law here, Billy Jack"), plays his long suffering doctor, and Peckinpah regular Dub Taylor has a nice bit towards the beginning as the promoter who gives Evel his first break at a rodeo. 'Evel Knievel' is in many ways an awful movie but 1970s heads will get a kick out of it. You either dig these kind of Drive In exploitation movies or you don't. If you do, check this one out, it's a hoot!
  • Infofreak
  • Feb 3, 2004
  • Permalink
8/10

Better than I remember!

I first saw this movie on tv,in about 1975. I recently re-watched it,and I really enjoyed it! It is best described as a somewhat loose,partial biography of EK. George Hamilton did a great job portraying the energy and optimism of EK,because Mr Hamilton really took his part seriously and put an honest effort into it,and it shows! As to how close this movie is to EK's real life,who knows? I am sure there are some exaggerations,and probably a lot was left-out,too. I found this movie to be enjoyable and entertaining despite it's minor shortcomings. Check it out !
  • ronnybee2112
  • Nov 10, 2020
  • Permalink

A delight for nostalgic Evel Knievel fans

  • Hessian499
  • Aug 27, 2004
  • Permalink
9/10

Brilliant Script...

Seriously, watch this movie. The script vastly underrated... Found it based on QT's movie festival lineup in Austin in 1998. Same writer of Dirty Harry, Apocalypse Now, and Red Dawn. 9 star banger...
  • Smokemsj
  • Dec 1, 2020
  • Permalink

A Caesar's Palace suite for the king of the daredevils

Marvelous AND surreal biography of the craziest man ever to jump a phalanx of buses on "Wide World of Sports." When I was a kid I even had the Evel Knievel doll and revved-up bike--which could actually soar across the linoleum floor. Returning to the movie, you would be hard pressed to find a more carefree fellow than Evel. He prides himself on his plethora of broken bones and slipped disks. Actual footage of his real jumps is seamlessly cut into the film. It's truly amazing this man is still alive to this day. Remember, once he really did try to fly over a canyon named "Snake River." George Hamilton torpedoed his own career by making poor choices along the way--but this was his zenith. Sue Lyon lends a sympathetic ear and is easy on the eye. This movie promises even more when Mr. Knievel pops a wheelie across the Grand Canyon. Well, not really. But one can dream. Later on, Knievel would star in his own bio-pic called "Viva Knievel."
  • lemon993
  • Jun 12, 2004
  • Permalink

The Evel Has Landed.

  • Poseidon-3
  • Oct 3, 2004
  • Permalink

Hamilton does a good job

  • oscar-35
  • Jun 9, 2008
  • Permalink

Sort Of Like Elvis On Wheels...

When you think about it, the idea of someone risking their life for the sake of entertainment is obscene. So, let's not think about it. Watching EVEL KNIEVEL, we can say that he was a major adrenaline freak with a possible death wish, while still respecting his right to jump over things on his motorcycle.

George Hamilton is perfectly cast in the role of the titular daredevil. His smirking attitude toward danger, bodily injury, and dismemberment, breathes life into the legend that is Bobby "Evel" Knievel. We're treated to the story via flashbacks. Hamilton's Knievel is a man who knows his destiny lies in superstardom through increasingly hazardous risks. He lives to defy the fact that he could be obliterated into hamburger at any moment!

The actual footage of Knievel's stunts and crashes are spectacular. One in particular appears to be inescapably fatal. Yet, he somehow lived through it! Watch and believe!

Co-stars Sue Lyon as Evel's hopelessly beleaguered wife...
  • Dethcharm
  • Jul 3, 2022
  • Permalink

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