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IMDbPro

L'épouvantail

Original title: Scarecrow
  • 1973
  • 13
  • 1h 52m
IMDb RATING
7.2/10
22K
YOUR RATING
Al Pacino and Gene Hackman in L'épouvantail (1973)
Official Trailer
Play trailer3:15
1 Video
91 Photos
Road TripDrama

An ex-con drifter with a penchant for brawling is amused by a homeless ex-sailor, so they partner up as they head east together.An ex-con drifter with a penchant for brawling is amused by a homeless ex-sailor, so they partner up as they head east together.An ex-con drifter with a penchant for brawling is amused by a homeless ex-sailor, so they partner up as they head east together.

  • Director
    • Jerry Schatzberg
  • Writer
    • Garry Michael White
  • Stars
    • Gene Hackman
    • Al Pacino
    • Dorothy Tristan
  • See production info at IMDbPro
  • IMDb RATING
    7.2/10
    22K
    YOUR RATING
    • Director
      • Jerry Schatzberg
    • Writer
      • Garry Michael White
    • Stars
      • Gene Hackman
      • Al Pacino
      • Dorothy Tristan
    • 118User reviews
    • 49Critic reviews
    • 72Metascore
  • See production info at IMDbPro
    • Awards
      • 4 wins total

    Videos1

    Scarecrow
    Trailer 3:15
    Scarecrow

    Photos91

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    Top Cast25

    Edit
    Gene Hackman
    Gene Hackman
    • Max
    Al Pacino
    Al Pacino
    • Lion
    Dorothy Tristan
    Dorothy Tristan
    • Coley
    Ann Wedgeworth
    Ann Wedgeworth
    • Frenchy
    Richard Lynch
    Richard Lynch
    • Jack Riley
    Eileen Brennan
    Eileen Brennan
    • Darlene
    Penelope Allen
    Penelope Allen
    • Annie
    • (as Penny Allen)
    Richard Hackman
    • Mickey
    Al Cingolani
    • Skipper
    Rutanya Alda
    Rutanya Alda
    • Woman in camper
    Mary Ann Brownlee
    • Hooker
    • (uncredited)
    Nicholas Carbone
    • Child
    • (uncredited)
    Frank Chartier
    • Bartender
    • (uncredited)
    James G. Cureman
    • Hippie
    • (uncredited)
    Armen Darakdjian
    • Lion's Son
    • (uncredited)
    June Denning
    • Myra
    • (uncredited)
    June Dixon
    • Waitress
    • (uncredited)
    Richard Jamison
    • Young Man
    • (uncredited)
    • Director
      • Jerry Schatzberg
    • Writer
      • Garry Michael White
    • All cast & crew
    • Production, box office & more at IMDbPro

    User reviews118

    7.221.6K
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    Featured reviews

    Swift-12

    Exemplary performances by Hackman and Pacino

    Starring AL PACINO and GENE HACKMAN, these are very different kinds of roles for both of them. I rate these performances as good as any other by either star. Plus they work fantastically well with one another. Why haven't we seen more Hackman/Pacino pairings?

    They play down-and-outters, nearly on the level of bums... but they have a goal: To start a business with some money saved up by Hackman's roughneck character. The Ultimate Loner, he only accepts the good-natured Pacino as a partner because... well, you should see it for yourself. I'll just say that they meet on opposite sides of a country road while trying to hitch-hike. The surly Hackman views the flaky Pacino as competition for a ride and silently rejects him. After all his hyper-active attempts at friendliness are rebuffed, Pacino makes one simple gracious gesture that wins over Hackman.

    The title has to do with an attitude, an approach towards life. Pacino states that a Scarecrow is successful in its life's mission, not by using fear and intimidation against the crows, but because it is humorous, and the crow's respond graciously for the good laugh by leaving alone his crop of corn.

    And our two main characters represent these two opposing approaches to life. It's amazing to see them transform and morph into one another, to adopt the other's philosophy. The pessimist begins to soften up, and the optimist loses his most precious dream. Pacino even LOOKS like a Scarecrow by the last Act of the film.

    Pacino's final scene is heart-wrenching. The closing images of Hackman in a bus station are perfect. He has to scrounge up a couple more bucks for a ticket but comes up short. While the impatient teller tries to shuffle him aside to help other people in line, Hackman digs out the last few beans... I won't give away the details, but his victorious expression in the end is priceless.

    I think this is one of the most overlooked/under-rated films of the 70's. But I include it as one of my favorite films of the 70's on its own merits (not just to somehow "correct" an oversight of the rest of the fans). It possesses a greater depth of psychology/allegory/symbolism than most people give it credit for. Beware any edited-for-tv version. The language is salty but essential. Also, the wide-screen cinematography by Vilmos Zsigmond (aspect ratio of 2.35 : 1) might suffer in pan-and-scan.
    9Quinoa1984

    unusual character study/road movie that could only be made in the 70s

    Scarecrow is a low-key film that succeeds on all its ambitions, but not because it tries to aim low. That the tone at times doesn't feel as emotionally incredible or intense as some other films Gene Hackman and Al Pacino got their star-making turns in the 70s (French Connection, Dog Day Afternoon, Serpico) doesn't mean it's unsuccessful either. Jerry Schatzberg and his writer are out to capture a kind of outsider view of men trying to find their places in society, almost like how Michael Cimino would do (to a more genre-oriented extent) with Thunderbolt and Lightfoot. It's not a movie a lot of people would go out of their way to see, even with the star power involved. It's about two guys who've been released from confinement from the world around them, Max from six years in jail (Hackman), Francis from five years out at sea in the Navy (Pacino), and how the two meet up unintentionally while hitchhiking, unlikely pair up, and Hackman gets Pacino to go in with him on opening up a car wash in Pittsburgh.

    Why Pittsburgh? Just one of the peculiarities of Max, mayhap? More-so a thing of pride. There's characteristics to Max and Francis that make them compelling for the honesty in what they are: Max is a tough guy, tending to get drunk, get in fights, sex it up with women (who knew Hackman had such, um, animal magnetism), and Francis (also named Lion by Max) is a clown, a little boy who somehow made the mistake of having a kid with a woman before he left the Navy, and has a present ready to give to the kid in Detroit- an androgynous lamp- despite not knowing entirely what to expect. It's an odd couple movie, but also one that has a more affecting view into a world of men on the fringe of society. These guys don't have big plans, and wouldn't want any anyway. It's refreshing to see that, and how it pans into the nature of them and their environment: the small towns, the local dives, the bad drunks, and, when things go bad after a big brawl during a drunken hoopla, the subtle horrors of prison for the both of them. Did I mention train-hopping?

    A film like this, despite having on its side gorgeous cinematography by Vilmos Zsigmond (who, along with Badlands and, in its own way Mean Streets, captures a vision of Americana that is pure and unique to its time and place), needs strong acting. Who better than Hackman and Pacino? They're playing big personalities, with Hackman doing great as always in a somewhat typical part of a guy who's aggressive and pig-headed but does have a hear. And Pacino doing a rare comedic turn as he gives some of his funniest (genuine, not unintentional scene-stealing) moments, like his 'diversion' gone wrong in the clothing store, or his classic "teach me how to handle a drunk" bit at the bar. Sometimes its too much, but it leads to a bittersweet side to the story that turns even more bitter by the time Schatzberg reaches the emotional climax in Detroit. What's been alternately crude and crazy, sometimes in ways that remind one a little of Altman, turns towards what is a small but great tragedy for these characters. And doing the script one better, the actors are able to get subtle, crushing, telling moments in scenes that others wouldn't be able to grasp with a ten-foot pole.

    It's also a fun movie, with a feel that you could only get in one of the truly great years in all movies (look at the year this came out, and realize how many films of its ilk were released, be they independent-like from Scorsese or Altman or Ashby or even Romero, or even Friedkin's Exorcist). Scarecrow is of its time, but it doesn't mean it can't be greatly liked in the present; it's even a near classic of genre subversion, doing a service to drama and comedy by not paying lip-service to either form, but enriching what comes naturally out of life, which is both sometimes, harrowingly, at once. 9.5/10
    buby1987

    Unjustly overlooked classic

    This overlooked film features Gene Hackman's best performance as an introverted ex-con. Al Pacino gives one of his best performances. Director Jerry Schatzberg and cinematographer Vilmos Zsigmond capture both the squalor and the grandeur of the American landscape. Garry Michael White's screenplay is filled with richly nuanced characters, religious symbolism and a deep sense of humanity. One of the best of the 70's.
    7perfectbond

    Great acting

    The highlights of this movie are the expected standout performances by a young Al Pacino and a young, well younger, Gene Hackman. Their range of facial expressions and absoulutely convincing characterizations are a joy to behold. Also since Hollywood usually deals in glamour, it's a nice change to see characters with more modest aspirations. A very good road movie, a genre I usually don't gravitate to, 7/10.
    7secondtake

    A steady process with an amazing Hackman

    Scarecrow (1973)

    A seemingly simple drama about a guy out of prison...but with Gene Hackman as the leading role expect something special. And then Al Pacino plays the sidekick, and an interesting, and little talked about, New Hollywood film is under way. The setting is a kind of revision of the American West, the big dry outdoors no longer the wild West, but still something unique in the visual lexicon.

    The director is also little discussed-Jerry Schatzberg-and this might be his best film, aided by the elegant, searing cinematography of Vlimos Zsigmond (famous for "Days of Heaven"). Seeing how the film unfolds you might agree that it's Zsigmond's film, for it carries forward with a brilliant, quiet choreography. Elemental scenes where actors move through space, or through a diner, are made almost gripping by how the camera tracks them.

    Of course, we eventually have to admit this is a two-man show. Hackman is his usual comfortable best, filled with loud nuance. I mean, he is a strong character, but his actions are loaded with little, natural details. And Pacino plays an unexpected sweetie with a cute smile. It's a compelling pair.

    Things are slow, for sure. It's an easygoing flow with often little really plot. We get into their lives and their heads. This is no "Midnight Cowboy" by any means, but it comes from the same intention, it would seem. Two slightly mismatched outsiders find they need each other, and a bond deeper than mere friendship is formed.

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    Related interests

    Sasha Lane in American Honey (2016)
    Road Trip
    Naomie Harris, Mahershala Ali, Janelle Monáe, André Holland, Herman Caheej McGloun, Edson Jean, Alex R. Hibbert, and Tanisha Cidel in Moonlight (2016)
    Drama

    Storyline

    Edit

    Did you know

    Edit
    • Trivia
      Gene Hackman has stated that his performance in L'épouvantail (1973) is his personal favorite.
    • Quotes

      Lion: Hey Max, you heard the story of the scarecrow?

      Max Millan: No.

      Lion: You think crows are scared of a scarecrow?

      Max Millan: Yeah, I think they're scared. Yeah why?

      Lion: No, crows are not scared, believe me.

      Max Millan: The god damn crows are scared.

      Lion: No, crows are laughin'.

      Max Millan: Nah, that's bullshit...

      Lion: That's right, the crows are laughin'. Look, the farmer puts out a scarecrow, right, with a funny hat on it, got a funny face. The crows fly by, they see that, it strikes 'em funny, makes 'em laugh.

      Max Millan: The god damn crows are laughin'?

      Lion: That's right, they're laughin' their asses off. And then they say, "Well, that ol' farmer Jo down there, he's a pretty good guy. He made us laugh, so he won't bother him any more."

      Max Millan: The god damn crows are laughin'...

      Lion: Ohh, they laughin', woooo!

      Max Millan: I gotta tell ya somethin', that's the most hare-brained idea I've ever heard.

      Lion: It's true, they're laughin' their asses off.

      Max Millan: The crows are laughin'... I guess the fish are reciting poetry...

      Lion: I guess so.

      Max Millan: Uh huh... and the uh, pigs are playin' banjo? And the dogs would be, let's see, uh... playin' hockey. And the uh... the uh...

      Lion: Crows are laughin'.

      Max Millan: Crows are laughin', right. Ya know, in the joint I've heard some tales, oh boy, golly I've heard some tall tales. But at least those guys had the decency to admit that it was bullshit, you know what I mean? They actually took pride, pride in that it was bullshit. But the crows are laughin' huh? I mean you're not playin' with a full deck man, you got one foot in the grave beyond.

    • Connections
      Featured in Une décennie sous influence (2003)
    • Soundtracks
      Love Forever
      (uncredited)

      Written by Marijohn Wilkin and Clarence Selman

      Performed by Bobby Bare

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    Details

    Edit
    • Release date
      • May 26, 1973 (France)
    • Country of origin
      • United States
    • Language
      • English
    • Also known as
      • Espantapájaros
    • Filming locations
      • Belle Isle, Detroit, Michigan, USA(fountain)
    • Production company
      • Warner Bros.
    • See more company credits at IMDbPro

    Box office

    Edit
    • Gross worldwide
      • $295
    See detailed box office info on IMDbPro

    Tech specs

    Edit
    • Runtime
      • 1h 52m(112 min)
    • Sound mix
      • Mono
    • Aspect ratio
      • 2.39 : 1

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