Ad agency employees Warren, Paul, and Terry suggest using Baja California, Mexico, for wealthy industrialist Sam Farragut's campaign. Sam insists on all four of them riding 600 miles on dirt... Read allAd agency employees Warren, Paul, and Terry suggest using Baja California, Mexico, for wealthy industrialist Sam Farragut's campaign. Sam insists on all four of them riding 600 miles on dirt bikes to find the perfect spot.Ad agency employees Warren, Paul, and Terry suggest using Baja California, Mexico, for wealthy industrialist Sam Farragut's campaign. Sam insists on all four of them riding 600 miles on dirt bikes to find the perfect spot.
- Michael
- (as Skip Burton)
- Cantina Local
- (uncredited)
- Helicopter Pilot
- (uncredited)
- Cantina Local
- (uncredited)
- Director
- Writer
- All cast & crew
- Production, box office & more at IMDbPro
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Among the three execs are Warren (William Shatner), Paul (Robert Reed) and Terry (Marjoe Gortner). All three are extremely flawed men and only Terry seems excited about making this trip. Paul is hiding a secret but Warren's is the darkest of all...he knows he's being terminated from his job and is showing hints that he might use this trip as a way to kill himself! What does come of all this?
This is certainly one of the strangest made for TV movies of its era. That's saying a lot since "The ABC Movie of the Week" often featured weird plots--such as women impregnated by aliens, monsters living in the chimney and reincarnated witches! But this strange is because the folks play so against type...especially Griffith! But is this strangeness any good? Well, yes. Despite the plot being extremely difficult to believe and the actors playing so against type, the basic issues going on in the film are compelling-- especially when Griffith's character does some very horrible things. The only BIG bad thing about all this is the ending with Shatner in the surf--not THAT is amazingly stupid! All in all, well worth seeing just because of its novelty.
By the way, if you are curious who Marjoe Gortner is, read him IMDb biography. This guy was VERY prolific on TV in the 70s but his life before this is really, really interesting. He's not particularly good in this film, however. Also, I think it is very likely NOT unintentional that the four men all sport shirts that look almost exactly like "Star Trek" shirts--red, blue and yellow! You really notice their Trekkiness in the cantina scene...complete with the black collars! Apart from missing the Enterprise emblem, they are almost dead ringers!
See! Andy Griffith as the silliest & most unthreatening bad guy since Jaye Davidson in "Stargate"!
See! William Shatner sport a variety of things atop his head that only faintly resemble human hair (or anything organic for that matter).
Hear! jaw droppingly inane 1970s psychobabble that makes "Chicken Soup For The Soul" sound like BF Skinner
Feel! Content that any decade was better than the 70s.
For those still reading...the plot surrounds a bunch of middle class mid level a--holes who decide to suck up to their s---head boss (Griffith) by joining him on a cross dessert race that spans California & Mexico. They all wear leather jackets, looking more Christopher Street than anything else. Along the way they stop at a Cantina, get drunk, smoke joints (the sight Robert "Mike Brady" Reed smoke a joint is an image you won't soon forget), start a fight, attempt rape, and just act like a bunch of suburban middle class jack offs. Although I have an excellent copy that I taped off TV I WISH this one would be released on video so the whole world could enjoy its half baked goofiness.
This movie was so funny and enjoyable because it was incredibly ridiculous with all its funky chemistry of Actors,Characters and the plot all combined to make a movie that me and my friends have been poking fun at for many years now. I often recommend this movie to people just because I want to see the look on thier faces and laugh when they see such a odd mixture of Actors and the Characters that they played in this flick.
Did you know
- TriviaWhen William Shatner was on The Howard Stern Show in the 1990's, his third time on the show, Stern read a rumor (one of many he was teasing him about) that Shatner said was false: that he and Angie Dickinson had an affair while working together. Shatner, for most of the interview, said he never worked with Angie, until the interview's end, where he said, "Oh, wait, we did do something together," but never mentioned the name. Ironically, in this movie, he plays a married man having an affair with Dickinson.
- Quotes
Sam Farragut: I'm a Hippie with money!
Sam Farragut: The old fashioned rules about what's right or wrong, just hang loose, and let it all happen, ain't that right?
- ConnectionsReferenced in Les rapides de la mort (1994)
Details
- Release date
- Country of origin
- Language
- Also known as
- Una oración para los gatos salvajes
- Filming locations
- Production company
- See more company credits at IMDbPro
- Runtime
- 1h 40m(100 min)
- Color
- Aspect ratio
- 1.33 : 1