A young director intent on making "the greatest color crime movie ever" can't seem to finish his script--he has a beginning and an end, but he can't quite figure out the middle. The daughter... Read allA young director intent on making "the greatest color crime movie ever" can't seem to finish his script--he has a beginning and an end, but he can't quite figure out the middle. The daughter of his landlord, excited to have a real "movie person" living nearby, tries to help by pu... Read allA young director intent on making "the greatest color crime movie ever" can't seem to finish his script--he has a beginning and an end, but he can't quite figure out the middle. The daughter of his landlord, excited to have a real "movie person" living nearby, tries to help by putting him in touch with a man who wants to collaborate on a script--the strange "Dr. Jolly... Read all
- Stanley Falco
- (as Mark Hunter)
- Dr. C. Jolly
- (as Neal Lawrie)
- Mrs. Brown
- (as Donna Fillingham)
- Director
- Writer
- All cast & crew
- Production, box office & more at IMDbPro
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Okay, Lynch may not have "ripped" the scene from this movie but when I saw the scene in Mulholland Drive with the cowboy I only took me a fraction of a second to drag out this little scene from Crime Wave which was lost somewhere in my memory banks. I think this is a good thing, because how else could I have reclaimed my interest in Piazs' film, introducing it to you now and maybe even getting you to be interested in it too?
Both scenes have similar settings, a failing light from above, and both involve a meeting with a menacing character in a cowboy hat. When I saw Mulholland Dr. I just KNEW Lynch had to have seen this movie too.
Anyways, you all inspire me: Maddin, Paizs, Lynch, Georges Melies, Miranda July, Godard...
The plot points have already been covered in the other reviews, but there are a few other things I could mention. For instance, I figured that the colour and lighting were an homage to all those National Film Board shorts we watched in high school. I asked Paizs about this, and he confirmed it.
The dialogue is sharp, the satire is pointed, and the acting has an edge.
Some fun moments:
Steven and Dr Jolly's dead-of-night meeting in the cornfield outside Sayles, Kansas;
The masquerade party where Steven shows up shirtless, painted up with green camouflage markings, festooned with dynamite and holding a detonator -- his costume was of a guy who blew himself up in a bank;
Inside the traffic-counting booth, where Steven's friend has three buttons to push: left turn, right turn, and straight ahead. When he sees a car sitting at an intersection, Steven's friend has his finger poised and hovering over the buttons, waiting, waiting, waiting to see which button he should push, beads of perspiration forming on his upper lip. Then the car turns left and with relief he pushes the "left" button. Who knew counting cars was so stressful? Go figure;
Eva Kovacs's line delivery throughout the movie, but especially where she shows Steven a letter and says "Steven, Steven, read this! Don't ask why, don't ask how, just read it!";
Steven explaining the concept of "persistence of vision": Keep looking at the dot through two verses of "When the Saints Go Marching In" on the harmonica;
All the assorted movie beginnings and endings that he can't join together, all satires of various genres, and all of which contain the phrase "But from the NORTH!"
This movie is a cult classic and not to be missed!
After the screening i remarked to Mr. Paizs that the overall tone of pre-Peewee's Playhouse naive child-adult humor was brilliantly counter-pointed by the sleazy "colour crime" sequences, and the occasional acts of gory violence got the biggest laughs due to being totally unexpected. I was rewarded with a lovely silk-screened poster, which i have framed and put up in our guest room.
If this sounds like your cup of tea, be sure to give it a viewing. It really is The Top!
Hopefully a distribution company will come along and make it available to you. Currently, if I'm not mistaken, it's only on VHS, and only in the hands of people, like me, who purchased a second hand copy.
But honestly, if you are a person who likes innovative films, and I'm assuming that you are one of those people, do yourself a favor and find a way to catch this one. I can't imagine it being any better than it is.
Good luck, and enjoy!
Did you know
- TriviaIn one scene, Steven Penny plays Kim a recording of a crash which destroyed a $2000 camera belonging to the National Film Board of Canada. This actually happened to John Paizs while he was filming his short film, Springtime in Greenland (1981), and the audio recording is from that crash. Later, when Kim's parents are looking at photos of the fictional crash, they are also the actual photos taken after police arrived.
- ConnectionsReferences L'ennemi public (1931)
- How long is Crime Wave?Powered by Alexa
Details
- Runtime
- 1h 20m(80 min)
- Color
- Aspect ratio
- 1.33 : 1