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Kansas

  • 1988
  • R
  • 1h 45m
IMDb RATING
5.5/10
1.4K
YOUR RATING
Kansas (1988)
A young man returning home to attend a wedding hooks up with a drifter who turns out to be a violent bank robber. Before he knows it, the man finds himself involved in the robber's plans.
Play trailer1:45
1 Video
17 Photos
CrimeDramaRomanceThriller

A young man returning home to attend a wedding hooks up with a drifter who turns out to be a violent bank robber. Before he knows it, the man finds himself involved in the robber's plans.A young man returning home to attend a wedding hooks up with a drifter who turns out to be a violent bank robber. Before he knows it, the man finds himself involved in the robber's plans.A young man returning home to attend a wedding hooks up with a drifter who turns out to be a violent bank robber. Before he knows it, the man finds himself involved in the robber's plans.

  • Director
    • David Stevens
  • Writer
    • Spencer Eastman
  • Stars
    • Matt Dillon
    • Andrew McCarthy
    • Leslie Hope
  • See production info at IMDbPro
  • IMDb RATING
    5.5/10
    1.4K
    YOUR RATING
    • Director
      • David Stevens
    • Writer
      • Spencer Eastman
    • Stars
      • Matt Dillon
      • Andrew McCarthy
      • Leslie Hope
    • 21User reviews
    • 8Critic reviews
    • 35Metascore
  • See production info at IMDbPro
  • Videos1

    Official Trailer
    Trailer 1:45
    Official Trailer

    Photos17

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    Top cast46

    Edit
    Matt Dillon
    Matt Dillon
    • Doyle Kennedy
    Andrew McCarthy
    Andrew McCarthy
    • Wade Corey
    Leslie Hope
    Leslie Hope
    • Lori Bayles
    Alan Toy
    Alan Toy
    • Nelson Nordquist
    Andy Romano
    Andy Romano
    • Fleener
    Brent Jennings
    Brent Jennings
    • Buckshot
    Brynn Thayer
    Brynn Thayer
    • Connie
    Kyra Sedgwick
    Kyra Sedgwick
    • Prostitute Drifter
    Harry Northup
    Harry Northup
    • Governor
    Clint Allen
    Clint Allen
    • Ted
    Arlen Dean Snyder
    Arlen Dean Snyder
    • George Bayles
    Jim Lovelett
    Jim Lovelett
    • Governor's Driver
    • (as James Lovelett)
    Louis Giambalvo
    Louis Giambalvo
    • Army Sergeant
    Craig Benton
    • Patrolman Casson
    James Lea Raupp
    • Man with Shirt
    John Lansing
    John Lansing
    • Governor's Aide
    Gale Mayron
    • Bank Teller
    T. Max Graham
    • Mr. Kennedy
    • Director
      • David Stevens
    • Writer
      • Spencer Eastman
    • All cast & crew
    • Production, box office & more at IMDbPro

    User reviews21

    5.51.3K
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    10

    Featured reviews

    7dominik96

    7 for the fantastic first half !! but then...

    Two strangers find themselves in a small Kansas town. Matt Dillon, the bad boy, constrains the other guy to a bank robbery, and this and the resulting problems with a police search, hideaway ,sharing the money etc. makes up the story. Don't want to get into details, so you have more of this movie. I was surprised about the low rating and the classification of this movie as thriller. Because it is definitely no thriller!! The beginning and the first half are hilarious!! The whole background of Kansas and a small town is wonderful, and is not only nice to watch, but becomes part of the story. The pace is high and Matt has some great comedian moments in it, really funny!! I could go on and on about the wonderful first half. At this time, the movie is definitely a 7, and with more work effort, it would have become more, but that's hypothetically. The second half is far worse. Matt character can't decide if it is evil or crazy,the whole love story is too much,no surprising elements and the pace becomes far too slow. At the end i gave it a 7, but the second half is a 5. Nonetheless it's worth to watch it, because there are not many movies out there, which can profit so much from a background.
    6bkoganbing

    You meet such interesting people on the railroad

    After watching Kansas I still haven't figured out why Andrew McCarthy just didn't call his friend and tell him my car died in Utah and there ain't no way I can make the wedding, get yourself another best man. Of course there would be no picture if he did that.

    Nevertheless McCarthy decided because he was a romantic he'd like to try bumming rides in freight cars on the railroad maybe because you meet such interesting people. In McCarthy's case he meets an amiable Matt Dillon going home to Kansas and the small town he grew up in.

    Dillon might seem amiable, but he soon enough gets McCarthy involved in a bank robbery and the two are fleeing. McCarthy has the loot and he buries it in a tree. But then on a heroic impulse he jumps in a river to save a drowning girl and the stranger is now a town hero.

    In the meantime Dillon flees far enough and then turns around to get McCarthy and the money.

    The tension in Kansas is whether McCarthy will be discovered as a bank robber just when things are going well for him. He's even taken interest in country girl Leslie Hope. Dillon on his return back shows what a truly sociopathic character he is with several acts of brutality.

    Watching Kansas put me in mind of I Was A Fugitive From A Chain Gang and how Paul Muni got caught up in something he was really not involved in. McCarthy is a bit less innocent than Muni was. Still it was not an enviable situation.

    Kansas is a well constructed film with very good tension buildup and helped by location shooting in the title state. McCarthy and Dillon acquit themselves in roles they are well type cast in.

    I'd see this one when broadcast.
    6Ed-Shullivan

    The film starts off strongly but gradually deteriorates to a predictable outcome

    The two lead actors Andrew McCarthy and Matt Dillon did an admirable job in their roles as two drifters who by happen stance meet while freeloading on a moving train through Kansas. I really enjoyed the opening 10 minutes of the film and the Director's (David Stevens) use of the wheat combines chomping through a Kansas wheat field as the opening credits rolled along. I believed I was in for a pretty good film. Within the first 30 minutes a lot had occurred which I do not want to spoil for the viewers who have not yet watched the film so no spoiler alert is required.

    As the plot progresses and the two lead characters roles emerge Doyle Kennedy (Matt Dillon) as the alpha male and his unsuspecting accomplice Wade Corey (Andrew McCarthy) continue on their mini crime spree it does not take them long to realize that they need to go their separate ways to avoid arrest and they agree to meet up later.

    Doyle being a bit psychotic without a conscience wants to have a few drinks and connect with an old girlfriend. While Wade is looking for a way to continue his route to New York where he is expected as the Best Man at his friends wedding. So Wade stumbles upon a farm that is willing to give him a couple of weeks work in the wheat fields. Wade falls for the bosses daughter and he finds himself in a dilemma with his recent new criminal associate Doyle who wants to get the money they stole and move on out of town. Unfortunately for Doyle his criminal past and his distinguishing features (duh Wade!) leave the local police with an easy target to re-apprehend him.

    The latter half of the film was predictable and a bit hokey. I thought because of the strong performances and cinema appeal of the first half of the film that maybe the production ran out of time and/or money and so a different director may have been used to complete the film. Since the first half of the film was so appealing I felt the latter half was a bit of a let down by the director David Stevens.

    As a result I have rated the film a 6 out of 10. It is worth watching still but don't expect a great ending to a film that started off very strong.
    8BrandtSponseller

    Very good thriller/character study

    Matt Dillon and Andrew McCarthy were two of the biggest actors in teen-oriented films in the 1980s, and rightfully so. Dillon was in The Outsiders (1983) and Rumble Fish (1983), for example, and McCarthy was in St. Elmo's Fire (1985), Pretty in Pink (1986) and Less Than Zero (1987). They turned in good performances in those films. Their teaming for Kansas should have been huge, but maybe it came just a little too late. This was toward the end of the 1980s, after all. A lot of generational change was in the air. Both Dillon and McCarthy made a couple big films after Kansas, and they've both been working ever since, but they've been more under the radar.

    Kansas only earned two and a half million dollars on its U.S. theatrical release. That's a shame, because this is a very good film. It's not perfect, but it doesn't deserve being ignored as it has. I think it was mostly ignored in the late 80s, too. I hadn't even heard of the film until just recently. The critical reception couldn't have been too positive, and director David Stevens hasn't directed since. He's still working, but primarily as a very under the radar writer for television. The only person to go on to bigger and better things has been cinematographer David Eggby, who has been the D.P. on Pitch Black (2000), Scooby Doo (2002) and others. This is because Eggby's work in this film has deservedly received a lot of praise. There are a lot of beautiful widescreen shots of Kansas that do much to both establish and complement/contrast the tone of the dramatic material.

    Kansas tells of a brief, ultimately tumultuous encounter between two young men, Doyle Kennedy (Dillon) and Wade Corey (McCarthy). Corey is out west, about to hop a freight train--he's eventually bound for New York. Kennedy happens to be in the open-door car Corey is trying to hop, so he helps him jump in. Kennedy says that he's headed to Kansas. He pitches Corey on the hospitality of his fellow Kansans and suggests that Corey stay for a few days.

    It doesn't take long until another side--a more typical Matt Dillon side I suppose we could say--begins to emerge. Despite the fact that Kennedy advertised that folks would be feeding them for free wherever they went, he decides to break into to a family's home while the family is at church so they can make themselves breakfast. Corey doesn't flinch, but when Kennedy's criminal behavior escalates, he does. He's "forcibly" dragged into a serious crime. Kennedy and Corey are almost caught. In the chaos, Corey unexpectedly commits an act of heroism. The two lose each other but remain in the same area. Corey just wants to forget about the incident and get on with his life, but he has something that Kennedy wants; meanwhile, the whole state is trying to find the unknown hero, who was roughly caught on film.

    Let's get the slight flaws out of the way first. Most of Stevens' previous directorial experience was in television. Maybe as a result of this, Kansas has a slight made for television feel, where that description is necessarily a bit negative (there are films actually made for television that transcend the made for television feel). What that means is that it has a bit of a potboiler quality, with a slight shallowness of emotional investment in the characters. I'm emphasizing "slight" because there's just a hint of this in Stevens' style--something like when there's a "hint of autumn" in the air when you get a coolish breeze in early October.

    However, not helping this is that Pino Donaggio's score is extremely maudlin with an "After School Special" flavor. It sounds almost like generic production music for the old Easy Listening radio formats. In my eyes, this was the biggest flaw of the film.

    At times, a few plot developments seem flawed, but because of later developments, I think the plot oddities are interesting complexities and twists instead. For example, it might seem curious why scripter Spencer Eastman doesn't just have Corey give Kennedy what he wants and completely divorce himself from events of the recent past--after all, he's trying to start a new life, and that's going pretty successfully. However, Corey's character is more complicated than that. He's not just trying to go on the straight and narrow. That's why he didn't flinch when they first broke into that home to make breakfast. That's why he rides the rails for transportation. The character is more nuanced than he seems.

    Another example--there's a reporter who fuels a lot of the plot. He trusts Kennedy at a later stage when it seems largely unjustified. However, two points emerge that explain this. One, he obviously knows Kennedy fairly well given the way they talk to each other, so he might have more reason to trust him than we're shown, even though Kennedy's a bit of a psycho and a criminal. Two, the reporter doesn't trust Kennedy enough to not hesitate until he receives more information. Eastman's script is actually well constructed, suspenseful, occasionally surprising, and neatly ties up most loose ends.

    Dillon and McCarthy both play characters perfect for their abilities (which is probably why they played these kinds of characters so often). Dillon is great as a subtle psycho. He seems closer to normal and even-keeled for much of the film, but odd little breaks in the façade keep showing through; this is a guy whom we could easily imagine ending up as a serial killer.

    While this is not a film that's likely to change your life, or leave a profound impact that sticks with you for years, not all films have to do that or even aim for it, obviously. This is just a very good thriller/character study admirably set in a relatively unique location. It deserves more recognition.
    6RightOnDaddio

    Sofa Surfing Streams of Cinema on Small Screens In The Summer of 2024

    I'm only giving this six stars because the two leads are true legends, and Brynn Thayer as Connie is so unbelievably gorgeous in her every single scene in this movie, it can't be less than a six.

    But this movie doesn't make sense in a lot of ways.

    This is another one of those Hollywood productions that comes along every now and then, even then, that tries to show us how Americans not on a coast, live, work and think.

    And it usually doesn't work.

    And it certainly doesn't seem authentic or real.

    This is also, yet again, another movie that proves the actors, no matter how great they are, are only as good as the material they are provided with.. Is Andrew McCarthy supposed to be salt of the earth or a scoundrel, or is he the Great Gatsby?

    For most of this movie we can never tell and it's confusing and unconvincing in all directions.

    Matt Dillon can play mean but here it just doesn't seem right.

    The ladies all look way to dry, clean and made up with their hair down to be riding on horseback out in the backwoods somewhere.

    It's funny because it seems the Brat Pack, at least some members of it were all taking grittier-sounding scripts and parts in this era to maybe distance themselves from that image.

    You had Emilio Estevez and Demi Moore in Wisdom (1986).

    You also had Judd Nelson and Ally Sheedy in Blue City (1986).

    And then you have this. Though I don't consider Matt Dillon part of that group.

    The actions of these characters just doesn't seem believable. Then or now.

    Certainly there is much behavior in 80's films that seems creepy or even stalker-ish.

    Then it was portrayed as romantically persistent.

    There are often tiny actions taken here by characters here that is simply unsafe in any era.

    Turning your back on a stranger.

    Being alone with a stranger. Even provocative.

    No.

    Doesn't make sense when you try to dose it in reality and not just an actress with a leading man.

    And the editing leads much to be desired.

    A character is drinking with somebody at a bar. Next scene, he's under a bridge with that person stripped down to the skivvies.

    Wait.

    What?

    What happened?

    What's going on here?

    We're not in Kansas anymore.

    Or are we?

    This was a total waste of Dillon and McCarthy in their prime.

    McCarthy, coincidentally enough, has a documentary coming out soon about the Brat Pack called, Brats (2024).

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    Storyline

    Edit

    Did you know

    Edit
    • Trivia
      This motion picture entitled Kansas (1988) was actually filmed in various locations in the American state of Kansas in the USA including Topeka, Overbrook, Edgerton, Lawrence, St. Marys and Valley Falls.
    • Goofs
      Carnival manager says that after their current five day stay at the fair, they're headed to "AR-kan-saw City" (phonetic spelling) like the state, Arkansas. However, as any Kansan can tell you, it's pronounced "ar-KAN-sas City". Don't know why, but it is.
    • Quotes

      Doyle Kennedy: I didn't do that bank alone. I had help. Wade Corey? The hero all you suckers have been goin' on about? He did that bank. He was my partner. Turns out he's more horseshit than hero. How do you like that for a little con?...

      Nelson Nordquist: Where's the proof, Doyle? You expect me to print that?

      Doyle Kennedy: Well, you go ahead and print what you like. I don't buy that shit. Newspapers and the truth... you make it up the same as the rest of us.

    • Connections
      Featured in Siskel & Ebert & the Movies: Punchline/Heartbreak Hotel/Memories of Me/Bird/Kansas (1988)
    • Soundtracks
      HOME ON THE RANGE
      Music by Daniel E. Kelley (uncredited)

      Performed by The Oskaloosa High School Band

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    FAQ17

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    Details

    Edit
    • Release date
      • August 8, 1990 (France)
    • Country of origin
      • United States
    • Language
      • English
    • Also known as
      • Kansas, dos hombres, dos caminos
    • Filming locations
      • Lawrence, Kansas, USA
    • Production company
      • Trans World Entertainment (TWE)
    • See more company credits at IMDbPro

    Box office

    Edit
    • Gross US & Canada
      • $2,432,536
    • Opening weekend US & Canada
      • $1,274,742
      • Sep 25, 1988
    • Gross worldwide
      • $2,432,536
    See detailed box office info on IMDbPro

    Tech specs

    Edit
    • Runtime
      • 1h 45m(105 min)
    • Color
      • Color
    • Sound mix
      • Dolby SR
    • Aspect ratio
      • 2.35 : 1

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