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Electra Glide in Blue

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Electra Glide in Blue
Image:Electra Glide in Blue 1973.jpg
Original 1973 movie poster
Directed by James William Guercio
Produced by James William Guercio
Rupert Hitzig
Written by Robert Boris &
Rupert Hitzig (story)
Robert Boris (screenplay)
Starring Robert Blake
Billy Green Bush
Mitchell Ryan
Jeannine Riley
Elisha Cook, Jr.
Music by James William Guercio
Cinematography Conrad Hall
Editing by Jim Benson
Gerald R. Greenberg
John F. Link
Distributed by United Artists
Release date(s) August 19, 1973 (USA)
Running time 114 min
Country USA
Language English
Budget Unknown
All Movie Guide profile
IMDb profile

Electra Glide in Blue is a 1973 film starring Robert Blake as a motorcycle cop in Arizona and Billy Green Bush as his partner. The movie was filmed in Monument Valley, and was produced and directed by James William Guercio (who is best known as the producer of Chicago's first eleven albums). The film was loathed by critics when first premiered at the Cannes Film Festival, but garnered a great deal of critical acclaim upon its nationwide release. Overall, it saw only limited commercial success.

Several members of Chicago appear in minor roles, including Peter Cetera, Terry Kath, Lee Loughnane, and Walter Parazaider, as well as David "Hawk" Wolinski from the Guercio-produced band Madura. Chicago also appears on the movie soundtrack.

Contents

[edit] Plot summary

Blake plays a motorcycle cop named John Wintergreen who patrols the rural Arizona highways with his partner, nicknamed "Zipper". Wintergreen is a rookie cop who resents being in traffic enforcement and wants to be transferred to homicide investigation. Wintergreen is laid-back but upright about enforcing the law, while Zipper is alternately lazy (preferring to read comic books in the shade) and hard-assed about busting hippies, even going so far as to plant evidence on a young man whose van they were searching.

At first his supervisors ignore his request for a transfer; however, he is informed of an apparent suicide by Crazy Willie (Elisha Cook, Jr.). Wintergreen believes the case is not a suicide, but is instead a murder; after a confrontation with the local coroner, he meets Detective Harve Poole (Mitchell Ryan), who admires Wintergreen's savvy, and arranges for Wintergreen to be transferred to homicide to help with the case.

Wintergreen's initial joy at being promoted is short-lived, as his relationship with his fellow officers deteriorates. Wintergreen begins increasingly to identify with the hippies whom the other officers are endlessly harassing; in one scene he watches as Harve brutally interrogates the same hippies who had cheerfully lied to Wintergreen about not knowing a suspect by the name of Bob Zemko (Peter Cetera).

Workplace politics also cause him to be quickly demoted back to traffic enforcement; the final straw comes when Harve discovers that Wintergreen has been sleeping with Jolene (Jeannine Riley), Harve's girlfriend and waitress at the local bar. Harve is emasculated by Jolene in front of Wintergreen, his subordinate, when Jolene mocks Harve's sexual prowess (implying that Harve is impotent) and brags that Wintergreen can "go three times in one morning".

Wintergreen eventually realizes that Crazy Willie committed the murder; the victim was an old friend of his who had taken to selling amphetamines and hanging around with a younger crowd. Jealous, Willie murdered his friend and arranged it so it appeared to be a suicide. Wintergreen then informs Harve that he is "full of horseshit", as Harve was convinced Zemko had committed the murder and stolen money from the victim.

Wintergreen then discovers another terrible fact: Zipper's dream was to own his own motorcycle, and had stolen the dead man's drug money (initally blamed on Zemko) to pay for it. Zipper is intoxicated and begins firing his gun at Wintergreen, and actually kills a random passer-by. Horrified, Wintergreen shoots Zipper in self-defense, and Zipper dies in his arms.

Shortly afterwards, Wintergreen loses his own life in an ending reminiscent of that in Easy Rider. On the road again, he encounters the van of the hippie that he and Zipper had interrogated earlier in the film; the hippie is now accompanied in the van by a friend. Wintergreen pulls the van over when he notices that it is without a front bumper, but when he recognizes the driver and remembers the trouble he and Zipper caused him, Wintergreen pardons the hippies and sends them on their way. Almost immediatedly after the van drives off, Wintergreen discovers that he is still holding the driver's license, and rides after them in an attempt to return it. However, the hippies interpret it as an arrest attempt (they are apparently carrying drugs in the van), and before Wintergreen is able to return the driver's license, the accompanying hippie leans out the van's back window and shoots Wintergreen with a shotgun. The hippies make their escape, and Wintergreen dies on the desert road, while his motorcycle lays some meters ahead of him.

[edit] Recent Acclaim

The film has appeared on Turner Classic Movies as part of the "TCM Underground" program hosted by Rob Zombie, who hails the film as a masterpiece.

[edit] See also

[edit] External links

it:Electra Glide (film)
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