Out (1982 film)

Out (also known as Deadly Drifter) is a 1982 satirical drama film directed by Eli Hollander. The film is based on Ronald Sukenick's 1973 novel Out.[1] It stars Peter Coyote, O-Lan Jones, and Danny Glover. The movie tells the tale of Rex (Coyote) roaming the U.S. doing various assignments for a mysterious group of "urban guerrillas" they call "Our Friends". In each meeting the person or persons designated "It" carries a hidden stick of dynamite. Director Eli Hollander summarizes the film, "A subtitle of it could be 'From Yippie to Yuppie'. And the '80s are certainly the age of yuppies. The film does kind of chronicle the history of the transformation from the '60s into the '80s."

Deadly Drifter
DVD cover
Directed byEli Hollander
Produced byEli Hollander
Written by
Based onOut
by Ronald Sukenick
StarringPeter Coyote
O-Lan Shepard
Jim Haynie
Music byDavid Cope
CinematographyRobert Ball
Edited byEli Hollander
Production
company
Osprey Ltd.
Distributed byTroma Entertainment
Release date
  • 1982 (1982)
Running time
83 minutes
CountryUnited States
LanguageEnglish

Synopsis

The film is about a team, known as "Our Friends", searching for the "Old Man", who is dying. Their trip across the U.S. takes many twists and turns along the way, as is depicted through the eyes of the main character, Rex/Harrold, who ultimately questions society. Whales are part of his ultimate revelation.

Structure

The film is structured in a 10 part journey/road film across America from the East to the West. The characters appear and disappear, morphing into other personalities and often using lines from previous scenes, thus the film, though linear, is a cyclic story. The movie was immortalized by O-Lan Jones's heartrending lines "allow simmer" and "you can't have the schleung".

Cast

References

  1. Sukenick, Ronald (1973). Out (1st ed.). Athens, Ohio: Swallow Press. ISBN 978-0804006316.


This article is issued from Wikipedia. The text is licensed under Creative Commons - Attribution - Sharealike. Additional terms may apply for the media files.