Three for the Road

Three for the Road is a 1987 road comedy film directed by Bill L. Norton and starring Charlie Sheen, Alan Ruck, Kerri Green, Sally Kellerman and Blair Tefkin.

Three for the Road
Directed byBill L. Norton
Produced byMort Engelberg
Herb Jaffe
Written byRichard Martini (screenplay/story)
Tim Metcalfe
Miguel Tejada-Flores
StarringCharlie Sheen
Alan Ruck
Kerri Green
Sally Kellerman
Blair Tefkin
Music byBarry Goldberg
CinematographyStephen L. Posey
Edited byChristopher Greenbury
Distributed byNew Century-Vista
Release date
  • April 10, 1987 (1987-04-10)
Running time
88 minutes
CountryUnited States
LanguageEnglish
Box office$1,539,000[1]

Plot

The film centers around Paul Tracy (Sheen), aide to the influential United States Senator Kitteridge (Raymond J. Barry). Paul has political aspirations of his own, and hopes to win the Senator's favor to advance his ambitions. He is asked to transport Robin (Green), the Senator's delinquent daughter, to an institution for girls. He asks his aspiring writer roommate T.S. (Ruck) to come along for the trip. Robin is initially drugged by her father and put nearly unconscious into the back of their car, but as soon as she wakes up she tries everything and anything to escape.

Eventually a romance develops between Robin and Paul, and he begins to take her claims of her father's abuse more seriously. Along the way they pick up Missy Butler (Tefkin), a southern belle who has her eye on T.S. After Robin escapes, almost for good, they manage to find her. Rather than take her unwillingly, they offer to make a detour to locate Robin's estranged mother Blanche (Kellerman), hoping that Robin can live with her. Robin agrees to go with them, but Blanche refuses, clearly out of fear of the repercussions of her powerful ex-husband.

With no other options left, a devastated Robin is taken to the institution, but when Paul sees firsthand the rough treatment of Robin by the institution's workers, he becomes more determined than ever to break her free, and develops a ruse. Blanche also arrives, demanding to see her daughter, but is turned away at the gate. However, Paul uses his initial visit to regain entry, which is granted by security. Paul tells Robin he's come to rescue her, but a now despondent Robin has accepted her fate and doesn't want to make matters worse. Paul takes her to a window, where she sees Blanche looking gloomily towards a window.

Realizing her mother does want her, Robin agrees to allow Paul to help her escape. This is quelched by the unexpected arrival of the Senator, admitting that he questioned Paul's loyalty. Paul rejects the Senator, effectively putting himself out of a job. Blanche drives up to the gate this time with the intent of taking her daughter with her at all costs. When the Senator threatens to have her arrested, she in turn threatens to expose his dastardly deeds (likely with information provided by Paul and Robin), including the rape of a babysitter. The Senator tries to reason with Blanche, but is interrupted by her sucker punch to his jaw.

Thus Robin goes to live with her mother, free to explore the romantic possibilities with Paul.

Reception

The film was a critical and commercial dud, grossing approximately $1,500,000 in the United States. The film effectively ended the mainstream acting careers of Green and Ruck, who had been rising Hollywood stars whose past projects were huge successes (Ruck in Ferris Bueller's Day Off and Green in Lucas and The Goonies.) Ruck would continue acting in smaller roles until cast in the TV show Spin City (opposite Sheen in later seasons); Green, who had played the romantic lead to Sheen in Lucas, did not appear in a mainstream film again.

Writer Richard Martini has asserted that the screenplay was dramatically altered from his original. Instead of being a rebellious troublemaker, the character of Robin was shunned by her conservative Republican Senator father because she was an outspoken liberal activist who stages protests. When she finally finds her birth mother she discovers that she was a drug addict who never wanted a child. Martini paid a visit to the set and met Sheen who said "Forget it – the reason I did this movie was I loved your script, but they've re-written it and it sucks now." Martini was then not invited to a screening and instead saw the film in a 3,000-seat theater with only 8 people in attendance. Martini discusses these experiences on both his own website[2] and in an entry at the IMDb.[3]

The theme song "We Got Our Love" is performed by actress/singer Holly Robinson. A soundtrack was issued (on vinyl only), but due to the failure of the film it too bombed.

Home video

After the film's theatrical run, it was released on video cassette by Vista Home Video and later in 1991 by Avid Home Entertainment in the EP Mode. To this day, the film has never been released on DVD and Lions Gate Home Entertainment has yet to announce plans to release the film onto DVD.

References

  1. "Three for the Road (1987) - Box Office Mojo". Boxofficemojo.com. Retrieved 18 December 2014.
  2. "Rich Martini - The Official Site". Geocities.com. Archived from the original on 27 October 2009. Retrieved 18 December 2014.
  3. "Reviews & Ratings for Three for the Road". IMDb.com. Retrieved 18 December 2014.
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