![]() ![]() ![]() We all rushed forward, past the police, into the expanding cloud of smoke, excited, apprehensive, and no less expectant than we had been before the explosion. Coyote, frazzled and splayed by his own petard. For a single, timeless instant he looked like Wile E. ![]() "Hopper, at one with the shock wave, was thrown headlong in a halo of fire. A correspondent from Rice University described it memorably: ![]() This involved blowing himself up as he sat within the vacuum created by an explosion of six sticks of dynamite facing outward in a circle. There he proceeded to perform the "Russian dynamite death chair act" stunt. In the extras included here, bemused director Richard Linklater tells a crazy story about going to an early '80s screening of "Out of the Blue" in Houston, after which Hopper took a small crowd of attendees to a nearby rodeo. He was also a physically abusive drunk, and by this point widely known in Hollywood as a human train wreck, exhibiting a feral, almost Charlie Manson-like intensity throughout the '70s (see "The American Dreamer" doc from '71). If you don’t know much about Hopper, the guy was a talented still photographer with a great eye, had prophetic taste as an art collector, and could be a brilliant actor when focused, having come up with Brando, Newman and close mentor, James Dean. Enter wild-eyed, Hollywood exile, Dennis Hopper, still in the throes of a drug-and-alcohol addiction of bejeezus belt dimensions – and not having directed since his underrated follow-up to "Easy Rider" that went largely undistributed, “The Last Movie”(1971). But when the movie's original writer-director got fired two weeks into the production, that’s when things got strange. The script featured a runaway teen played by spunky child actress, Manz (the memorable narrator who improvised her lines in Terrence Malick’s classic “Days of Heaven”) and starring Raymond Burr as her therapist. The original project started out as an after-school TV special about incest being shot in Vancouver using tax shelter funds. But I can only think of it as a punk cult classic, a coming of age story that serves as tomboy actress Linda Manz’ finest moment, which is plenty enough reason to check out the new restoration. Critics called the movie a spiritual successor to Hopper’s early megahit, “Easy Rider,” showing how hippie utopianism often plunged into addiction and late '70s nihilism. This time I found myself enjoying the improvisational acting and often laughing at the oddball writing and editing choices, which director and star Dennis Hopper later said were influenced by Abstract Expressionism and the video work of his friend, artist Bruce Conner. But after a recent 4K-scan restoration championed by actresses Natasha Lyonne and Chloë Sevigny, the film looks better than it ever has on a new Blu-ray and DVD reissue. My how things change.įor much of its life this gritty flick has been hard to find. I remember being a little depressed by it, while also thinking it was a low budget mess. I remember first seeing the film, "Out of the Blue" (1980), on a grainy VHS tape rented from the Video Fan on Strawberry Street while I was still in high school. ![]()
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