Cannonball Run (film)

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(Redirected from The Cannonball Run)

Template:Infobox Film Cannonball Run was a campy, screwball comedy movie released in 1981 that starred Burt Reynolds, Dom DeLuise and Farrah Fawcett. Hal Needham was the director and had an uncredited role as an emergency medical technician. The premise is very similar to the earlier Cannonball and The Gumball Rally (both 1976). It also has a sequel, Cannonball Run II

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Plot details

Reynolds and DeLuise play has-been race car driver "J.J. McClure" and his mild-mannered mechanic "Victor Prinzim" (with a superhero alter ego, "Captain Chaos") who run the Cannonball in an ambulance, a heavily modified Dodge Tradesman van which was actually used in the original running of the Cannonball. In an attempt to appear legitimate to law enforcement, Victor hires "Doctor Nikolas Van Helsing," an inebriated physician of questionable skill played by Jack Elam. They kidnap young photographer "Pamela Glover" (Farrah Fawcett) nicknamed "Beauty" to be their "patient." Though Beauty protests her apprehension at first, she eventually comes around to the idea of being a participant in the race. A scene where the ambulance is stopped by law enforcement for speeding to California since the patient was "unable to fly" is based on an actual event.

Based on a true story, See Cannonball Baker Sea-To-Shining-Sea Memorial Trophy Dash, the movie is based on a cross-country rally from Ohio to the pier at Redondo Beach, California organized by automotive journalist Brock Yates.

Cast

Cannonball Run had its share of stars. Among them:

  • George Furth played "Arthur J. Foyt." Despite sharing a name with racing legend A. J. Foyt, Foyt in an anti-automobile fanatic who tries to have the race stopped. Instead, he winds up in a number of hilarious predicaments.
  • Roger Moore played "Seymour Goldfarb, Jr." as a self-parody of his role as James Bond. Goldfarb is a character who thinks he's Roger Moore and who therefore stylizes himself as James Bond. His car is an Aston Martin DB5 like the one in the original Bond films. Molly Picon portrayed his mother, who referred to her son "as if he were some goy movie star named Roger Moore".
  • Jackie Chan played the driver of the Japanese entry, a Subaru that was constantly getting lost despite all the high-tech gadgetry aboard. Michael Hui played the Japanese engineer and navigator.
  • Jamie Farr appeared as "Shiek Abdul ben Falafel," a wealthy Arab determined to win the race even if he has to buy it. Bianca Jagger makes a brief appearance as his sister. Farr's racer is a Rolls-Royce Silver Shadow. This character is the only one to appear in all three films in the Cannonball Run movie continuum.
  • Adrienne Barbeau and Tara Buckman appeared as "Marcie" and "Jill", Spandex-clad "hotties" in a black Lamborghini Countach. That same Lamborghini was used in the opening credits of the movie as it was being pursued (unsuccessfully) by an Arizona Highway Patrol car. Valerie Perrine has an uncredited role as a state trooper who successfully stops the duo later in the film. (Though their character names were not mentioned during the story, they are mentioned in the end credits. Their character names, however, *are* mentioned in the sequel, though the parts were re-cast)
  • Peter Fonda had a cameo role reprising his character in Easy Rider. The appearance of Fonda and his motorcycle gang during a halt in the race caused by a road closure was the perfect excuse to cut Chan loose in a kung-fu fight sequence.
  • Bert Convy played wealthy but bored executive "Bradford Compton" who planned to run the Cannonball by motorcycle with the help of an old friend, "Shakey Finch" (played by Warren Berlinger), once the world's greatest cross-country motorcyclist. The two planned to disguise themselves as newlyweds, presumably to try and make themselves appear legitimate. However, his friend had gained a great deal of weight over the years forcing them to ride a "wheelie" all the way across the continent.

A "cult classic" today and fairly well-received by the public (but savaged by critics), Cannonball Run sparked a sequel, Cannonball Run 2 which reprised most of the original cast. It would also be Dean Martin's final film before his death.

The film continued director Hal Needham's tradition of showing bloopers during the closing credits (a practice he started with the Smokey and the Bandit films). Jackie Chan (who admitted he did Cannonball Run II to fulfill his contract with Warner Brothers) says it was this film that inspired him to do the same at the end of most of his movies.

Trivia

  • In this movie Jackie Chan tried to break into the American market once again, but failed yet again. The mainstream Western market wasn't ready for Hong Kong action movie yet.
  • Although the movie script describes Jackie Chan and Michael Hui as Japanese, they spoke Cantonese during the whole movie. The only time that we hear Japanese language is when the Japanese TV show presenter is interviewing these two characters.
  • The opening sequence showing the famous 20th Century Fox logo was specially animated for the movie. It starts normally, but then an unseen crash takes out one of the spotlights and winds the fanfare music down. A rally racer zooms around the front of the logo and parks inside the "zero." A police cruiser then zooms around, crashing into two more spotlights in the process. The anthropomorphic rally racer peeks out from it hiding place, looks around, then beeps his amusement and laughs in Reynolds' high-pitched "trademark" laugh.
  • The stop-motion animated series Robot Chicken once featured a segment parodying race movies called "3 Fast 3 Furious", in which Reynolds and DeLuise cameoed as the voices for look-alike characters in a nod to their Cannonball Run roles. The episode specifically parodied Cannonball Run director Hal Needham's trademark of running a blooper reel alongside ending credits; in this case, the bloopers were animated clips set to multiple takes of DeLuise flubbing one of his lines.

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