When I was a teenager, there were three channels on TV and one of them showed an “ABC Movie of the Week”. It was a made-for-TV production and usually low budget. In spite of this, some of them were quality movies and I remember some of them fondly. Some of the more memorable ones were “Tribes”, “The Night Stalker”, “Duel”, “Brian’s Song”, and “Kung Fu”. And then there were others like “Killdozer!” “Death Race” (also known bizarrely as “State of Division”) is somewhere in the middle. It is typical in that it has a fairly good cast consisting of mainly TV stars. Doug McClure made several of them. “Death Race” was directed by David Lowell Rich (a prolific TV movie director) and it took him only 15 days!
The movie is set in November, 1942 in North Africa in the aftermath of El Alamein. The Germans are on the run. A P-40 pilot named Culpepper (McClure) is forced to land at a British camp to refuel. The Brits rope him into dropping a bomb on a minefield. (The one bomb will set off a chain reaction clearing the mine field!) We now know the movie will be preposterous, but will it be silly? When Culpepper’s wingman (Roy Thinnes) is shot down by a tank, Culpepper lands to pick him up. However, the same tank disables his plane so it can not take off. What ensues is a chase between the plane and the tank. The tank is commanded by Gen. Beimler (Lloyd Bridges). The general is obsessed with revenge for the strafing of his unit. He is also delusional. He is not, however, insane and is a dogged adversary. The tank crew is divided on whether to follow his orders or try to survive.
“Death Race” is nice little time waster, as were most
of the Movies of the Week. On YouTube it
is only 1:12. Don’t watch it as a
documentary. Obviously, nothing that
happens ever occurred in WWII. There is
some suspense to the absurdity. The cat
and mouse works pretty well.
Surprisingly, the plot is not predictable. The acting is not bad from a decent
cast. The cast includes the underrated
Eric Braeden. Bridges is clearly
slumming, but he doesn’t chew the scenery too much. He even tries a half-ass German accent. The P-40 looks authentic, but the German tank
is decidedly unGerman. The interior is
not shameful, albeit pristine. The
desert is deserty. The movie was shot on
location in North Africa, just kidding.
The dialogue is fine and features some nice snark between McClure and
Thinnes. Thinnes’ character (a Yank in the
RAF) is the gung-ho warrior and Culpepper is the save your skin type. They bond, of course. The music is snare drummy, nuf’ said.
What does it say when an obscure 1973 made for TV
movie was better than some big budget feature films? That’s not saying “Death Race” is a good
movie. It is what it is – junk
entertainment. But there is a place for
it. Especially in the early 1970s when a
war movie loving teenager got to see it at home on a Tuesday night. Commercially interrupted, but who knew there
would be an alternative, eventually?
GRADE
= C
Seen it twice (tells you something, doesn't it?) over a couple of years. Both times I liked the character interplay (two headbutting flyers on one side, the regular-guy tank crew / fanatical officer on the other) and the real Desert Airforce P40's. On the downsde, Bridges' General wasn't likely to have that rank - too close to unhinged, where Hitler's generals were usually reasoning professionals - and I was asking, what now? after the final scene, which begs more questions than it answers. Several fine technically-based action scenes, and some excitement for those less initiated.
ReplyDeleteThanks for sharing.
DeleteThe Yanks were nowhere near El Alamein. The P40 aircraft looks correct however the tank is a sherman and the German vehicles are all US with the exception of the kubelwagen. In the first scene with Lloyd Bridges he decides to walk off into the desert rather than trying any of the vehicles in his group which may have been operable. The 50cal machine gun appears to have a Blunderbus style muzzle break fitting. Typical 70s rubbish.
ReplyDeleteWouldn't the Brits have had some Lend-Lease Shermans?
Delete