Hollywood Man
Hollywood Man is a 1976 American film directed by Jack Starrett.[1] The film was featured in the 1997 Quentin Tarantino Film Festival.
Hollywood Man | |
---|---|
Directed by | Jack Starrett |
Produced by | William Smith |
Written by | Tom Farese Ray Girardin Dominic Gombardella William Smith |
Starring | William Smith Jennifer Billingsley |
Music by | D'Arneill Pershing |
Cinematography | Robert C. Jessup |
Edited by | Arthur Anthony John C. Horger |
Distributed by | Intercontinental Releasing Corporation |
Running time | 93 minutes (Finland, uncut) 87 minutes (Finland, cut) 107 minutes (USA) |
Country | United States |
Language | English, Spanish |
Cast
- William Smith as Rafe Stoker
- Jennifer Billingsley as Buttons
- Ray Girardin as Harvey
- Jude Farese as Rhodes
- Mary Woronov as Julie
- Tom Simcox as The Sheriff
- Don Stroud as Barney
- Carmine Caridi as Anthony
- Angelo Farese as Angelo
- Michael Delano as J.J.
- John Alderman as Jesus
- Wayde Preston as Tex
- David Pritchard as Dennis
- Stefanie Auerbach as Audrey
- Art Hern as The Hollywood Producer
- Byron Mabe as John
- Clay Tanner as Dave
- Shelly Babcock as The Nurse
- Michelle Marley as The Lady in the Hospital
- Eddie Duncan as The Boy in the Hospital
- Stafford Morgan as Bill
- Billy Rose as The Bartender
- Peter Mengrone as Hit Man
- Don Sebastian (actor) as Hit Man
- Beau Gibson as The Hollywood Stuntman
- Bud Davis as The Hollywood Stuntman
- Charles Pitts as Newlywed
- Reggi Lynn as Newlywed
- Don Banashek as Boy in the Van
- Cheryl Dunn as Waitress
- John De Troia as The Stillman
- Gary Littlejohn as Biker
Synopsis
Cash-strapped actor/director Rafe Stoker (Smith) reluctantly agrees to put up almost all of his personal fortune as collateral to shady investors in order to complete production on his action film. In turn, they hire Harvey (Girardin), an unstable biker, to sabotage the production so that they can collect on Stoker's pledge. Harvey and his gang engage in escalating acts of violence against Stoker's film crew and other random people while Stoker desperately attempts to complete his film shoot amidst other production delays. After completing the movie Stoker and his girlfriend are gunned by thugs hired by his backers.
Soundtrack
- Tony Chance - "Hollywood Man" (Music and Lyrics by Arnold Capitanelli)
References
External links
- Hollywood Man on IMDb
- Hollywood Man is available for free download at the Internet Archive