0 out of 1 people found the following review useful:
Bullets over Fraud Way., 11 August 2009
Author:
dunmore_ego from Los Angeles, California
*** This review may contain spoilers ***
Clint Eastwood takes the bus to work.
THE GAUNTLET is a ludicrous, riotous, guilty pleasure, Eastwood at the
helm as director and star, doing all those outlandish things only Clint
Eastwood can get away with in a Clint Eastwood Movie.
Clint is Ben Shockley (cool name, huh?), a hard-drinking, unreliable
Phoenix cop, who must escort "a nothing witness for a nothing trial,"
Gus Mally (Sondra Locke), from Las Vegas back to Arizona to testify
against - who else? - The Mob.
Shockley discovers Mally is not as small potatoes as his slimy police
commissioner (William Prince, channeling Dick Cheney) made her out to
be, as The Mob are placing bets on Mally as a "no-show." And sending
assassins with lots and lots and lots of bullets to try to stop him.
Shockley thought he was chosen to escort Mally "because I get the job
done." Ironically, the crooked commissioner chose him because he knew
drunken slob Shockley would be an easy target. No one to call, no one
to help, no one to trust, Shockley is on his own; set up by his own
department, with bullets coming at him every which way, Shockley at
last finds incentive to really get the job done.
Sondra Locke looking her most delectable with those big doe eyes and
70's-wench bellbottoms, doing the best acting of her nepo-Clint-istic
career. She never achieved this level of natural-ness in any of her
other roles with Eastwood; just a guess, but maybe she became too
complacent as his main squeeze. After leaving Eastwood, she left
Cinema.
Just another guess, but maybe her ousting was self-imposed after her
directorial debut with RATBOY (1986), where Clint lent her his A-Team
production crew (David Valdes, Joel Cox, Bruce Surtees, Lennie Niehaus,
et al) only to have her pump out a landmark of filmic sewage.
In THE GAUNTLET, the ludicrousness starts when police open fire on a
house that Shockley and Mally are hiding in, and shoot it up so badly
it collapses. Film immediately redeems itself by having Mally change
into something more prostitutable - tight velour bellbottoms laced up
the ass-crack and a shirt-top tied up to expose her midriff.
Plot? What plot? Working with many familiar cast (Bill McKinney, Dan
Vadis, Michael Cavanaugh, and Pat Hingle as a doughy superior officer -
again), Clint stages one chase-and-shoot set-piece after another, each
designed so that only an icon as audacious as Clint Eastwood could
survive them.
The funniest slice of non-pc violence has to be Shockley punching the
biker chick off the train. The act of punching ladies seems to advocate
violence against women, but Clint's avenger characters - of which
Shockley is one, albeit more reluctantly than most - have always
advocated only punching people who deserve to be punched. If they
happen to be female, so be it.
The feature piece of THE GAUNTLET is also its grandest stupidity:
Shockley and Mally driving an armored bus up the main street to the
courthouse, while policemen line both sides of the street, unloading
millions of rounds into the bus. Where do we start the one hundred
questions?...
Have any of these guys heard of crossfire? Why didn't Shockley drive
faster than 10mph? Why didn't the cops shoot out the tires? Even if the
commissioner falsely warned against armed and dangerous perps onboard
the bus, is it really police procedure to open fire on a city bus
without it opening fire first? Is their aim to stop the bus or the
people, because as soon as the bus stops and Shockley and Mally exit,
the cops stop firing. And if their aim was to stop the bus only, why
not a spike strip across the road? Because nothing can stop Clint
Eastwood.
--Review by Poffy The Cucumber (for Poffy's Movie Mania).
| Plot summary | Amazon.com summary | Ratings |
| External reviews | Parents Guide | Plot keywords |
| Main details | Your user reviews | Your vote history |