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The Loveless

  • 1981
  • R
  • 1h 25m
IMDb RATING
6.1/10
3.3K
YOUR RATING
Willem Dafoe in The Loveless (1981)
Trouble ensues when a motorcycle gang stops in a small southern town while heading to the races at Daytona.
Play trailer1:22
1 Video
87 Photos
Coming-of-AgeDrama

Trouble ensues when a motorcycle gang stops in a small southern town while heading to the races at Daytona.Trouble ensues when a motorcycle gang stops in a small southern town while heading to the races at Daytona.Trouble ensues when a motorcycle gang stops in a small southern town while heading to the races at Daytona.

  • Directors
    • Kathryn Bigelow
    • Monty Montgomery
  • Writers
    • Kathryn Bigelow
    • Monty Montgomery
  • Stars
    • Willem Dafoe
    • J. Don Ferguson
    • Robert Gordon
  • See production info at IMDbPro
  • IMDb RATING
    6.1/10
    3.3K
    YOUR RATING
    • Directors
      • Kathryn Bigelow
      • Monty Montgomery
    • Writers
      • Kathryn Bigelow
      • Monty Montgomery
    • Stars
      • Willem Dafoe
      • J. Don Ferguson
      • Robert Gordon
    • 28User reviews
    • 50Critic reviews
    • 44Metascore
  • See production info at IMDbPro
  • Videos1

    Trailer
    Trailer 1:22
    Trailer

    Photos87

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    Top cast40

    Edit
    Willem Dafoe
    Willem Dafoe
    • Vance
    J. Don Ferguson
    J. Don Ferguson
    • Tarver
    Robert Gordon
    Robert Gordon
    • Davis
    Marin Kanter
    Marin Kanter
    • Telena
    Tina L'Hotsky
    Tina L'Hotsky
    • Sportster Debbie
    • (as Tina L'hotsky)
    Lawrence Matarese
    Lawrence Matarese
    • La Ville
    Danny Rosen
    • Ricky
    Phillip Kimbrough
    Phillip Kimbrough
    • Hurley
    Ken Call
    • Buck
    Elizabeth Gans
    • Augusta
    Margaret Jo Lee
    • Evie
    John King
    • John
    Bob Hannah
    Bob Hannah
    • Sid
    Jane Berman
    • Lady in T-Bird
    A.B. Calloway
    • Truck Driver in Diner
    Leslie Kribbs Jr.
    • Wino
    Don Tilly
    • Cook
    Herbie Benton
    • Customer at Diner
    • Directors
      • Kathryn Bigelow
      • Monty Montgomery
    • Writers
      • Kathryn Bigelow
      • Monty Montgomery
    • All cast & crew
    • Production, box office & more at IMDbPro

    User reviews28

    6.13.3K
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    Featured reviews

    Wizard-8

    Missing one (big) thing

    "The Loveless" has apparently built somewhat of a cult since it was first released more than thirty years ago. To a degree, I can sort of understand that. There are some positive things to be found here. Though a low budget movie, the movie looks good, from the convincing period detail to the photography. The acting is also well done; you can really believe these brooding characters. And the atmosphere is appropriate for a movie about hard core bikers.

    Unfortunately, despite positive things like what I've listed, the movie didn't work for me. In fact, I think that most viewers will be dissatisfied as well. There is a big problem, and that problem is that there is virtually no plot. The movie is just one scene after another where little to nothing (usually nothing) of consequence happening. I admit I came close to hitting the eject button on my DVD player several times because I was quite frankly bored. In the end, I can only recommend the movie to hard core fans of anyone in front of or behind the camera.
    Lexo-2

    Not bad for a first attempt

    Kathryn Bigelow's first film as a director. It's a superior biker flick, with the characteristic Bigelow gloss already visible. Don't remember much of the plot, but there are scenes - mostly between Dafoe and the eerily underage-looking Marin Kanter - that have stayed with me ever since I saw it years ago. Violent and sexy and almost too cool for its own good, with a rockabilly soundtrack by Robert Gordon and lots of long tracking shots of glossy cars and bikes. Worth watching, and one of Dafoe's less stunned performances (he really is much better on stage.)
    5caseymoviemania

    Casey's Movie Mania: THE LOVELESS (1982)

    Before director Kathryn Bigelow became widely recognizable with her later effort in 1987's NEAR DARK, 1991's POINT BREAK, 1995's STRANGE DAYS and of course, right down to 2009's Oscar-winning war drama THE HURT LOCKER, she made her first feature debut in a low-budget independent drama called THE LOVELESS when she was still studying in NYC as a film student. THE LOVELESS is a stylized and eccentric genre movie that pays homage to 1950s biker movies (notably Marlon Brando's THE WILD ONE) with art-house sensibility. This movie is also notable as Willem Dafoe's first lead role.

    Set in 1950s, the story centers on Vance (Dafoe), a leather-clad biker who rides into a small Southern town where he supposes to meet up with his fellow motorcycle gang at a cafe somewhere at Highway 17. Their plan is to head over to Daytona Beach for the races, but they forced to postpone for a while when one of their motorcycles breaks down. While waiting the broken motorcycle to get fixed in a nearby garage, Vance and his motorcycle gang hang around at the cafe. Along the process, Vance flirts a bit with a widowed waitress named Augusta (Liz Gans). She also hooks up with Telena (Marin Kanter), the rebellious teenage daughter of a psychotic father, Tarver (J. Don Ferguson).

    THE LOVELESS is also co-directed by Monty Montgomery, who is best known for producing David Lynch's WILD AT HEART (1990). Both he and Bigelow favors a lot in fetishism (mostly close-up on leather outfit, motorcycle, chrome) that it's quite mesmerizing to watch their stylized eroticization of a '50s biker culture. Somewhere in between, you can also see Bigelow's earlier attempt in lurid direction that will later becoming one of her trademarks in her subsequent movies. Despite its low-budget standard, the visual is adequate enough for this kind of genre, while Robert Gordon's (who also appeared as an actor here, playing one of Vance's motorcycle gang member named Davis) rock soundtrack is a standout. As for Willem Dafoe, he made quite an impression playing a stoic lead character.

    But most of the movie is a disappointment. Despite clocking at a brief 82 minutes, the movie can be excruciatingly tough to sit through. The pace is deliberately slow to a crawl, especially in the long-winded first hour. Here, the movie lingers in a circle as we watch the characters sit around and talk about nothing in particular. Other times we see them stare silently into space, waiting for something to happen, and all the mundane tasks that goes on and on. The purposefully-stylized dialogues, which meant to be cool, are mostly borderline into self-parody. Meanwhile, the sudden burst of violence that occurs in the final act, fails to deliver any would-be shocking impact.

    Suffice to say, THE LOVELESS isn't much of a recommended effort, other than those who always curious to see how Bigelow and Dafoe get started during their early careers.

    www.caseymoviemania.blogspot.com
    9t-paulsm

    Never was meant to be the next "Wild One"...

    Now that this beautifully sculpted, wildly atmospheric, true-to-the-era in which it is set movie is on DVD, I've watched and re-watched it many times. This is more of a review of the DVD than of the whole film, and the spoilers are more DVD commentary-related than plot-related, so read on if you wish.

    This is, by far, one of the finest films paying homage to the motorcycle enthusiasts (or outlaws, as it may be), settings, and characters of the 1950's that I've ever seen, and I own many, so any rockabilly guys or gals out there reading this review - this movie is for you! It's moody, sexy, violent, and slick - great eye-candy with an outstanding cast of characters.

    The DVD has one of the better commentaries, featuring conversations with the film's co-writer/co-directors Kathryn Bigelow & Monty Montgomery, as well as the film's star, Willem Dafoe. Dafoe credits the movie's directors for starting his career with this movie, a fact which Monty Montgomery humbly shrugs off. They get into the movies they watched that directly influenced how "The Loveless" was shot, trivia notes, like how Robert Gordon, who was paid to score the flick blew all of the budget on on single calypso tune that is featured for a few minutes of the film. It would also seem that Gordon, who is most noted for being a rockabilly musician (and an excellent one at that!) was inadvertently cast while meeting with the film's directors. Gordon created some on-set tension that flickered mainly between himself and Dafoe, as Gordon felt that he was the only one on set who truly understood the whole biker/greaser world.

    It is interesting to note that the movie was Bigelow's thesis for film school, as well as her directorial debut, and it must've earned her some high marks, as she's gone on to work with people like David Lynch! Montgomery, too, has worked extensively with Lynch, producing "Wild At Heart", working on "Twin Peaks", and acting in "Mulholland Dr."

    For those who expect this to be a biker exploitation flick (like "The Wild One" and all of its followers thereafter), you're in for a surprise. The directors intended for the audience to feel as if that is what they were in for while the initial scenes unfold, but as the story moves forward, we realize that it isn't so much a biker film but more of a kind of a wild-west movie. Monty Montgomery credits Edgar G. Ulmer's short, noir film "Detour" as being the major influence as far as the style, the framing, and the shots of "The Loveless" go. He also credits Kenneth Anger's movie "Scorpio Rising" as the movie that inspired the whole homo-eroticism of the biker world as presented in this, Montgomery's earliest film.

    For those interested in some trivia, here ya be - Originally titled "U.S. 17", which used to be a U.S. superhighway up until the 1960's when the I 95 highway replaced it as the major thruway from Georgia to Florida and up to New York, the entire film is shot on location along this now abandoned stretch of blacktop. Monty Montgomery, the movie's co-director, grew up in and around the Georgia area where the film was shot, and at the time of filming, the stretch of road was like a time capsule, with abandoned motels, diners, and gas stations along the way which had not changed since the 40's and the 50's. This made the reality of the movie much easier to capture, and cut down massively on the cost of what would have meant sound stage creations of all of these types of locations. I wonder if any of these places exist now, as the movie was done at the beginning of the 80's? I can only hope...

    There is no disguising that this film focuses more on atmosphere than on plot, and there is no pretense to suggest that the directors intended anything else. Montgomery even refers to it as "eye-candy", and why not? Sometimes my eyes crave the cavities offered up by such sweet treats as "The Loveless"! There are many a long, lingering shot of beautiful vintage 'cycles being worked on, close ups on tattoos (one of the actors, Larry Matarese, who plays "La Ville", opted for an actual old-school pinup gal tattoo on his forearm before filming began), tension-creating pauses while characters look on sipping coffee in a diner or lean on a 50's Coke machine clad in leather and denim, and all of this works for the piece that this movie was meant to be.

    It is somewhat of homage to "The Wild One", but only in that it deals with motorcycle enthusiast-rebels in the 50's - all other plot comparisons and similarities fall by the wayside.

    Though they wished for a score that was more like Sergio Leone's large, sweeping, and melodramatic western film's scores, and they were held back by budgetary constraints, I felt what they did have to work with offered the film the nostalgic atmosphere perfectly. The score as it stands on the DVD (which, unfortunately is not on CD, record, or tape, darn it!) largely done by John Lurie (of "The Lounge Lizards" fame, and also a regular in many Jim Jarmusch films), along with a minimal amount of tracks supplied by Robert Gordon, can be credited for being the cherry on top of this 50's diner served, tasty milkshake of a flick!

    ~T.Paul www.t-paul.com
    7MOscarbradley

    At least Bigelow's feature debut doesn't outstay its welcome

    "The Loveless" was Kathryn Bigelow's feature film debut, (she co-wrote and co-directed it with Monty Montgomery). It's a very self-conscious homage to both "The Wild One", with Willem Dafoe in the Brando role, (it also marked Dafoe's 'official' debut), and Kenneth Anger's "Scorpio Rising" shot in the garish colors of the kind of fifties' melodramas that Douglas Sirk might have made. It's got a very rough and ready feel to it and the script and the acting leave a lot to be desired but it looks great, (Bigelow was a painter before going into movies), and it has a great soundtrack. Hardly anything happens and it might have worked better as a short but at 82 minutes it never outstays its welcome and is worth catching.

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    Storyline

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    Did you know

    Edit
    • Trivia
      Debut credited role in a movie of Willem Dafoe.
    • Goofs
      After visiting the liquor store, Vance downs a pint of Thunderbird wine and throws the empty bottle out of the car. The sound of the glass breaking on the pavement is heard while the bottle is still in the air.
    • Quotes

      Buck: Y'know? I ain't never seen nothin' like it before in my life. They're animals. Hell, I'd love to trade places with 'em for a day or two.

    • Crazy credits
      The closing credits includes the following information: "Robert Gordon is an RCA recording artist"
    • Connections
      Featured in Ultravox: Hymn (1982)
    • Soundtracks
      Title Theme
      Written by Robert Gordon

      Arranged by Tim Wisner (as Jim Wisner) and Robert Gordon

      Music Coordinator Artie Kaplan (as Art Kaplan)

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    FAQ15

    • How long is The Loveless?Powered by Alexa

    Details

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    • Release date
      • May 25, 1984 (Sweden)
    • Country of origin
      • United States
    • Languages
      • English
      • Russian
    • Also known as
      • Breakdown
    • Filming locations
      • 271 North Coastal Highway, Midway, Georgia, USA(Midway motel on U.S. 17)
    • Production company
      • Pioneer Films
    • See more company credits at IMDbPro

    Box office

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    • Budget
      • $800,000 (estimated)
    See detailed box office info on IMDbPro

    Tech specs

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    • Runtime
      1 hour 25 minutes
    • Color
      • Color
    • Sound mix
      • Mono
    • Aspect ratio
      • 1.85 : 1

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