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Cult starlet June Fairchild as a cheerleader/hippie student in Jack Nicholson's DRIVE, HE SAID Year: 1971 |
As
most people know, Jack Nicholson is a rabid basketball fan. He has his
own center seat at the L.A. Lakers games and even before becoming really
famous, according to Roman Polanski in a CHINATOWN interview, he
furiously demanded to watch a televised game in his trailer...
So
it may come as no surprise that Jack's directorial debut, a few years
before that, would center on a college basketball player drawing crowds
during the “turbulent” hippie era.
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William Tepper on the team bus with Bruce Dern in DRIVE, HE SAID |
The games and practices are filmed nicely, combining a
shaky documentary style with creative editing that went into other BBC
productions like EASY RIDER, in which Jack co-starred, and surreal
aspects of HEAD, that he co-wrote.
Bruce Dern’s
hard-nosed Coach Bullion wants to win games, and his star player Hector,
played by William Tepper, best known as Tom Hank’s uptight brother in
BACHELOR PARTY years later, is the perfect fit for the role – but only
in one important aspect: He’s tall and can play the game really well.
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Michael Margotta plays hippie rebel Gabriel in DRIVE, HE SAID |
Hector, remaining in peripheral rhythm with Gabriel,
his rebellious roommate, like the film itself isn't quite sure whether
to center his attention on basketball or the student revolutionaries,
and winds up meandering pointlessly in-between.
As the
bushy-haired radical, Michael Margotta's Gabriel is the token messianic
anti-hero. From heading a non-violent guerrilla raid during an opening
game, to feigning insanity to avoid the Vietnam draft, he eventually
takes personal wrath on Karen Black’s Olive, who, as Hector’s on/off
girlfriend having an affair with an enigmatic character played by future
Jack cinema CHINATOWN and THE LAST DETAIL scriptwriter Robert Towne,
is, compared to her standout performance in FIVE EASY PIECES, ultimately
wasted in a filler role.
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Director Jack Nicholson cameo as an annoyed bearded guy in his DRIVE. HE SAID |
Nicholson juggles noisy basketball games and the
hippie students gathered with Henry Jaglom’s radical campus professor,
while June Fairchild, best known as the Ajax-snorting lady in Cheech and
Chong’s UP IN SMOKE, appears as a cheerleading hippie: that is, a
face-contorting hippie in class and a cheerleader during the games. The
only character besides the leading man to play on both courts.
Also
includes the soon to-be-famous Cindy Williams in a quick cameo, and
future HILL STREET BLUES actor Mike Warren, as one of the players
depending on Hector’s talent, who simply wants the team to go all the
way.
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Cindy Williams cameo as a bored girlfriend in DRIVE, HE SAID |
DRIVE, HE SAID (the title from a poem read by one of the hippies) tries really hard to capture drug
culture angst and, straying from a sport providing the core of the
film’s energy and purpose...
With two leading actors not strong enough
to carry either the athletic or protest storylines, is more of a curio
for anyone interested in what Nicholson was up to before blasting off
into cult, and then mainstream, superstardom: Just think of this as Jack’s “student film,” and for that, it’s not entirely shabby.
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Karen Black in Jack Nicholson's DRIVE, HE SAID |
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June Fairchild in Jack Nicholson's DRIVE, HE SAID |
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June Fairchild in Jack Nicholson's DRIVE, HE SAID |
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Karen Black and William Tepper in Jack Nicholson's DRIVE, HE SAID |
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Robert Towne in Jack Nicholson's DRIVE, HE SAID |
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