Speedtrap

1978 "Crazy for speed and driving for revenge!"
Speedtrap
5.4| 1h53m| PG| en| More Info
Released: 01 April 1978 Released
Producted By: First Artists
Country: United States of America
Budget: 0
Revenue: 0
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Synopsis

After a wave of unsolved car thefts, an insurance company calls in a private investigator to solve the case. While the chief of police isn't thrilled about having an outsider come and show up his men, one of the officers is a former girlfriend who's more than willing to help him out in any way she can.

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Paul-308 It sure must not have taken any time to come up with Speedtrap,just about all of the movie had been done before.What really amazes me,is why Joe Don Baker agreed to star in this film.Sure it was money,but his part is mainly that of grinning car driver and not much else.The whole of the movie is loosely based on Gone in 60 seconds...cars get stolen,and the cops chase them.Usually until both the police car and the stolen car are nearly destroyed.The tip off to the rip off is the 1971-1973 generation Ford Mustang (base coupe,not Mach1 fastback though)that gets stolen and slams into another car leaving the lot.Exactly what happened in "Gone".A slow motion jump from building to building,a slow motion jump from a culvert pipe into a pond...loosely replicates the slow motion jump of "Eleanor" over a row of crashed/parked cars in "Gone".Even the police dispatcher is one of the female dispatchers in "Gone".The car Novick drives is a 1971-72 Dodge Charger,painted up like Starsky & Hutch's "Tomato" Gran Torino,the Charger is even jacked up with chrome wheels a'la S&H.The cops are made to look like buffoons crashing nearly every Plymouth Satellite LAPD ever decomissioned (this must have been stolen from Dirty Mary,Crazy Larry).The female star (Tyne Daley) is treated a lot like her appearance with Dirty Harry,a novice cop who needs to prove herself. Not that this movie is all bad.Good chase scenes,catchy music,and a laughably smug Joe Don pass the time well.Looking back at the promise Tyne Daley held as an actress,and seeing her in her youth (as opposed to her overweight later years) was always a welcome addition,but her addition to the film sorta spoiled the ending,you just knew she was out to prove herself,and make everybody else look foolish at the same time.
fbm72751 I lived in Phoenix at the time when this was filmed and recognize some things that are now long gone, so watching this movie holds a lot of sentimental nostalgia for me. Some of the scenes were filmed right in the parking lot of the downtown Phoenix police station (built in 1974) The garage where Richard Jaeckel's character works (located at 9th Avenue & Jefferson) was a real auto repair facility called Paul's. Some of the street scenes look like they were filmed in Tucson as well. The antique auto show scenes are right near City Hall. I watch this at least 4 to 5 times a year. Not bad for something I paid $3 for at a truck stop!The race track scenes were filmed at Manzanita Speedway in Phoenix which was an icon for local racers starting in the 1950s. Sadly it closed in 2014 another victim of overzealous redevelopment that has been going on for decades now. I long since moved away from there.
Woodyanders Scruffy, nonconformist loose cannon private eye Pete Novick (burly, bullfrog-faced 70's action movie icon Joe Don Baker at his most breezy and ingratiating) and sassy, spirited rookie police lady Nifty Nolan (played to pert'n'perky perfection by Tyne Daly, who tackled a similar role in "The Enforcer" and eventually found greater fame as a gutsy, feminist-minded detective on "Cagney and Lacey") join forces to capture an evasive, enigmatic hi-tech car thief known as the Road Runner, a crafty, crackerjack driver with a taste for fancy expensive automobiles.This witty, lively, easygoing, fairly tongue-in-cheek and highly entertaining cops'n'crooks crime/action thriller qualifies as frisky, first-rate, free-wheeling straight-up-with-no-chaser 70's drive-in fun at its most unpretentious and to-the-point best. Director Earl Bellamy keeps the characterizations and plot exposition to an absolute minimum, placing a marked emphasis on frequent stirring outbursts of fast'n'furious excitement: blazing shoot-outs, knock-down, drag-out fist fights, and, best of all, more tire-squealing, rubber-burning, gear-grinding, dust and dirt flying car chases than you can shake an oily dipstick at. Dennis Dalzell's slick, animated cinematography also delivers the goods, notably some tasty freeze frames and spiffy use of heart-pounding slow motion. The lowdown funky, heavy on the brassy horns and wicked wah-wah guitars score by Anthony Harris hits a blistering righteous groove that's further enhanced by several seriously groovy songs which sporadically blare away on the soulful soundtrack.The top-drawer supporting cast really hits the spot as well: Robert Loggia in his sole 70's B-picture as a classy, business-like drug kingpin whose Rolls Royce with $1 million worth of smack in the trunk gets stolen by the Roadrunner, the always creepy and unnerving Timothy Carey as Loggia's brutish right-hand man, a total lout who wears loud Hawaiian shirts; Richard Jaeckel as a helpful mechanic, Morgan Woodard as a shady, on the take police captain, Natalie Wood's busty sister Lana as a flaky psychic, and longtime favorite 70's exploitation flick regular Roberta Collins as a ditsy, klutzy student driver who keeps crashing her car. Co-screenwriter Stuart A. Segall also directed the so-awful-it's-weirdly-awesome cheesy gimmick slice'n'dice item "Drive-In Massacre." Producer Howard Pine later gave us the spectacular "Straight Time." Joe Don Baker made his name in the first "Walking Tall" movie; Earl Bellamy directed that film's first sequel! Quickly paced and efficiently done all around, "Speedtrap" never once runs out of gas, keeping the pedal to the metal for 98 brisk, vibrantly right-on minutes of pure 70's grindhouse pleasure.
emm Movies like SPEEDTRAP usually don't get an even brake, er, break anymore. It's a good alternative to GONE IN 60 SECONDS when it comes to automotive action, yet it's not all that exciting this time around. It does have a couple of big explosions and a giant police car pile-up. The scene where Road Runner's car leaps from one tall building to another is so odd to believe. Too much stray footage not relating to the movie makes the story look mumble-jumbled, though. A few scenes were very useless in accompanying the action for which SPEEDTRAP is based upon. What it lacks for a writing flaw, it makes up for some humor. The female student driver who appears twice steals the show, making big mistakes at every turn in a careless, but amusing way. Joe Don Baker, PO'ed at the Road Runner, says the goofiest line I've ever heard: "Beep beep my @$$!". Later on, it becomes a predictable surprise. This one rips off GONE IN 60 SECONDS as with other car crash movies of the 70s, but it's worth a try if like fun-filled, though greatly missed, auto action thrills.