Cannonball
Brief Synopsis
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This is another story of the secret Coast to Coast auto race across America The only rule is, the first to finish is the winner. Naturally, anyone driving 55 isn't going to win. They'll need to drive a little faster than that. Well actually, they will need to drive a LOT faster that 55.
Cast & Crew
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Paul Bartel
Director
David Gottlieb
Gary Austin
Sylvester Stallone
Paul Bartel
Joe Wong
Film Details
Also Known As
Carquake
MPAA Rating
Genre
Action
Comedy
Drama
Release Date
1976
Technical Specs
Duration
1h 33m
Sound
Mono
Color
Color (Metrocolor)
Synopsis
An illegal & lengthy marathon road race where the goal of the race is simply to make it to the finish without being arrested or incinerated.
Director
Paul Bartel
Director
Cast
David Gottlieb
Gary Austin
Sylvester Stallone
Paul Bartel
Joe Wong
Dick Miller
Louisa Moritz
Roger Corman
Glynn Rubin
Stanley Clay
Peter Cornberg
Glenn Johnson
Keith Michl
David Carradine
Wendy Bartel
James Lashly
Patrick Wright
Gerritt Graham
John Alderman
Carl Gottlieb
Michael Finnell
Deirdre Ardell
Read Morgan
Judy Canova
Todd Mccarthy
Aron Kincaid
Mary-robin Redd
Mary Woronov
Jim Conners
Joseph Mcbride
Lea Gould
Robert Carradine
Paul Glickler
James Keach
Allan Arkush
Samuel W Gelfman
Saul Krugman
Archie Hahn
Martin Scorsese
Joe Dante
Diane Lee Hart
Linda Civitello
Belinda Balaski
Bill Mckinney
Jonathan Kaplan
Miller Drake
Veronica Hamel
George Wagner
John Herzfeld
Don Simpson
Gretchen Ardell
David Arkin
Crew
Kathy Agron
Script Supervisor
David Axelrod
Song
David Axelrod
Music
Ed Barger
Camera
Paul Bartel
Song Performer
Paul Bartel
Song
Paul Bartel
Screenplay
T Baxter
Costumer
Cheryl Beasley-blackwell
Costumer
Dick Bernstein
Production Assistant
Lance Billitzer
Transportation
Delaney Bramlett
Song
Delaney Bramlett
Song Performer
Linda Civitello
Production Secretary
Bob Collins
Photography
Peter Cornberg
Associate Producer
Peter Cornberg
Production Manager
Ray Dilger
Other
Paul Dillingham
Camera
Margot Duxler
Assistant Editor
Michael Finnell
Production Assistant
Tak Fujimoto
Director Of Photography
Samuel W Gelfman
Producer
Alan Gibbs
Stunt Coordinator
Alan Gibbs
Unit Director
Betty Goldberg
Script Supervisor
David Gottlieb
Location Manager
Gerritt Graham
Song Performer
Gerritt Graham
Song
Bruce Green
Assistant Editor
John Hale
Other
Michael Hilkene
Sound Editor
Paul E Hipp
Gaffer
Ron Horwitz
Assistant Editor
Ron Johnson
Assistant Camera
Michael William Katz
Gaffer
Michael Levesque
Art Director
Jan R Lloyd
Assistant Director
Domenic Mastrippolito
Camera
Willie Maxham
Grip
Catherine C Mccabe
Assistant Director
Jim Mccann
Sound
Bob Mcvay
Key Grip
Keith Michl
Props
Douglas Olivares
Assistant Camera
Carson Parlon
Production Assistant
Bruce Pearn
Best Boy
Chuck Record
Key Grip
Edwin D Rich
Production Accountant
Rebecca Ross
Production Assistant
Cheri Ruff
Makeup
Chuck Russell
Production Assistant
D G Saarinen
Boom Operator
Nancy Schaefer
Sound
Henning Schellerup
Photography
Richard Peter Schroer
Production Assistant
Michael Shadler
Assistant Art Director
Don Simpson
Screenplay
Gary Strange
Grip
Gary Strange
Driver
Hollis Trainer
Wardrobe
Morton Tubor
Editor
Alex Vandercar
Sound Mixer
Peggy Waggoner
Boom Operator
Gerald B Wolfe
Photography
Harry Woolman
Special Effects
Katherine Wooten
Script Supervisor
Film Details
Also Known As
Carquake
MPAA Rating
Genre
Action
Comedy
Drama
Release Date
1976
Technical Specs
Duration
1h 33m
Sound
Mono
Color
Color (Metrocolor)
Articles
Cannonball! on DVD
The film stars David Carradine as Coy "Cannonball" Buckman. It's a far cry from his role as the Frankenstein character in Death Race 2000 since Cannonball Buckman is the kind of guy who will take a bad rap and spend time in jail just to spare a friend, Zippo (Archie Hahn), a worse fate. But although a man of personal principles, he certainly has no regard for the law and is ready to jump his parole at a chance to win the $100,000 prize that is being offered to the winner of an illegal cross-country road-race stretching from the west coast of Santa Monica to the east coast of Manhattan. Among those competing against Buckman and his flashy Trans-Am are three vixens in a van, a ruthless psycho in a black Dodge Charger, two romantically involved teenagers in a corvette, and a few other lawbreakers who will stop at nothing to win.
Carradine embraces his macho role with gusto, some fancy footwork, lots of bare-chested scenes, and very, very tight pants. Bartel gives himself brief screen time as a money shark, and includes cameos by Martin Scorsese, Sylvester Stallone (uncredited), Roger Corman, Joe Dante, and Bartel's co-writer Don Simpson (1943 - 1996), whose future successes and excesses as the producer of films ranging from Flashdance (1983) to The Rock (1996) are now part of modern Hollywood lore. One senses that Simpson's penchant for the bombastic may have started early and contributed more than a little to a climactic 15-car pile-up near the end of Cannonball! And, speaking of bombastic motorway scenes, one pivotal moment at the end of an unfinished overpass seems to clearly inform a similar stunt in Speed (1994). Discussion of related films wouldn't be complete without mentioning the celebrity-riddled Cannonball Run (1981), which cites Brock Yates' real-life "Cannonball Run" coast-to-coast race in 1971 as its inspiration. While Cannonball Run made a big splash and certainly had a lot more flash and glitz than Bartel's low-budget vision of road rogues, it also lacks the scrappy charm of Cannonball!
Blue Underground's dvd features a crisp and colorful print in a widescreen presentation with various Dolby options. Extras include a behind-the-scenes documentary titled Kicks and Crashes: Interview's with Stars David Carradine & Mary Woronov and the Legendary Roger Corman, a theatrical trailer, TV spots, and gallery of posters and stills. Speaking of posters, viewers who stick it through the ending credits of the film will see a plug for another Carradine vehicle (this particular vehicle being a "destructocyle") called Deathsport (1978).
For more information about Cannonball!, visit Blue Underground. To order Cannonball!, go to TCM Shopping.
by Pablo Kjolseth
Cannonball! on DVD
Actor and director Paul Bartel (1938 - 2000) hated cars, and yet his second feature-length film for Roger Corman's New World Pictures, the four-wheeled ode to futuristic mayhem titled Death Race 2000 (1975), was a financial success destined to be a true cult-classic. Bartel would find his desire to direct a comedy frustrated by Corman's desire to capitalize on the success of Death Race 2000, and the result is Cannonball! (1976.) For some reason, the exclamation mark is dropped from most publicity for the film, but purists who go by on-screen titles will surely give it that extra bit of emphasis as surely as they note that Tobe Hooper's grind-house classic is really The Texas Chain Saw Massacre (with a space between "Chain" and "Saw," as it appears on the screen) instead of The Texas Chainsaw Massacre (with "Chainsaw" being one word, and branded thusly on all publicity materials from posters to video packages). Such attention to detail may seem maddening, but it is the detail-minded viewer who will be most rewarded by watching Cannonball! Especially if they enjoy spotting cameos, for here they fly fast and furious.
The film stars David Carradine as Coy "Cannonball" Buckman. It's a far cry from his role as the Frankenstein character in Death Race 2000 since Cannonball Buckman is the kind of guy who will take a bad rap and spend time in jail just to spare a friend, Zippo (Archie Hahn), a worse fate. But although a man of personal principles, he certainly has no regard for the law and is ready to jump his parole at a chance to win the $100,000 prize that is being offered to the winner of an illegal cross-country road-race stretching from the west coast of Santa Monica to the east coast of Manhattan. Among those competing against Buckman and his flashy Trans-Am are three vixens in a van, a ruthless psycho in a black Dodge Charger, two romantically involved teenagers in a corvette, and a few other lawbreakers who will stop at nothing to win.
Carradine embraces his macho role with gusto, some fancy footwork, lots of bare-chested scenes, and very, very tight pants. Bartel gives himself brief screen time as a money shark, and includes cameos by Martin Scorsese, Sylvester Stallone (uncredited), Roger Corman, Joe Dante, and Bartel's co-writer Don Simpson (1943 - 1996), whose future successes and excesses as the producer of films ranging from Flashdance (1983) to The Rock (1996) are now part of modern Hollywood lore. One senses that Simpson's penchant for the bombastic may have started early and contributed more than a little to a climactic 15-car pile-up near the end of Cannonball! And, speaking of bombastic motorway scenes, one pivotal moment at the end of an unfinished overpass seems to clearly inform a similar stunt in Speed (1994). Discussion of related films wouldn't be complete without mentioning the celebrity-riddled Cannonball Run (1981), which cites Brock Yates' real-life "Cannonball Run" coast-to-coast race in 1971 as its inspiration. While Cannonball Run made a big splash and certainly had a lot more flash and glitz than Bartel's low-budget vision of road rogues, it also lacks the scrappy charm of Cannonball!
Blue Underground's dvd features a crisp and colorful print in a widescreen presentation with various Dolby options. Extras include a behind-the-scenes documentary titled Kicks and Crashes: Interview's with Stars David Carradine & Mary Woronov and the Legendary Roger Corman, a theatrical trailer, TV spots, and gallery of posters and stills. Speaking of posters, viewers who stick it through the ending credits of the film will see a plug for another Carradine vehicle (this particular vehicle being a "destructocyle") called Deathsport (1978).
For more information about Cannonball!, visit Blue Underground. To order Cannonball!, go to
TCM Shopping.
by Pablo Kjolseth
Quotes
Trivia
Miscellaneous Notes
Released in United States Winter January 1, 1976
Released in United States Winter January 1, 1976