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This article may require cleanup to meet Wikipedia's quality standards. Please improve this article if you can. (January 2008) |
| Repo Man | |
|---|---|
Theatrical release poster |
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| Directed by | Alex Cox |
| Produced by | Peter McCarthy Jonathan Wacks |
| Written by | Alex Cox |
| Starring | Emilio Estevez Harry Dean Stanton |
| Music by | The Plugz |
| Cinematography | Robby Müller |
| Editing by | Dennis Dolan |
| Distributed by | Universal Pictures |
| Release date(s) | March 2, 1984 |
| Running time | 92 min. (approx.) |
| Country | |
| Language | English |
| Budget | US$1.5 million |
| Gross revenue | $3,750,080 |
Repo Man is a 1984 cult film directed by Alex Cox. It was produced by Jonathan Wacks and Peter McCarthy, with executive producer Michael Nesmith, and stars Emilio Estevez and Harry Dean Stanton.
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Otto Maddox (Emilio Estevez), an alienated young punk rocker living in mid-1980s Los Angeles, is fired from his menial supermarket stock clerk job. At a party, he finds his girlfriend having sex with his best friend. He soon finds that his pot-smoking, ex-hippie parents have donated his college savings account to a televangelist, supposedly to supply Bibles to El Salvador. Depressed and broke, Otto falls in with Bud (Harry Dean Stanton) a seasoned repossession agent, or "repo man", working for the disingenuously named "Helping Hand Acceptance Corporation", a small-time automobile repossession agency. While repelled by the concept at first, Otto's opinion is rapidly changed when he is paid cash for his first "job."
Otto soon learns that "the life of a repo man is always intense." He enjoys the drug use, real-life car chases, the thrill of hot-wiring cars and good pay. His old punk rock lifestyle seems boring by comparison, and he begins to develop a rapport with his fellow repo men as well. When he returns to a punk club to see a lounge act (played by real-life hardcore band Circle Jerks), he is amazed at how terrible they now seem.
Soon, Bud, Otto and competing repo men all over town are searching for a 1964 Chevrolet Malibu from New Mexico, ludicrously overvalued at $20,000 (about $41,000 in 2007 dollars); this vehicle, unknown to them, contains something mysterious and dangerously powerful in its trunk, also sought by a strange female FBI agent, Agent Rogersz (Susan Barnes) and her staff.
The film draws on the experiences of director Alex Cox, who worked briefly as a repossession agent in Los Angeles, but soon deviates into the surreal with aliens, the CIA, punk rocker thieves and other strange characters and situations, all amid a long string of running gags and almost-impossible coincidences.
Repo Man was voted as the 8th best film set in Los Angeles in the last 25 years by a group of Los Angeles Times writers and editors with two criteria: "The movie had to communicate some inherent truth about the L.A. experience, and only one film per director was allowed on the list".[1] The film was also ranked #3 on Entertainment Weekly magazine's "The Cult 25: The Essential Left-Field Movie Hits Since '83" list.[2]
1985 Academy of Science Fiction, Fantasy & Horror Films (Saturn Awards)
Repo Man was ranked #7 on Entertainment Weekly's "Top 50 Cult Films of All-Time". [3]
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This article may contain original research or unverified claims. Please improve the article by adding references. See the talk page for details. (April 2008) |
| Repo Man (Original Soundtrack) | ||
|---|---|---|
| Soundtrack by Various Artists | ||
| Released | 1984 | |
| Genre | Soundtrack | |
| Length | 37:20 | |
| Label | MCA | |
| Professional reviews | ||
The soundtrack features now-classic punk rock tracks by Black Flag, the Circle Jerks, Suicidal Tendencies, Iggy Pop and others. Producer Mike Nesmith has a small cameo role (a mock TV commercial taken from his video production Elephant Parts).
It was meant to capture an angry spirit and features a collection of punk bands of the time.
Indie-rock label American Laundromat Records has announced plans to release a tribute to the film in 2008 with some of their favorite artists covering the classic punk-rock tracks. At the suggestion of Alex Cox himself, the tribute will include a bonus track "Burning Down The House" by Talking Heads. The song was supposed to appear in a scene of the original film but the scene was cut due to song clearance issues.
A semi-sequel titled Waldo's Hawaiian Holiday, also written by Cox, was released as a graphic novel in March 2008 after funds could not be raised for filming. The novel is published by Gestalt Publishing and is illustrated by Chris Bones and Justin Randall.
On December 3rd, 2008, it was announced that a true sequel was going into development with the working title Repo Chick. The film will be produced by David Lynch. No plot details have yet been released. [4][5]
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