Deputy Fisher (Peter Tell, who co-wrote this) must watch over the body of the recently deceased Matya Abelman (Laura Golinski) until her family can claim the body. But his curiosity gets the better of him and when he looks at her body, he concludes an unfinished ritual. Now tormented by literal demons, he must also face the demons of his past.
Director and co-writer Matt Cunningham (The Mangler Reborn, The Spore) weaves a pretty interesting tale here. For some movies, it’d be enough to have that corpse walk around, conveniently after Fisher’s partner Haley (Heslip Winters) leaves. But what if there was something watching from the woods? Or that Fisher’s wife and daughter came back from the grave as well and start bedeviling him? And just who is that voice on the radio?
This was a real surprise to me, a movie that I had no expectations for whatsoever and ended up spellbound by. Definitely check it out — it’s high concept on low budget, which is one cocktail I always love to drink.
3 Demons is now available on DVD, Digital, and On Demand.
A young rhinoceros named Riki has his horn stolen and to get it back, he and Beni the duck must unite with several animals, learn new skills and avoid the poachers who don’t just want to steal the animals, but destroy their homes.
I enjoyed that even though Beni is the kind of duck who would make merch of his best friend and sell it to other animals, he’s still willing to lose all of his feathers to make a new horn for Riki.
Sumatran rhinos aren’t just the smallest of rhinoceroses, they’re the only Asian rhino with two horns and they’re also covered in fur. According to the World Wildlife Foundation, “While surviving in possibly greater numbers than the Javan rhino, Sumatran rhinos are more threatened due to habitat loss and fragmentation. The remaining animals survive in small, fragmented non-viable populations, and with limited possibilities to find each other to breed, its population decline continues. Just two captive females have reproduced in the last 15 years.”
This would be a good film for the young zoologist or conservationist in your family. The animation may not be as great as a Hollywood film, but it had so much heart even I enjoyed it.
Riki the Rhino was originally produced in South East Asia in the Indonesian language. For the UK release, Jennifer Castle and Paul Reynolds voiced Riki and Beni, with the script adapted by BAFTA-nominated Tim Clague and Danny Stack.
Riki the Rhino is available on DVD and digital platforms from Uncork’d Entertainment.
Years after Avengers Grimm, Looking Glass has become the SHIELD of this fairy tale superhero universe, led by Alice (Christina Licciardi), who is kept in check with the help of Hatter (Randall Yarbrough). These two characters come from another The Asylum superhero fairy tale movie, Sinister Squad.
Snow White (Lauren Parkinson), Sleeping Beauty (Marah Fairclough) and Red (Elizabeth Eileen) are part of the team, working to combine the broken Magic Mirror pieces and go back home. Until then, they must battle Magda the Mad (Katherine Maya) and her merman, who are seeking the magic ring of Prince Charming (Michael Marcel), who somehow survived dying in the first movie.
Original director Jeremy M. Inman wrote this and it has Maximilian Elfeld directing. He’s also made War of the Worlds: Annihilation and two apocalyptic movies, End of the World and Apocalypse of Ice.
This isn’t as much fun as the first two films in the series, but I mean, it does have dudes in Spirit Store 300 costumes as warriors from Atlantis, so I enjoyed it.
The Asylum is never going to make a Marvel movie, but they can take several public domain fairy tale characters and make a superhero team movie with them and you know, that takes a certain amount of creativity.
Snow White’s kingdom is under attack by Rumpelstiltskin’s (Caper Van Dien) army, which breaks through the castle walls, stops happily ever after by killing Prince Charming and the battle between them goes through the Magic Mirror and into our world.
To the rescue appear Cinderella, Sleeping Beauty, Rapunzel and Red Riding Hood arrive, on the trail of not just Snow White but also the Wolf (UFC fighter Kimo). In the six months that has passed in our world, Rumpelstiltskin has gained power — and another henchman named Iron John (Lou Ferrigno) — while Snow White leads the resistance.
This was directed and written by Jeremy M. Inman, who also was behind two other similar films that cash in on fairy tales and comics, the direct sequel Avengers Grimm: Time Wars and Sinister Squad, which has storybook villains saving the world.
It’s dumb, low budget and goofy. So you know, consider this a good review.
Also known as SuperBlack and In Your Face, this movie has Dr. Kinkade giving a special formula to his bodyguard John Abar to become a black superhero. It was shot in the Baldwin Hills and Watts neighborhoods of Los Angeles without any permits. When the cops showed up, the actors playing the motorcycle gang surrounded them and the crew kept right on shooting.
Directed by white actor Frank Packard, who acted in a few films and was a gaffer on The Runaways, written by J. Walter Smith (who also plays Dr. Kinkade) and funded and conceived by James Smalley, a pimp from Louisiana who had the connections to film this movie in an actual house of the rising sun. He ran out of money before the film was completed and then sold the film to the owner of a film processing lab to settle his unpaid bills. It played the Southern drive-in circuit and black theaters and then went away until it was released again in 1990.
John Abar (Tobar Mayo) has come to the aid of the doctor and his family after they move to an all white neighborhood and get treated exactly as you’d expect. He leads the Black Front of Unity (BFU) who sadly can’t save the life of Kinkade’s son. He’s given superpowers in the hopes that he can combine Dr. King and Malcolm X along with the invulnerability he needs to not get killed.
He also gets mental powers, the kind that allow him to teach prostitutes how to kung fu their masters — I wonder how Smalley felt about that — and turns a racist’s dinner to earthworms years before The Lost Boys.
To quote Black Horror Movies — and Abar — the powers may have been his all along: “You see, the potion released from my soul an ancient wisdom. My powers are of a divine origin. I’m only a tool, a mirror reflecting man onto himself. By controlling the mind, I can hasten the retributive forces lodged in his unconscious mind.”
He then lets a literal Biblical plague loose on those honkeys.
This movie may appear cheap, because it is. But it also has some really great ideas, it presents a hero that brings intelligence instead of violence and has multiple views of the 70s black experience. It’s also incredibly weird, almost unexpectedly so. I found myself loving every minute of this and I think you will as well.
It’s a total accident that brings Alicia (Crystal-Lee Naomi) into the world of Morgan (Jennifer Freeman), a successful entrepreneur on her way to a retreat where she’s supposed to detox from technology for an entire month. Morgan leaves her keys in the car and Alicia is tempted to live the rich woman’s life for a day. Then a week. And then the trouble starts.
After several days, Morgan’s housekeeper Daya Perez (Suzanne Salhaney) and groundskeeper Charlie (Kareem Lewis) arrive and question who Alicia is. She tells her that she’s the house sitter, which they believe. But after she starts wearing Morgan’s clothes and running up her credit cards, Daya argues with Alicia and ends up going head first into a rock, dying instantly.
After throwing Daya into a river, Alicia takes this whole single black female thing way too far by convincing Morgan’s man Xander (Ali Amin Carter) that he’s been dumped. They hook up, but it’s a small victory as soon, Morgan is back.
Is Alicia ready to go back to basically being homeless? Well, she wouldn’t be in a Tubi movie if she were. She’s the kind of Lifetime — err, Tubi — villainess who may not have the best motivations, but goes extra bonkers and shrugs off corkscrew impalement.
Directly by Courtney Miller (A Stone Cold Christmas) and written by Daniel Whidden, this movie has a cast of people who are all losing it every single moment, as I demand from films such as this. What can we learn from it? Always hold on to your keys, don’t take a rideshare and stay away from cults that hold on to your tech.
The Three Supermen — George (Jorge Martin), Sal (Sal Borgese) and Brad (Frank Braña) — accidentally use Prof. Aristide Panzarotti’s (Luigi Bonos) time machine and find themselves in the American West.
Directed, produced and co-written with Anthony Blod and Martin by Italo Martinenghi (who made the Cüneyt Arkin-starring Three Supermen Against the Godfatherand that movie’s sequels Three Supermen at the Olympic Games and Three Supermen in Santo Domingo; he also produced The Three Fantastic Supermen and 1970’s Supermen), this starts with a time travel to see the dinosaurs and Pompeii erupt which has to be footage taken from other movies.
Working for the FBI, the Supermen have been tasked with taking the time machine for the U.S. government. Of course, they screw up and end up using it to take them through time, finally ending up in the west where they decide to stay after meeting Agata (Ágata Lys, Sexy… amor y fantasía).
The time machine also shows up in Three Supermen Against the Godfather.
The craze of making barbarian movies post-Conan the Barbarian had to feel like going back home for director Tonino Ricci, as he worked on the second unit on Thor and the Amazon Women all the way back in 1963, as well as other peblum movies such as Sword of the Conquerer, Erik the Conqueror and Taur, il re della forza bruta. You may also know him for the films he directed, like Kid il monello del west, Un omicidio perfetto a termine di legge, Rush, Panic and Encounters In the Deep.
Kind of taking a page out of the aforementioned Arnold movie — but not really — this starts with the death of Thor’s parents. Sure, we see Gant The Annihilator (Angelo Ragusa) speaking with the owl wizard Etna (Christopher Holm) as Thor’s mom squats him out behind a tree, but it’s only minutes before the army of Gnut (Raf Falcone) kill everyone but the wizard and the baby as Gant’s sword turns into a snake.
Thor grows up to be Bruno Minniti, who will grow up to be Rage and Rush. He has to find that sword to become the greatest chief of all time and to get there, he must become the most misogynist hero you’ve ever seen, repeatedly sleeping with women while his ghost owl magician adoptive father watches and yells stuff out and man, Italian movies.
One of those women, a virgin warrior named Sheeba (Maria Romano, Violence in a Women’s Prison) ends up becoming his slave and then his wife after saving him and then bears Thor a child, so sometimes getting caveman dragged into lovemaking can be a meet cute, if we believe a 1983 Italian exploitation movie and we never should.
There’s also Ina (Malisa Longo, who is also in Gunan, King of the Barbariansand was Helga, She Wolf of Stilberg), another virgin warrior that our hero who isn’t a hero must battle.
In the final battle, Etna sends Thor an animal to help him and says, “In days to come, they will call this a horse” and I laughed so hard that even thinking about it now makes me laugh even more.
You can’t copyright a thunder god, so while this isn’t a Marvel movie, it is a Thor movie and it puts the son of Odin (Max Aria) against Loki (Mike Milian). If you say, “That sounds a lot like 2015’s God of Thunder,” that’s because they’re the same movie.
Loki is in San Diego taking over people’s minds while Thor loses his memory and must remember why he’s on Earth and also how he showed up in a movie with a $1.5 million dollar budget.
This was directed and written by Thomas Shapiro and there was a review on IMDB that said, “Don’t trust the Shapiro family” that sounds pretty ominous.
There are also a lot of reviews calling this the worst movie ever and really just dunking all over the fake Odinson. Trust me, it’s not the nadir of film, but you can see it from there.
Rick Dalton was born in the midwest and moved to Los Angeles where he found his initial fame on the TV series Bounty Law before moving on to a Universal contract that saw him make four movies for the studio before returning to TV to play the villain of the week on shows like The Green Hornet, Mission Impossible and Lancer. He also made plenty of Italian films, like Jigsaw Jane; Kill Me Quick, Ringo, Said TheGringo; Nebraska Jim; Red Blood, Red Skin and Operazione Dyn-O-Mite! He eventually reinvented his career and became a big star of direct-to-video films like The Fireman series and Coming Home In a Body Bag.
Of course, he’s also a fictional character in Quentin Tarantino’s Once Upon a Time In…Hollywood, but Rick Dalton’s Hollywood career has roles in both real and made for the movie movies.
Tarantino has promised an entire book about Rick’s career — in the world of the movies, Tarantino writes the book after meeting Roger Ebert and Dalton at the 1996 Hawaii International Film Festival — and explains every single acting role of Leonard Dicaprio’s character. This book promises to have synopses, critical quotes and notes on Rick’s film and television career until 1988.
That book may or may not be released. Until then, we have this list.
1956
A Strange Adventure: The role of Harold Norton was played by Ben Cooper in our universe, but in the world of Rick Dalton, he played that part in this William Witney movie. Rick wanted the gangster part that Nick Adams got, but ended up playing the guy who gets bullied. William Witney pulled him aside and told him he was doing a good job but knew this role wasn’t suited to him. He promised to get him a better part that would better show his abilities in the future.
Jubal: Rick played Woody in this Delmer Daves-directed movie opposite Glenn Ford, Ernest Borgnine, Rod Steiger, Jack Elam and Charles Bronson. No such character appears in our world.
Away All Boats: Rick has an uncredited part as Private Pickford in this movie.
These Wilder Years: Rick was an uncredited football player in this Roy Rowland-directed, James Cagney and Barbara Stanwyck-starring movie.
1957
Tales of Wells Fargo (season 1, episode 13: “Jesse James): In the universe of Tarantino, Rick Dalton plays Jesse James instead of Hugh Beaumont; he encounters Jim Hardie (Dale Robertson) when he’s accused of robbing a train.
Whirlybirds: A syndicated series produced by Desilu Studios, Rick appeared in an episode directed by Bud Springsteen (who directed eight episodes of the show between 1957 and 1959; he also directed Double Jeopardy).
Rick also appeared in the shows Tombstone Territoryas The Salt Flat Kid in the episode “Wyatt Earp Tells No Tales,” as Jessie James on the “Death at Northfield” episode of Lux Video Theatreand in the “So Long Miss Mulligan” episode of M Squad. This episode does not exist, but supposes an episode where Bette Davis plays the owner of a candy store that’s been menaced by a gang called the High Rollers, which includes Tom Heron as Sunny, Robert Blake as Buzz, Ross Bagdasarian (who became David Seville, the father of Alvin and the Chipmunks) and Rick as gang member #4. During the shooting, Rick kept moving closer to Davis, who saw what he was doing and stood up for him to the director. Rick would later say, “You know, that’s the glory of having a Hollywood career is having good Hollywood stories to tell and I never get tired of telling that when we Miss Davis, especially to young actors.”
1958
Big Sky Country: Part of being a TV actor is being in pilots that aren’t picked up for a series. Rick played the oldest son on this show that was produced by Dick Powell, David Niven, Charles Boyer and Joel McCrea’s Four Star Productions.
Bachelor Father: Rick played Kelly’s (Noreen Corcoran) boyfriend in the episode “Girls Will Be Girls.”
Man with a Camera: In this Charles Bronson-starring series, Rick appeared in the episode “Second Avenue Assassin” as Joey Savoyen.
Tales of Wells Fargo: Rick was Butch Cassidy in the episode “The Hole in the Wall Gang.”
Darby’s Rangers: Rick was Sgt. Hank Bishop in this movie, directed by William A. Wellman and starring James Garner. In real life, that part was played by Stuart Whitman.
Young and Wild: Rick played Richard Edward “Rick” Braden in this Wiliam Witney movie, a part played by Rick Marlowe in our world.
1959
Bounty Law: Rick starred in this series from 1959-1963 and appeared in 48 episodes as Jake Cahill. Produced by Robert Fuzz and Lee Donowitz (who was part of the drug deal in True Romance and is the son of Donny from Inglorious Basterds), several episodes were directed by Paul Wendkos (The Brotherhood of the Bell, The Mephisto Waltz), who Rick would work for through this career. Tarantino has mentioned that Rick was in some of the director’s 70s TV movies.
Rick’s co-stars were Martin Kove and James Remar; the character first appeared on the show The Restless Gun.
This series is based on Wanted Dead or Alive, which starred Steve McQueen. Dalton’s series ran on NBC at the same time McQueen’s ran on CBS and Ty Hardin’s Bronco was on ABC. Beyond the moment where they meet in the film having such dramatic weight, Tarantino’s book had the working title of Rick Dalton: The Man Who Would Be McQueen.
Guest stars on Bounty Law included James Coburn, Lee Van Cleef, Charles Bronson, Vic Morrow, Robert Blake, Claude Akins, Edward G. Robinson, Louis Hayward, Douglas Fairbanks Jr., Sammy Davis Jr, Ralph Meeker, Aldo Ray, Tom Laughlin, Howard Duff, Darren McGavin and Rory Calhoun.
On the Video Archives episode that pays tribute to Rick, Roger Avery discussed an episode from season four where Ross Martin played Edward Muybridge while Quentin mentioned several episodes, such as one where Darren McGaven played gunfighter Tom Horn — who would one day be played by Rick’s nemesis Steve McQueen — that was directed by Joseph H. Lewis (Gun Crazy). Another episode, “Incident In Parkertown,” was discussed and this two-parter had Sammy Davis Jr., Dorothy Dandridge and Vic Morrow guest starring.
Battle of the Coral Sea: Rick had a small role in this Paul Wendkos-directed movie which starred Cliff Robertson, L.Q. Jones and Tom Laughlin.
Rick picks Wendkos as his favorite director and talks about this movie when he meets with agent Marvin Schwarz in the novelization. “Yeah, I started out with him in my early days,” Rick replies. “I’m in his Cliff Robertson picture, Battle Of The Coral Sea. You can see me and Tommy Laughlin hangin’ out in the back of the submarine the whole picture.”
Riverboat: Rick appeared in a guest role opposite Burt Reynolds and Darren McGavin in a William Witney (who Tarantino called out as a reference in Kill Bill volume 1, joining Charles Bronson, Lucio Fulci, Sergio Leone, Shaw Brothers regulars Cheng Cheh and Lo Lieh, Djangodirector Sergio Corbucci and Lee Van Cleef)-directed episode. Witney directed six episodes during this time period that could be the one that Rick was in.
Drag Race, No Stop: Another William Witney film — this time one not from our reality — that had Rick as the lead and a cast that included Gene Evans, John Ashley and Richard Bakalyan. It was written by Vanishing Pointdirector Richard C. Sarafian.
1961
Commanche Uprising: Another fictional film, it had Rick in a cast that includes Robert Taylor, Joan Evans, Claude Akins, Charles Bronson, Jay C. Flippen, Michael Dante and Tarantino’s acting coach in our reality, James Best. It was directed by Bud Springsteen and written by Samuel A. Peeples, the creator of Lancer. The poster is based on Navajo Joe.
The Chapman Report: In this George Cukor-directed film — an actual movie in our universe — Rick played Ed Kraski, who was portrayed by Ty Hardin in real life. That actor, who left Hollywood to make movies in Italy — like Sergio Corbucci’s Eurospy movie Death on the Run — was an inspiration for the fictional Rick.
1963
Big Game: Another fictional movie, this time directed by Stewart Granger.
1964
Hellfire,Texas: Rick appeared in this fictional adaption of the real book by Nelson and Shirley Wolford, which in our world was made as A Time for Killing. Both worlds have the same cast — Glenn Ford, Inger Stevens — and Phil Karlson directing.
1965
Tanner: Based on the Phil Karlsen film Gunman’s Walk, this was a big movie for Rick, as he even promoted it on an episode of Hullabaloo with The Kinks that had Frankie Avalon and Annette Funicello as hosts. This film was directed — in the movie world — by Jerry Hopper.
1966
Jigsaw Jane: Rick played the killer in this pre-Argento giallo-style thriller that co-starred Suzanne Pleshette, Paul Burke, Jack Cassidy, Lloyd Bochner, Alice Ghostley and Aldo Ray. It was directed by TV movie king David Lowell Rich and written by Jerome Zastoupil, who is actually Tarantino (it’s his middle name and the last name of his stepfather).
The 14 Fists of McClusky: This movie is why Rick had a working flamethrower in his garage, the exact one he used to burn up Susan Atkins. Based on Roger Corman’s 1964 film The Secret Invasion, Phil Karlson’s Hornets’ Nest and Rober Aldrich’s The Dirty Dozen, Rick stepped in to replace Fabian Forte after the singer injured his shoulder. The 14 Fists of McClusky also had Rod Taylor as McClusky (a name Tarantino used as the warden in Natural Born Killers; it’s Burt Reynolds’ last name in Gator; Rod Taylor’s last movie was Inglorious Basterds), Virna Lisi, Sal Mineo, Van Johnson, Tom Laughlin, Kaz Garas and Adam West. Directed by Paul Wendkos, the footage shown in Once Upon a Time In…Hollywood is from Stole Janković’s 1974 movie Hell River.
There’s also a fan poster by Octavio Terol for the Italian release of this film under the title Combaterre All’Inferno (Combat In Hell) that I imagine was re-released in Italy after Rick became a star there.
1967
Rick returned to TV after his movie career didn’t work out and was often a guest star or villain of the week on shows like:
Tarzan: Directed again by William Witney — who had several episodes in season 2 of this show, which would be 1967 — Rick played Brick Bradford in the episode “Jewel of the Jungle.”
Bingo Martin: In the episode “Hell to Pay,” Rick was Rocky Ryan. This is a fictional show that starred the fictional actor Scott Brown.
The Green Hornet: Rick appeared in an episode called “Hornet Hunter” as Thompson Shaw which is a lot like the episode “Invasion from Outer Space.” In that episode, Gary Kent served as the stunt coordinator on the episode. Kent was married to stunt woman Tomi Barrett, so we can see him as Randy Miller (Kurt Russell) who is married to Janet (Zoë Bell). Randy is, of course, the brother of Mike Miller, the killer from Death Proof. This would also be when Cliff Booth fought Bruce Lee.
Salty, The Talking Sea Otter: Rick signed a four-picture deal with Universal and his performance in this movie ended it. He played Jed Martin in this movie which seems based on the Ricou Browning movie Salty, which is about a sea lion.
1968
Rick only made one appearance in this rough year:
Land of the Giants: Rick was Dr. David Hellstrom in “The Capture.” This episode had to have been directed by either Irwin Allen, Sobey Martin, Henry Harris or my pick, Nathan Juran, who directed The Brain from Planet Arous, Attack of the 50 Foot Woman and The Boy Who Cried Werewolf.
1969
The F.B.I.: William A. Graham directed “All the Streets Are Silent,” the eleventh episode of the first season of this show. Rick played the part of Michael Murtaugh. In our world, Burt Reynolds played that role.
Lancer: Rick appeared as villain Caleb DeCoteau in the pilot of this show. This is where he’d meet child actor Trudi Frazer and director Sam Wanamaker (played by TV Spider-Man Nicolas Hammond) and discover that he had a future as an actor. The real Wanamaker would direct Sinbad and the Eye of the Tiger.
After meeting with his agent Marvin Schwarz, Rick would have dinner with Sergio Corbucci and his wife, costume designer Nori Bonicelli. The actor didn’t know much about Italian films — this is not a unique thing, as when Sergio Leone came to America, he struggled to find actors willing to make a movie with him — and he confuses Corbucci with Sergio Leone and doesn’t respect him much, but goes to Italy to make movies anyway.
Sergio replies, “He’s Sergio Fatso, I’m Sergio not so fatso.”
The other actors Sergio considered were Robert Fuller, Gary Lockwood and Ty Hardin. Rick made fun of all of them and got the part.
Kill Me Quick, Ringo, Said The Gringo: Rick plays Ringo, a role that several Americans — Mark Damon, Montgomery Wood and Ken Clark are others — played. The poster artist for so many Italian movies, Renato Casaro, painted the poster that appears in the movie. This movie was directed by Calvin Jackson Padget, who is really Giorgio Ferroni, the director of Mill of the Stone Women.
1970
Nebraska Jim: Tarantino knows his Italian westerns. Savage Gringo AKA Gunman from Nebraska was called Nebraska Jim in Germany. Rick starred in this movie with Daphna Ben-Cobo, who is played by Tarantino’s wife Daniella Pick. Rick told Corbucci that he didn’t have to like Spaghetti Westerns or even acting to be good in them. He wanted to be a cowboy as a kid and that’s what makes him so good.
On the Video Archives show, Quentin said that this was one of his favorite movies and Dalton said that it was his best Italian movie (“by a lot, really” he adds).
Red Blood, Red Skin: Based on the novel The Only Good Indian Is a Dead Indian by Floyd Ray Wilson (whose name inspired the boxer Butch kills inPulp Fiction), this movie was inspired by the Nathan Juran-directed Land Raiders and shares its star — Telly Savalas — but also has Carroll Baker in its cast. It was directed — in the movie universe — by Joaquín Luis Romero Marchent, who made a movie that had to have influenced Tarantino’s The Hateful Eight, the gore-filled Cut-Throats Nine.
After this movie, Rick decided that he had to go home. He didn’t get Italian Westerns and “rejected what he couldn’t comprehend.” He also had a major issue with the way the filmmakers in Italy and Spain treated the horses.
Cannon for Cordoba: This is a real movie, shot in Spain by Paul Wendkos and starring George Peppard. Rick would play the part of Jackson Harkness, which Don Gordon did in our timeline. Pete Duel, an actor who inspired Rick thanks to his alcoholism and an undiagnosed bipolar disorder, is also in this.
Hell Boats: A Wendkos movie that Rick acted in opposite James Franciscus.
Operazione Dyn-O-Mite!: Rick played Jason in this Eurospy movie directed by Antonio Margheriti. The footage in the movie comes from Sergio Corbucci’s Moving Target.
Rick also appeared on the shows Matt Lincolnand Mission: Impossible in 1970 and had some level of new fame after saving the life of Sharon Tate.
Tarantino said, “But the thing is, on the episodic-TV circuit, he’s a bigger name now. He’s not quite Darren McGavin, all right? Darren McGavin would get paid the highest you could get paid as a guest star back in that time. But Rick’s about where John Saxon was, maybe just a little bit higher. So he’s getting good money and doing the best shows. And the episodes are all built around him. So as opposed to doing Land of the Giants and Bingo Martin, now he’s the bad guy on Mission: Impossible, and it’s his episode.”
1971
Rick appeared on the shows Cade’s Countyand Benacaek, a show that starred George Peppard. Perhaps in this universe, Rick was able to tell Peppard to stay on his show and not end it for a movie career.
Cade’s County: Dalton’s guest role on the 70s neo-Western series Cade’s County saw him playing a confused criminal convinced he’s the reincarnation of Billy The Kid…with a bazooka. This episode was later repackaged with another Cade’s County episode as the TV movie The Marshal Of Madrid. Both episodes were directed by Richard Donner.
1972
Night Gallery “The Ring With the Red Velvet Ropes“: Rick appeared as James Figg, a boxer who is stolen away to a mysterious elite hotel, where he’s to fight an old boxing champ that no one has ever beaten named Roderick Blanco (Chuck Conners). A remake — kinda — of ” A Game of Pool” from the original Twilight Zone, this has Joan Van Ark as Blanco’s wife, was directed by Jeannot Szwarc and was written by Robert Malcolm Young (Starflight: The Plane That Couldn’t Land, The Ghost of Flight 401, Locusts and The Crawling Hand). It was taken from a story by Edward D. Hoch.
The Deadly Trackers: Rick was in this movie, directed by Barry Shear, along with Richard Harris, Rod Taylor and Al Lettieri.
1974
Manhunter:This TV movie became the pilot for the Quinn Martin-produced TV series The Manhunter. Yes, Rick was again playing a bounty hunter, this time chasing Stefanie Powers and Gary Lockwood as a pair of Bonnie and Clyde style bank robbers in Depression-era Idaho.
The first episode of the show, which aired opposite Cannon and Get Christie Love, had guest stars Ida Lupino as a Ma Barker-like villain and Don Stroud and Sam Watterson as her sons. Other guest stars included Bo Hopkins as Pretty Boy Floyd, Joan Van Ark, Tom Skerritt, Leslie Nielsen, Robert Foxworth, Celeste Holmes, Shirley Knight, Kevin McCarthy and Woody Strode.
The show got cancelled due to controversy about its violence and was replaced with repeats of Dan August.
Rick went on to star in three seasons of The Truckies, taking the role that Michael Aitkens played in our world.
1975
Baretta: Rick told Quentin Tarantino in their interview at the Hawaiian International Film Festival that his friend Robert Blake got him a great role in an episode of this show and also got him his full rate.
1976
An excerpt from a book The Films of Rick Dalton was read on Video Archives and explained how Rick was finally coming to terms with his career. “Soon Dalton could be seen sitting behind a desk surrounded by Paul Lynn, Wally Cox and Charlie Weaver on the Hollywood Squares, playing guessing games on Password and The $20,000 Pyramid, bowling spares on Celebrity Bowling, horsing around and filling in the blanks with Richard Dawson, Brett Summers and Charles Nelson Reilly on Match Game and acting cute with the other Hollywood couples on Tattletales. Francesca with her ditzy Italian shtick was a big hit. And for the rest of the decade, Rick could be seen on the couch of Mike, Merv and Dinah yucking it up with Henry Winkler, Ben Vereen, Joe Namath, Brent Vaccaro and the rest. The end result of all this horsing around was to a large degree, Rick Dalton was enjoying his Hollywood career in a way he never had up until then. He could still get movies from time to time. But he knew he’d never be a movie star. He’d never do as good as Burt Reynolds or Steve McQueen. Frankly, he’d be happy to do as good as William Shatner or Robert Culp, both actors who were serious draws on TV movies as Burt and Steve were in theatrical films. But with that realization came an inner peace that had eluded Rick his whole career. But not just a feeling of inner peace, but a sense of humor about himself that was completely absent in the first half of his career. And you can see it when he flirts with Diana or teases Merv or just has fun on Match Game and Tattletales. Rick was finally having fun being a TV star.”
DingoDan: This was an Australian TV series that Rick worked on.
1977
Grizzly: Rick played Don Stober instead of Andrew Prine in the timeline of the movies.
1980s
Blastfighter (1984): In the world of Quentin Tarantino, the role of Jake “Tiger” Sharp is not played by Michael Sopkiw but instead by Rick Dalton. In his Hawaii interview with Dalton. Quentin mentions that this is one of his favorite movies, along with Monster Shark — and Rick says that of his eighties movies, it’s one of the better ones.
Jungle Raiders(1985): Rick takes the place of Christopher Connelly in his universe, playing Duke “Captain Yankee” Howard in this movie by Antonio Margheriti.
Operation Nam (1986): The role of Roger Carson may have been played by Christopher Connelly in our world, but in the Tarantino Cinematic Universe, Rick Dalton took the lead in this dark take on what it would be like for men to go back to Vietnam and save their friends there. Well, they all pay for it in a wild movie that defies expectations, as do many of the movies made by Fabrizio De Angelis.
The Fireman: Rick was in a series of direct-to-video movies in which he — according to Screen Rant — plays a cop and Vietnam vet whose discover of police corruption leads to the death of his young partner, played by Samuel Jackson. Jane Kennedy also was in this movie.
Dressing as a firefighter and using the flamethrower that Rick would forever be known for, his character sets criminals on fire in a movie a lot like Exterminator 2.
Rick produced and directed this movie with Cliff doing the action scenes. It led to two sequels and a whole new career of Rick making VHS era ripoffs of bigger action movies and working with Cannon Films.
Tarantino said, “Cliff Booth in 1979 or ’80, wrote a vigilante exploitation movie for Rick … Rick read it and goes, “We can do this better,” so Rick rewrites it and the two of them are going to produce it, they get the money, and it’s a vigilante movie called The Fireman. The lead character was in the Vietnam War — it’s very similar to The Exterminator — he became a cop and then he started seeing this whole group of bad apple cops that are killing guys and are completely corrupt. And they end up killing his partner, played by a very young Samuel L. Jackson. The film becomes a real big hit, and that makes Rick, he gets a third career, going into the ’80s, as a straight to video action star.”
Cliff would direct The Fireman 2, which moved the action to Texas and had Joe Don Baker and Donald Pleasence in the cast. The Fireman 3: CIA Crackdownwould follow a few years later (Fred Williamson, Monte Markam and William Smith also appear in this movie).
Coming Home In a Body Bag: Rick starred in this Anthony Irvin-directed, Anthony Irvin-produced movie that gets discussed in True Romance. It also had Somerset O’Neal in the cast, who played the leader of Fox Force Five, a pilot for a TV show that also had Mia Wallace as the deadliest woman in the world with a knife, Raven McCoy. That show within a movie — Pulp Fiction — is based on The Doll Squad.
One surmises that the fatal ending of True Romance kept the sequel from getting made.
Rick retired in 1988 after his action stardom brought him back one more time to Italy as well as the Philippines. He moves to Hawaii with his wife Francesca Capucci and meets Tarantino at the 1996 Hawaii International Film Festival.
Movies Rick didn’t get:
Rick lost out on the role of Lover Boy in Gidgetto Tom Laughlin and Virgil “The Cooler King” Hilts in The Great Escape to Steve McQueen. He also offered to play Hud Dixon in The Specialists but Sergio Corbucci went with Johnny Hallyday.
Ads Rick was in:
Old Chattanooga Beer: Rick did a commercial for this beer on an episode of Bounty Law. The same beer shows up in Death Proof.
Big Kahuna Burger: Rick said “Pineapple? On my burger?” before the commercial was shot, which ended up being in the ad and in five more commercials over the next two years.
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