Fast Walking: James Woods and how to do sleaze

Ever since I posted on the underrated movie Cop a few months ago, I’ve been engaged in my own James Woods film festival.

As I wrote at the time, Cop is a great little neo noir that combines the rogue cop, police procedural and serial killer genres. But it works so well due to the casting of James Woods as the central character of Detective Sergeant Lloyd Hopkins, a sleazy burnt out LAPD homicide dick trying to track down a maniac no one else thinks exists.

Watching and re-watching Wood’s films only confirms his status as the original hard-boiled bad lieutenant. With his whippet thin body and bedroom eyes, his looks are more lounge lizard than movie star perfect. And his permanently up turned lip and slightly bad skin make him look like a man with a bad past.

Starting with The Onion Field (1979), in which he played a disturbed ex-con who panics one night when he and his partner are pulled over by cops and murders one of them, Woods went on to play some of the most repellent yet strangely charismatic sleazes on film.

Videodrome (1983): This early Cronenberg effort hasn’t dated in the slightest and Woods’ is in top form as sleazy soft porn cable TV producer, Max Renn.

Against All Odds (1984): Woods plays Jake Wise, sleazy gangster and nightclub owner who hires ex-football player Jeff Bridges to find his girlfriend in Mexico. If you can put the Phil Collins soundtrack aside for one moment this re-make of the noir classic Out of the Past is not nearly as ham fisted as it first appears. It’s also helped enormously by the presence of Richard Widmark in a supporting role.

Best Seller (1987): Sleazy unbalanced hit man Cleve approaches best selling author and cop Brian Dennehy to write the story of his work as a hired killer for a corrupt politician. Cleve omits the fact that he nearly killed Dennehy in a robbery several years earlier. This is definitely one of the better crime flicks of the eighties.

True Believer (1989): Eddie Dodd, a disillusioned, sleazy former civil liberties lawyer whose clientele now consists of drug dealers and other assorted criminals. With a bit of prodding by a very young Robert Downy Junior, Eddie reluctantly takes the case of a young Korean man in jail for a murder he did not commit. Not the best film to ever burn up the screen, but even Woods manages to salvage something from it.

Diggstown (1992): Fresh out of prison, Woods as ex-con Gabriel Caine wages with the owner of a boxing-mad town (Bruce Dern) that he can find a fighter who can knock out ten local men in 24 hours. Not the greatest boxing film ever made but good for a laugh.

Casino (1995): Sleazy hustler Lester Diamond in white flares and jacket, leaching off Ginger, Robert De Niro’s promiscuous, alcoholic wife. Enough said.

Another Day in Paradise (1998): In the hope of a big score, two older junkies – Woods and Melanie Griffith – team up with a couple of up and comers to commit a series of robberies that end up going disastrously wrong. Directed by Larry Clark (Ken Park and Bully), this thoroughly nasty little heist film has everything, including an unhinged criminal preacher.

I haven’t even mentioned Once Upon a time in America (Woods as sleazy gangster), The Boost (sleazy eighties businessman with a bad coke habit) and Salvador (sleazy journalist).

But the winner of my James Woods’ festival is in the little known Fast Walking (based on The Rap, a novel by US author Ernest Brawley, which I have not read cannot find for sale anywhere), released in 1982. Woods plays Frank ‘Fast Walking’ Minivar, a permanently stoned prison guard, who as a side line pimps girls to the local Chicano farm workers out of a couple of shot gun shacks out the back of his aunt’s grocery store.

The prison is on edge after the murder of a black inmate, a situation worsened by the imminent arrival of William Galliot, a radical black nationalist. The Klan want Galliot dead and there are rumours the prison authorities have put a contract out on him.

Minivar is pressured by Rosco, his Neo Nazi biker cousin, also an inmate, to kill Galliot for $25,000. He is also approached by a group of black nationalists to bust Galliot out for $50,000.

For all Minivar’s faults, racism is not among them. An equal opportunist hustler, he decides the best way out of minimum wage hell is to try and play both sides against each other.

Apart from a young Woods, there is so much that is interesting in this film. It’s well written. Some of the dialogue, for example when Rosco fronts the prison’s head drug dealer with a view to taking him over, is magic.

Fast Walking takes its time establishing the plot and character and is not perturbed examining side plots that at first don’t seem to have any connection to the central theme. Black power, racism, the fading influence of the counter culture, and drug use and and violence in prison, are just some of the issues touched on.

There’s a Lalo Shrifrin soundtrack and a tremendous supporting cast, including J Emmett Walsh (who has himself played some pretty sleazy film characters) as Minivar’s supervisor at the prison and B-movie siren Kay Lenz as a mysterious femme fatale who is connected to his biker cousin.

It is definitely one not to miss next time you do your own James Woods fest.

Share

7 Responses

  1. I love the story of him being at Sundance for the premier of Resevoir Dogs. He went up to QT and said how much he would have loved to have been in the film. QT told him that he really wanted Woods for the film but Woods agent told him he was too big for an indie film. Woods knew nothing of this but was so pissed of that he sacked his agent that day!

  2. What a pity. Woods would have been great in Reservoir Dogs.

  3. Woods even manages to bring sleaze to Disney as the voice of Hades in the animated film Hercules. According to IMDB, Hades is Woods’ favourite character of all time; “he states that he’ll continue playing the character, whenever needed, until the day he dies because he loves the character so very much.” Go figure.
    My favourite Woods role was as Richard Boyle in Salvador, though I agree he was outstanding as Frank ‘Fast Walking’ Minivar.

  4. For me: Cop and Best Seller (with Brian Mannion Dennehy who always does corruption better than most — could have done Welles in Touch of Evil ). Luv em heaps. Gee i thought I was the only person that knew these two films existed! I was turned into a Woods aficionado over night. I need to catch Fast Walking though.I always see him as the eighties man despite the fact he has been on film since 1972 . In the eighties sleaze, as you say, and speediness/self hype came into vogue. Woods captures the dark side of Yuppiedom and got getterness so well and in amy ways epitomizes the decade more than any number of Rockies or any Day of Thunder. He was the new creature for the age — self obsessed and activated. Wired. Untrustworthy. And he celebrates it! He made Arthur Daily look so quaint, archaic and sentimental and took us back via the cynicism of Get Carter.

  5. Pingback: Split Image: James Woods and how to do sleaze redux | Pulp Curry

  6. Pingback: Hunger and other films about doing time | Pulp Curry

Leave a Reply to Andrew Nette Cancel reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *

This site uses Akismet to reduce spam. Learn how your comment data is processed.