Tom Baker (Blair), William Smith (Tim), Carl Steppling (Sheriff Dan), Frank Leo (Martin), Alan DeWitt (Farragut, the Undertaker), Gary Littlejohn (Piston), Beach Dickerson (Shank), Rita Murray (Naomi), William Bonner (Houston), Mike Angel (Dirty), R.G. Armstrong (Mel Potter), Connie Nelson (Nancy), Les Otis (Tommy), Diane Turley (Patsy), Michael Donovan O'Donnell (Monk), Dan Haggerty (Teddy), Michael Stringer (Seed)
Directed by Richard Compton
The Short Version: Virtually plotless biker shenanigans sees The Angels gang lose one of their members in a town not welcoming of their rowdy presence. Compton's movie fractures things like narrative flow, assuming a quasi-documentary feel in spending more time documenting the biker lifestyle while periodically reminding the audience a story resides somewhere in his script. Compton's ANGELS gets especially chaotic when trying to characterize the gang members and townspeople. Not the best film of its kind, but like a fine wine, these ANGELS age well with repeat viewings. This un-EASY RIDER cycle show is salvaged by several distinguishable attributes that show what Compton was capable of with barely any budget; a highlight of which is its depiction of 70s biker culture versus small town tribalism.
Another bit of business Compton's ANGELS does well will endear itself to fans of vintage small town iconography. It's Americana as you don't see it anymore; the slow, methodical grasp of industrialization having made town fairs, old style gas stations, coke machines, and hanging out at the local diner all but extinct. For all its rough spots, ANGELS DIE HARD pays a good deal of lip service to this outmoded American past time.
However, small town life of Whiskey Flats is illustrated as not all peaches and cream. The Angels come in and there's no welcome wagon awaiting them. Bikers wear this badge of trouble on them, and upon entering this sleepy little town, trouble is what they get. You're not even ten minutes into the flick and there's already a brawl outside the town pool hall. Granted, the Angels don't do a whole lot to endear themselves to the citizenry. The tribalism of the locals is understandable, but eventually, the script turns it into all-out hatred. The half-hearted treatment of this dichotomy is possibly the films biggest failure.
Compton's script plays narrative tug-of-war in juggling two storylines at once; well, one is the actual plot and the other is a visual exploration of life in an outlaw motorcycle club. The former pops in and out, never actually taking hold till the last thirty minutes. Partially inflamed by the raucous behavior of the MC (more about that in a bit), a contingent of Whiskey Flats has seething disdain for them. Mel Potter (played by the always reliable R.G. Armstrong), who consistently refers to the gang as 'biker skum' (he spells it with a k!), gathers his own group of rough-housers to get rid of what he deems a plague on the town. Potter and his crew are like their own local MC, only instead of hogs they ride pick-up trucks. Till the last half, Compton seems to have difficulty in clearly defining exactly who we're supposed to root for.
There's one great scene early on where, during the town fair, the sheriff's daughter, Nancy, is noticeably disinterested in her boyfriend (a plot point that crops up later on). Meanwhile, Seed, the biker who was taken into custody after the big brawl the night they arrived, is on his way out of jail, but his bike won't start. He goes in to make a call and Nancy happens over. She walks around the motorcycle in awe of this steel horse. She smiles. The metaphor is obvious. The bike represents the open road, ie freedom; Whiskey Flats, her hometown, signifies constriction. Nancy wants to experience new things and the motorcycle, much like the gang, is the forbidden fruit. It's one of the best scenes that, unfortunately, is never sufficiently explored in a movie that occasionally runs off the celluloid road.
Aside from the younger members of the community experiencing that touch of rebellious youth through their fascination with the gang, these rough riders also seduce the local undertaker, Farragut, an already eccentric character, into their fold. He becomes a temporary tag-along, quickly becoming entranced with the odd practices of the Angels; the epitome being the bizarre funeral procession that culminates in the bikers pissing on the pine box that holds their dead comrade.
The script succeeds in making us like the Angels at times, but at others, it does little to dispel their violent image. We're supposed to be sympathetic towards them, but this is difficult to do when they enter a local bar, ransack the place and rape a man's wife while slinging mounds of spaghetti all over her. We never see the rape, but we are left to assume once the lady's top comes off, the gang members that are encircling, or on top of her don't stop there. Towards the end, the script confounds the audience further by rendering the Angels as compassionate when they help in saving a little boy who is trapped in a mine cave-in. This moment of heroism is short-lived, though.
Aside from the younger members of the community experiencing that touch of rebellious youth through their fascination with the gang, these rough riders also seduce the local undertaker, Farragut, an already eccentric character, into their fold. He becomes a temporary tag-along, quickly becoming entranced with the odd practices of the Angels; the epitome being the bizarre funeral procession that culminates in the bikers pissing on the pine box that holds their dead comrade.
This review is representative of the Entertainment One DVD. There are no extras. The opening title on this DVD edition is not the one on the original film print.