Straight Time

Straight Time

Theatrical release poster
Directed by Ulu Grosbard
Produced by Stanley Beck
Tim Zinnemann
Uncredited:
Dustin Hoffman
Screenplay by Alvin Sargent
Edward Bunker
Jeffrey Boam
Uncredited:
Nancy Dowd
Michael Mann
Based on novel No Beast So Fierce 
by Edward Bunker
Starring Dustin Hoffman
Harry Dean Stanton
Gary Busey
Theresa Russell
M. Emmet Walsh
Kathy Bates
Music by David Shire
Cinematography Owen Roizman
Edited by Sam O'Steen
Randy Roberts
Production
company
First Artists
Distributed by Warner Bros.
Release dates
  • March 18, 1978 (1978-03-18) (U.S.)
Running time
114 minutes
Language English
Box office $9,900,000[1]

Straight Time is a 1978 crime drama film directed by Ulu Grosbard, starring Dustin Hoffman, Theresa Russell, Gary Busey, Harry Dean Stanton, M. Emmet Walsh, and Kathy Bates.

Plot summary

Max Dembo (Dustin Hoffman), lifelong thief, is released from a six-year stint in prison and forced to report to a boorish and condescending parole officer, Earl (M. Emmet Walsh).

One of the conditions of parole is that Max finds a job. At the employment agency, he meets Jenny Mercer (Theresa Russell), who helps him land scale-wage work at a can factory. Jenny accepts his invitation to dinner, where it's clear that she is smitten by this worldly and seemingly gentle ex-con.

Earl pays a surprise visit to Max's room, finding a book of matches that Max's friend Willy (Gary Busey) recently used to cook heroin. Although Max clearly has no track marks or other signs of drug abuse, he is handcuffed and dragged back to jail, out of a job and a home. Jenny visits him and gives him her number to call when he gets out.

After blood tests prove he's clean, Max is picked up by a smug Earl, who feels he actually gave Max a break by not pursuing the fact that someone had been using drugs in his place of residence, which would result in three more years in prison. During their car ride to a halfway house, Earl pushes Max to name the user. Max, realizing he will never get a break, pummels Earl, takes control of his car, and handcuffs him to a highway divider fence with his pants around his ankles.

This stunt now makes straight life impossible. Max returns to a life of crime, robbing a Chinese grocery store and planning bigger heists with some willing old accomplices. After successfully robbing a bank together, Max and his friend Jerry (Harry Dean Stanton) decide to up the ante and clean out a Beverly Hills jewelry store. The job is botched when Max takes too long in trying to steal everything. Willy, acting as getaway driver, panics and takes off, leaving Max and Jerry to flee on foot as police convene on the store.

Jerry is shot and dies, while Max shoots a police officer. Max escapes with the loot, settles the score with Willy by killing him, and escapes L.A. with a loyal Jenny by his side. Outside the city limits, though, Max has second thoughts as to their prospects on the lam. He decides to leave Jenny at a gas station for her own good, telling her he will be caught no matter what as he drives away.

Cast

Production

The screenplay was written by Alvin Sargent, Edward Bunker and Jeffrey Boam, based on Bunker's novel No Beast So Fierce. Dustin Hoffman was the director of the film when shooting began, but ultimately decided to give up that role, resulting in Grosbard being hired.[2][3]

This film introduced both Gary Busey and his seven year old son Jake; Theresa Russell; and Kathy Bates. Busey went on to earn an Academy Award nomination for Best Actor as the lead in The Buddy Holly Story. Russell’s film career includes roles in Impulse and Whore. Bates would win the Academy Award for Best Actress and a Golden Globe, playing deranged nurse Annie Wilkes in the Rob Reiner film Misery, as well as thirteen Emmy awards for her work in television.

Film location

Filmed at Burbank Studio, California. (Ref: Film Credits)

References

  1. "Straight Time". Box Office Mojo.
  2. Foden, Giles (March 2, 2012). "The Tao of Hoffman". The New York Times. Retrieved January 18, 2013.
  3. Knight, Chris (January 18, 2013). "Actor-turned-director Dustin Hoffman on the ‘awesome’ experience of making Quartet". The National Post. Retrieved January 18, 2013.

External links

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