Lone Wolf McQuade

Lone Wolf McQuade
'Lone Wolf McQuade' movie poster
Directed by Steve Carver
Produced by Yoram Ben-Ami
Steve Carver
Written by H. Kaye Dyal
B.J. Nelson
Starring
Music by Francesco De Masi
Cinematography Jerry G. Callaway
Roger Shearman
Michael Sibley
Edited by Anthony Redman
Production
company
Distributed by Orion Pictures
Release date
April 15, 1983
Running time
108 minutes
Country United States
Language English
Spanish
Budget $5 million[1]
Box office $12,232,628 (United States)[1] or $15 million[2]

Lone Wolf McQuade is a 1983 American action film, starring Chuck Norris, David Carradine, Barbara Carrera, L.Q. Jones, R.G. Armstrong, Leon Isaac Kennedy and Robert Beltran, and directed by Steve Carver. The film score was written by Francesco De Masi and borrows heavily from Ennio Morricone's score for Once Upon a Time in the West. The screenplay features a quiver of characters: the "lone wolf" Ranger Jim McQuade (Norris), the bad guy (Carradine) with the widow of his partner (Carrera) who falls for the hero at first sight, the retired buddy (Jones), the captain trying to rein in the hero (Armstrong), the federal agent (Kennedy) and the new young partner (Beltran) the hero does not want.

Plot

The main character, J.J. McQuade (Norris), is a former Marine and a Texas Ranger who prefers to work alone. He lives in an old, run-down house in the middle of nowhere with a pet wolf.

The film opens with McQuade involved in an intense battle with Mexican bandits and a gang of horse thieves from which he emerges unscathed (saving several Texas State Troopers). Shaking off the dust, McQuade returns to El Paso, Texas to attend the retirement ceremony of his fellow Ranger and close friend Dakota (Jones). After the party, his commander attempts to curb his "lone wolf" attitude by insisting he work with local Texas State Trooper Kayo Ramos (Beltran), a tough but clean-cut and polite Latino.

Although divorced, McQuade is on very good terms with his ex-wife, and loves his teenage daughter Sally. McQuade also seems to like Sally's boyfriend Bobby, who is enlisted in the US Army and is respectful of McQuade being a retired Marine.

While out horseback riding with his daughter, his daughter's horse runs wild and she is saved by Lola Richardson (Carrera). She invites them to a party where Rawley Wilkes (Carradine) displays his prowess in martial arts and some of his thugs get into a fight with Ramos. After settling the fight, Richardson and McQuade leave the party and apparently have a romantic encounter. She shows up at his house and cleans it. Despite McQuade's annoyance that he does not need a woman to take care of him, Richardson seems to start breaking through his rough exterior within the couple of days they are together.

Meanwhile, Sally and Bobby witness the hijacking of a U.S. Army convoy. Bobby is shot and killed by the hijackers, who then cause Sally to be hospitalized when they shove her car into a ravine. McQuade more readily works with Kayo to find out who did this to his daughter and her boyfriend. Kayo's computer skills allow him to track the errant convoy. At an illegal garment factory, they pick up a young delinquent named Snow (William Sanderson), who is reluctant to talk until Dakota points a Mac-10 in his general direction and empties the magazine.

In retaliation for disrupting his operations, Wilkes asphyxiates Dakota in his house and also has Snow killed. Dakota's murder attracts the attention of FBI Special Agent Jackson (Kennedy) who works with Ramos and McQuade. The trail leads them to Wilkes, revealed as an arms merchant who is hijacking U.S. arms shipments for his illicit weapons deals.

The three eventually find the arms trading headquarters in the desert. Agents Burnside and Núñez are killed when they attack the headquarters. McQuade and Ramos had tried to stop them, but ended up in the gunfight as well. McQuade is caught and sadistically beaten by Wilkes, who then orders that McQuade be placed in his truck and buried under a truckload of dirt, ignoring Richardson's pleas for mercy for the three men. After regaining consciousness in his truck, McQuade produces a beer and pours it over his face. Then, using his homemade supercharger system, McQuade charges his truck through the dirt - miraculously breaking himself free - and then rescues Ramos and Jackson. All three men are weakened due to being shot and beaten.

McQuade finds that Sally has been taken by Wilkes to Mexico. A rival arms dealer known as Falcon, who has been disguising his illegal business as a pinball machine dealer supplies McQuade with this intelligence, claiming Wilkes has double-crossed him and he would like his competition eliminated. Falcon gives McQuade the exact location in Mexico where Wilkes and his daughter are.

Though McQuade is intent and tries to head to the location on his own, both Ramos and Jackson have followed him and the three head into the base for the attack. After an intense battle, with Jackson being shot again, and Sally and Richardson escaping, Sally is shot in the leg and both women are sidelined.

Finally McQuade and Wilkes engage a hand-to-hand fight with the fight leaning in Wilkes' favor, until he strikes Sally (who ran to her father's aid), provoking McQuade into a frenzy of hits and kicks that defeats Wilkes. McQuade is reunited with his daughter, only to be fired upon by an injured Wilkes. Richardson steps into the line of fire to save McQuade and is fatally wounded. Her dying words to McQuade are that Wilkes killed her husband, forced her to be his arm candy, and that she loved McQuade.

Meanwhile, Wilkes and his remaining thug run into a building. Jackson provides McQuade with a grenade, and McQuade throws it into the building, killing Wilkes and the other man. Falcon then arrives in his helicopter. McQuade, Sally, Ramos and Jackson take it, leaving Falcon to deal with the Mexican "federales".

McQuade's ex-wife and daughter are at a ceremony where McQuade's commander presents him (as well as Ramos and Jackson) with the Texas Award of Valor, and McQuade congratulates his ex-wife for getting an excellent job in New Mexico. The following day, McQuade has rented a U-Haul and is helping Sally and his ex-wife move. As they are getting ready to leave, Ramos shows up telling McQuade he is needed as a gunman has held up a bank. Figuring he has had enough adventure and wanting to spend more time with his family, McQuade politely declines. However, when Ramos also warns that the robber has taken hostages, McQuade is spurred into action. As the squad car speeds off, his ex-wife bellows "J.J. McQuade, you will never change!"

Cast

Production

Development

Director Steve Carver had previously worked with Chuck Norris on the film Eye for an Eye.[4]

Kaye Dyal wrote the script with BJ Nelson. It was originally called Lone Wolf Gonzaullas and was about a real Texas Ranger who usually worked alone, Manuel T. Gonzaullas. Dyal was friends with Carver and showed him the script. Carver thought Chuck Norris would be ideal to play the lead so he approached him to do the film.[4]

Carver wanted to "mess up" Chuck Norris' image, having him grow a beard and drink beer on screen. Norris was reluctant as he wanted to be a good role model for children.[5]

Carver thought the screenplay had a novel idea but it "was a very by the numbers script, it had a lot of problems, not just story wise but technically."[4] He was friends and "shooting buddies" with John Milius and asked him to contribute some ideas, including advice on the guns the character used. In particular, Orion (who were financing the film) were unhappy with the opening sequence so Carver asked Milius to rewrite it. Milius did this, as well as providing input on guns in the script. Carver says Milius "was great to work with" but "didn't want credit".[4]

Carver was a fan of director Sergio Leone and had met him. He decided to make the film in the style of Leone.[4]

Carver says the film was turned down by every studio, including Orion. He says Orion only agreed to finance the film because another project fell over.[5]

Shooting

Chuck Norris and David Carradine refused to use stunt doubles for their climactic fight scene, despite strong reservations from the producers.

"The thing about the fight with Dave is that not only is it very well done, but it and the other martial-arts scenes are not just fillers," said Norris. "You've got to have more than technique if you're going to capture the emotions of the audience."[6]

Release

The film was originally rated "R" but Chuck Norris appealed the decision to the MPAA and succeeded in getting the film rated PG.[7]

"This is the second time I've appealed," said Norris. "They gave Good Guys Wear Black an R, but I persuaded them to make it a PG. My argument was the strong, positive image I project on the screen. The word karate, unfortunately, connotes violence to many people. Actually, it's a means of avoiding violent situations, and a form of defense if you have no choice and you're backed into a corner.... My films are very similar to the John Wayne movies of the '40s. He'd go in a bar and Jack Palance would pick a fight with him, and then Wayne would take out half the saloon. It's the same theme: A man is pushed into a situation where he has to resort to violence."[6]

Reception

The movie had a relatively positive reception from movie critics, often being compared to Sergio Leone's stylish spaghetti westerns. Film Critic Roger Ebert gave the film a 3.5 star rating, calling the character of J.J. McQuade worthy of a film series and predicting the character would be a future classic.The film has 67 percent on rotten tomatoes[8][9][10]

Box office

'Lone Wolf McQuade' grossed $12 million worldwide.[11]

Legacy

Norris later said the film "broke the kung fu mode"for him and helped turn him into a more mainstream action star.[2]

Norris credits this film as a leading inspiration for his hit television series, Walker, Texas Ranger, which premiered a decade later. Yet the pilot had to be rewritten, and the characters' names changed, since "all things McQuade" were copyrighted by Orion Pictures. The original co-producer of the series was The Cannon Group, which like Orion is now absorbed into Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer (though the Cannon films are distributed on television by another company).[12]

See also


References

  1. 1 2 "Lone Wolf McQuade - Box Office Data". The Numbers. Retrieved 28 July 2011.
  2. 1 2 BROESKE, P. H. (1985, May 19). CHUCK NORRIS--AN ALL-AMERICAN HIT. Los Angeles Times (1923-Current File) Retrieved from https://search-proquest-com.ezproxy.sl.nsw.gov.au/docview/154169712?accountid=13902
  3. Action Speaks Louder: Violence, Spectacle, and the American Action Movie - Eric Lichtenfeld - Google Books. Books.google.com. 2007-04-27. Retrieved 2012-08-26.
  4. 1 2 3 4 5 "Steve Carver". Legends of Film (Podcast). 21 February 2015. Retrieved 14 December 2016.
  5. 1 2 Taylor, Tadhg (Oct 14, 2015). Masters of the Shoot-'Em-Up: Conversations with Directors, Actors and Writers of Vintage Action Movies and Television Shows. McFarland. p. 63-64.
  6. 1 2 Ryan, Desmond (21 Apr 1983). "THE LONER - DESPITE CRITICS, THIS ACTOR'S PROUD OF HIS FILMS". Philadelphia Inquirer. p. D.6.
  7. Caulfield, Deborah (4 Apr 1983). "FILM CLIPS: COPPOLA JOINS 'THE COTTFON CLUB'". Los Angeles Times. p. g6.
  8. "Lone Wolf McQuade". Chicago Sun Times. Retrieved 2011-01-03.
  9. "Lone Wolf McQuade". Variety. 1982-12-31. Retrieved 2011-01-03.
  10. Canby, Vincent (1983-04-16). "Villainy dispatched in el paso". The New York Times. Retrieved 2011-01-21.
  11. "A New Kick For Norris Macho Martial Arts Man Chuck Norris Welcomes The Chance To Soften His Public Image In His Latest Movie". Sun Sentinel. Retrieved 2011-01-03.
  12. "Lone Wolf rides again Chuck Norris takes on a new challenge: A TV series". Chicago Tribune. 1993-04-21. Retrieved 2011-01-03.
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