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Sharky's Machine By Jeff Shannon
Burt Reynolds was getting restless with the good ol' boy screen image
he cultivated in Smokey & the Bandit and numerous car-chase
flicks of the mid-to-late 1970s, and this brutal 1981 thriller presented
the actor with an interesting change of pace. Reynolds directed the film
as well, and there was a lot at stake for him both personally and
professionally, so Sharky's Machine--based on a gutsy novel by
William Diehl--has an urgent, no-nonsense quality that lifts it above most
comparably sleazy thrillers. The plot may be sordid, but Reynolds's
handling of it is not. This adds another element of freshness to the story
of a demoted Atlanta vice cop (Reynolds) who pursues a personal vendetta
against a crime boss (Vittorio Gassman) after falling in love with a
stunning beauty (Rachel Ward) from the mobster's stable of high-priced
prostitutes. The climactic shootout is violent and bloody in keeping with
movies of the period (when jarring brutality was beginning to be
commonplace in Hollywood films), but Reynolds doesn't go overboard. Sharky's
Machine doesn't pretend to be anything more (or less) than a
tough-as-nails crime movie, and it's one of Reynolds's most unusual and
intelligent films.
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FILM
FACTS |
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|  | Director: Burt Reynolds
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|  | Stars: Burt Reynolds, Rachel Ward, Vittorio Gassman, Brian Keith, Charles Durning, Bernie Casey, Henry Silva, Earl Holliman, Richard Libertini, John Fiedler, Darryl Hickman, Hari Rhodes
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|  | Released: December 18, 1981
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|  | Availability: DVD VHS | | |
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