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Vanishing Point
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Vanishing Point (1971) More at IMDbPro »

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Overview

User Rating:
7.2/10   7,905 votes
MOVIEmeter: ?
Up 22% in popularity this week. See why on IMDbPro.
Writers:
Malcolm Hart (story)
Guillermo Cabrera Infante (screenplay)
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Contact:
View company contact information for Vanishing Point on IMDbPro.
Release Date:
13 March 1971 (USA) more
Genre:
Action | Drama more
Tagline:
It's the maximum trip... at maximum speed. more
Plot:
Kowalski, works for a car delivery service. He takes delivery of a 1970 Dodge Challenger to take from Colorado to San Fransisco... more | add synopsis
NewsDesk:
(9 articles)
Nicolas Cage Goes 3D in 'Drive Angry'
 (From Cinematical. 31 August 2009, 4:32 PM, PDT)

Auto of the week: 1970 Dodge Challenger R/T from Vanishing Point
 (From BoxWish. 18 August 2009, 3:15 AM, PDT)

User Comments:
A Dirge For A Dying America more

Cast

  (Cast overview, first billed only)
Barry Newman ... Kowalski
Cleavon Little ... Super Soul
Dean Jagger ... Prospector
Victoria Medlin ... Vera Thornton

Paul Koslo ... Charlie, Young Nevada Patrolman
Robert Donner ... Collins, Older Nevada Patrolman (as Bob Donner)
Timothy Scott ... Angel
Gilda Texter ... Nude Motorcycle Rider
Anthony James ... Male Hitchhiker #1, in Front Seat
Arthur Malet ... Male Hitchhiker #2, in Back Seat
Karl Swenson ... Sandy McKees, Argo's Attendant
Severn Darden ... Rev. J. 'Jessie' Hovah
Delaney Bramlett ... J. Hovah's Singer (as Delaney & Bonnie and Friends)
Bonnie Bramlett ... J. Hovah's Singer (as Delaney & Bonnie and Friends)
Lee Weaver ... Jake, Kowalski's Denver Connection
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Create a character page for: ?

Additional Details

MPAA:
Rated R for sensuality/nudity and drug content. (1998 re-rating)
Runtime:
99 min | UK:106 min
Country:
USA | UK
Language:
English
Color:
Color
Aspect Ratio:
1.85 : 1 more
Sound Mix:
Mono (Westrex Recording System)
Certification:
France:U | Iceland:L | Germany:16 (re-rating) (2008) | Singapore:PG | USA:R (re-rating) (1998) | Australia:M | Canada:14A | Finland:K-16 | Norway:16 | Sweden:15 | UK:18 | USA:GP (original rating) | West Germany:18 (original rating)
Filming Locations:
Austin, Nevada, USA more

Fun Stuff

Trivia:
There were actually four 440 Challenger R/Ts and one 383 Challenger R/T, which was an automatic with green interior. This one was used for some exterior shots and it pulled the 1967 Camaro up to speed so the Camaro could hit the bulldozers. As confirmed by property master Dennis J. Parrish, all of the cars were NOT originally white. They were just painted white for the film. During the scene where Kowalski has a flat tire, you can see green paint in the dents. more
Goofs:
Continuity: When the bulldozers drop the blades, the blades overlap by about a foot, there is no gap between them. The next shot, a frontal camera shot, shows a gap between the blades, and there's a gap between them in every shot after that. more
Quotes:
Kowalski: What do you do with those things?
Prospector: Trade 'em. Trade 'em for coffee, sugar, chewing tobacco, salt, flour, and beans, lots of beans, son.
more
Movie Connections:
Referenced in Grindhouse (2007) more
Soundtrack:
You Got To Believe more

FAQ

What are the differences between the US-Version and the UK-Version of this movie?
more
127 out of 145 people found the following comment useful.
A Dirge For A Dying America, 21 February 2004
10/10
Author: AdamKey (teslaman62@yahoo.com) from San Diego, Calif., USA

Richard Sarafian's 1971 film "Vanishing Point" is, for starters, a fascinating study of those persons anthropologists sometimes term "marginal men"--individuals caught between two powerful and competing cultures, sharing some important aspects of both but not a true part of either, and, as such, remain tragically confined to an often-painful existential loneliness. Inhabiting a sort of twilight zone between "here" and "there," a sort of peculiar purgatory, these restless specters cannot find any peace or place, so they instead instinctively press madly on to some obscure and unknown destination, the relentless journey itself being the only reason and justification.

Disc jockey Super Soul (Cleavon Little) and delivery driver Kowalski (Barry Newman) are two of these specters, marginal but decent, intelligent men who can't or won't live in burgeoning competing cultures which in reality have offered them very little of worth or substance, despite their own personal sacrifices. Kowalski himself had tried to "fit in" with the Establishment as a soldier and police officer and later, attempted to do the same with the blossoming 1960s counterculture, but soon disappointingly found that they both were ridden with their own various forms of dishonesty and insincerity. Personal honor, self-reliance and genuine respect--Kowalski's stock in trade--were tragically valued very little by either, despite each one's shrill and haughty claims to the contrary.

Moreover, it's no accident Newman's character has a Polish surname; the Poles throughout their history have created a very rich and unique Slavic culture largely based upon just such a "marginality"--being geographically jammed between powerful historic enemies, Germany and Russia, and never being able to fully identify with either one, at often great cost to themselves. It's also no accident Little's character is blind and black, the only one of his kind in a small, all-Caucasian western desert town--his sightlessness enhancing his persuasiveness and his ability to read Kowalski's mind, the radio microphone his voice, his race being the focus of long simmering and later suddenly explosive disdain--all of the characteristics of a far-seeing prophet unjustly (but typically) dishonored in his own land.

The desert environment also plays a key role in cementing the personal relationship between and respective fates of these two men--to paraphrase British novelist J.G. Ballard, prophets throughout our history have emerged from deserts of some sort since deserts have, in a sense, exhausted their own futures (like Kowalski himself had already done) and thus are free of the concepts of time and existence as we have conventionally known them (as Super Soul instinctively knew, thus creating his own psychic link to the doomed driver.) Everything is somehow possible, and yet, somehow nothing is.

Finally, VP is also a "fin de siecle" story, a unique requiem for a quickly dying age- a now all-but-disappeared one of truly open roads, endless speed for the joy of speed's sake, of big, solid no-nonsense muscle cars, of taking radical chances, of living on the edge in a colorful world of endless possibility, seasoned with a large number and wide variety of all sorts of unusual characters, all of which had long made the USA a wonderful place--and sadly is no longer, having been supplanted by today's swarms of sadistic, military-weaponed cop-thugs, obsessive and intrusive safety freaks, soulless toll plazas, smug yuppie SUV drivers, tedious carbon-copy latte towns, and a childish craving for perfect, high-fuel-efficiency safety and security.

The just-issued DVD contains both the US and UK releases of the film; the UK release, I believe, is a much more satisfying film, as it has the original scenes deleted from the US version. As an aside, Super Soul's radio station call letters, KOW, are in fact the ones for a country & western station in San Diego.

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