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DAMNATION ALLEY
Rating:
USA. 1977.
Director Jack Smight, Screenplay Lukas Heller & Alan Sharp, Based on the Novel by Roger Zelazny, Producers Paul Maslansky & Jerome M. Zeitman, Photography Harry Stradling Jr, Music Jerry Goldsmith, Laser Animation Mimi Gramatki, Special Effects Linwood Dunn, Milton Rice, Frank Van Der Veer & Don Weed, Production Design Preston Ames. Production Company Landers-Roberts-Zeitman/20th Century Fox.
Cast:
Jan-Michael Vincent (Jake Tanner), George Peppard (Major Eugene Denton), Dominique Sanda (Janice), Paul Winfield (Keegan), Jackie Earl Harley (Billy)
Plot: The world is devastated by a nuclear holocaust. The devastation causes The Earth to tilt on its axis, which brings about vast meteorological chaos. As the weather dies down mutated insects start to emerge, preying on the survivors. The surviving crew at a US Air Force bomb shelter in the Mojave Desert pick up radio signals coming from Albany. The commander Major Eugene Denton unveils two armored vehicles he has constructed and announces a plan to cross Damnation Alley, the hundred mile wide strip between areas of radiation hazard, to join the survivors. They set off, along the journey taking on board two survivors, a novice singer they find in the ruins of Las Vegas, and a wild child. But their journey is also beset by giant mutated cockroaches, storms and crazed survivalists.
Damnation Alley has been held up as the perfect example of Hollywoods lack of understanding of science-fiction literature and a case illustration of what happens when filmmakers decide they know better. The book in question is a 1969 novel that comes from New Wave science-fiction writer Roger Zelazny indeed it is one of the always eccentric Zelaznys more filmable works. The book was a strong and hard-bitten story wherein the central character was a Hells Angel entrusted with delivering much needed drugs across a post-apocalyptic American continent. It would still make a good film someday.
Damnation Alley the film however might be politely called a travesty the Hells Angel hero has become a US Air Force officer and to the story has been added mutant cockroaches and giant scorpions, and a kid and a bimbo and written in along for the journey as supporting characters. If Damnation Alley had been made following Mad Max 2 (1981) the book might have fared better. With the Mad Max films Mel Gibson created an archetype of the grim, post-holocaust loner anti-hero, which comes a great deal closer to the character in Roger Zelaznys book than the bland, squeaky-clean Tanner played by Jan-Michael Vincent does in the film. With this to draw on, the book would have come across much more acceptably and at the very least could have been blown up into a decent action movie.
But Damnation Alley is a real Grade Z film. The cast get to play out in straight-face lines like The towns infected with killer cockroaches. Dominique Sanda offers an explanation for her survival that involves being taken to bed in a fallout shelter beneath Las Vegas by a man who promised to advance her singing career at the time the bombs were dropped. And the plausibility holes are frequently laughable you keep asking how come if the rest of the country is devastated the power managed to stay on in Las Vegas, or where they keep managing to find all the fuel for the journey. Dominique Sanda and in particular Jan-Michael Vincent give dull performances, while George Peppard plays with a stolidly unvarying expression. The mutant bugs look fairly laughable, although there are some quite interesting laser effects added in post-production to create the burned-out skies.The ending arrived at is ludicrous because when the film finally arrives at Albany it is like a pastoral vision of Waltons Americana in the midst of the wasteland. It is indicative of the film that George Peppard sets out on his mission without ever stopping to check and see whether the messages are coming from Albany, Oregon or Albany, New York.
The only other Roger Zelazny work to ever approach filming was a supposed version of his novel Lord of Light (1967), a conceptually wild work about a planet where scientifically advanced humans pose as Hindu gods, which was announced in 1979. This however proved to be a multi-million dollar scam attempting to jump on the post-Star Wars (1977) science-fiction trend.
Jack Smights other genre films include the Ray Bradbury adaptation The Illustrated Man (1968), the serial killer black comedy No Way to Treat a Lady (1968), and the Frankenstein adaptation Frankenstein: The True Story (1974).
Copyright Richard Scheib 1990
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