Little Fauss and Big Halsy (1970) Poster

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6/10
Little Fauss and Big Halsy
Prismark1027 April 2020
When Alex Cox used to present the BBC's cult film strand Moviedrome. He boasted that you will not find films from the likes of Robert Redford here.

Little Fauss and Big Halsy would had been tailor made for Moviedrome. It is a cult obscure film. It was made just as Redford was on the cusp of superstardom.

Redford plays Halsy Knox a braggart. A small time womanising motorbike racer and petty crook always looking for his next buck. Halsy can race but he does not have temperament or the mechanical knowledge to be a winner.

Halsy meets Little Fauss (Michael J Pollard) a mechanic who wants to be a racer. He just cannot stay on his bike when he goes fast. His parents are oafs and Fauss is shy with a child like innocence. He has no friends.

Fauss hooks up with Halsy, he tunes his bikes and Halsy races, they even make some money. Fauss soon sees through Halsy's tall tales and his womanising. Halsy always hooks up with a floozy who hangs around the races.

Fauss is upset when Rita Nebraska (Lauren Hutton) who came across them running totally naked before a race, falls for Halsy even though she is aware that he is shallow and unreliable.

There is an element of the counterculture in this movie. There are several songs from Johnny Cash. There is full frontal nudity. It is an atypical Redford film, he is a chancer with no redeeming features. He appears half naked for most of the movie, shirtless and showing a long scar on his back.

There are hints of homoeroticism. One male photographer at the beginning of the movie is more interested in photographing Halsy's bronzed torso.

Fauss grows up as a person with his time with Halsy. He becomes a better racer and he also gets to have sex with one of Halsy's cast offs. He also tries to leave them in the same way as Halsy by sneaking away early in the morning.

The main difference is Fauss still remains a better person. This comes up when he talks about being drafted to the army, Halsy then reveals how he got his scar on his back.

Little Fauss and Big Halsy is a small scale character piece and part road movie. Robert Redford was interested in flawed people. A year before this he played an Olympic skier in Downhill Racer. His character was selfish who was only interested in winning gold.

In The Great Waldo Pepper made in 1975, Redford played a stunt pilot who told tall tales of his exploits in World War One. The box office failure of that film meant that Redford stuck with mainly heroic parts. Only as director would he examine the darker side of the American dream.

Director Sidney J Furie has made an offbeat and meandering look at Americana. The script is too thin and also predictable. Furie pumps it up with the race scenes.
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7/10
A Grindhouse Film...With Robert Redford!
morrison-dylan-fan18 February 2012
Warning: Spoilers
Around six weeks ago or so,a friend of mine gave me a very interesting challenge,which was to try and hunt down four very rare films that he had been searching after for a good while.Whilst three of the titles seem like ones that I'll have to do a little bit more searching for,I was surprised,when I decided to have a quick search round on Ebay,and I found that this pretty entertaining Grindhouse drama (with Robert Redford!)was being sold on an auction that was about to end in 5 minutes.

The plot:

Taking part in one of his first dirt bike races,Little Fauss meets dirt bike playboy Big Halsy,whose footsteps he would secretly like to follow in,thanks to Halsy always having a girl on his arm and a winning smile on his face.Despite his parents voicing their concerns over him hanging out with an "outlaw",Fauss agrees to a plan which will hopefully make him and Halsy very rich,with him serving as Halsy's mechanic and Halsy impersonating Fauss by wearing his biker costume.

Although things at first go smoothly for the both of them,Little Fauss starts to develop some feelings for Halsy's latest girlfriend.

View on the film:

As the first credits appeared on the film,I was thrilled to hear Johnny Cash deliver a toe-tapping tune that was specially written for this very fun film.For the dirt bike scenes,director Sidney J. Furie (who has also directed the under rated British Horror Doctor Bloods Coffin) gives them a good amount of dirt and sand,which gives the scenes a low budget rawness.

Whilst the first half of this very entertaining Grindhouse film mostly focuses on the bike races,the second half suddenly turns into a really great Road Movie,and although the change of gears in the films style is pretty abrupt,the performances from Robert Redford and Michael J. Pollard make sure that the film never stops being fun.For his performance,Robert Redford shows a wonderful amount of charm playing Halsy,as Fauss and Halsy's latest girlfriend are initially left dazzled by his charisma.

With Redford playing the outlaw,Pollard cleverly shows the nervousness that Fauss at first experiences when he enters the "outside" world,which Pollard shows slowly changes,from Fauss being an admire of the way Halsy lives his life,to him almost not being able to stand the very site of him.
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7/10
Worth your time....
FloridaJoeH18 February 2021
I have seen a LOT of movies...a LOT...and I believe this is worth your time....A fun film with good acting and character development....Redford gives a solid performance, but Pollard really shines....the two of them together are really believable....

Enjoy !
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7/10
A Refreshing Heel
inspectors715 August 2022
The title of Sydney J. Furie's little, forgotten film intrigued me, and I made sure to see it on ABC way back when, about 1975. I could tell it was an R-rated movie that was edited for TV, but the movie felt fresh and thoughtful. There was so much I didn't comprehend about the story of a narcissistic heel and an insecure but driven-to-win mechanic who cross paths on a motorcycle racing circuit. Robert Redford (Halsey Knox) and Michael J. Pollard (Little Fauss) have little in common except that Halsey is a low-life manipulator in whom Little sees a chance to get out of Heat Rash, Oklahoma, and win some trophies.

Redford, a man who became very famous by being a charming bank robber/mountain man/CIA employee/Barbara Streisand's ex is a thoroughly believable heel. He slithers through lying and thieving effortlessly. He wanders around without a shirt, glib and facetious, ordering Little to do this and that, and throwing Fauss' insecurity with women in his face when they pick up a bike bunny (Lauren Hutton). It's instant love for Little, instant sex for Halsy, and it leads to Little calling his partnership with Halsy quits.

He wonders back to Mom, and Dad has passed on. All the best things that are in Little are on display when he takes up racing again, practicing and practicing, with Momma sucking down dust with a stopwatch in her hand. You can see the scar Halsy left on him, and he deals with its pain by exhibiting determination.

Then Halsy arrives, and because Little is weak, he throws in, again. Hutton is pregnant, and Redford's character has so little good in him that he simply dumps her at the hospital.

I think the kid got the better half of that deal.

Our two boys are racing now, competing against each other. Little has the confidence he lacked earlier. Halsy will always be the winner of a participation ribbon. And the saddest part of the movie is how Halsy's lack of good character changes the face and behavior of who he sees as his protege.

I thought this movie was much better than many of the reviews I read. It's clearly a flick that is designed to play off Redford's growing popularity. What Furie gets right is that, although Robert Redford's Big Halsy is the powerhouse on screen, the viewer might be more interested in Michael J. Pollard's performance. The balance of the two personalities on screen makes for a darn-fine tension. Pollard played many a wimp, but here, Fauss has a deeper well of grit than you see at the start (when he habitually lands in a dusty heap during race after race).

Speaking of dust, and heat, the whole movie seems to be covered in a fine layer of grit. There's no place to feel clean and dry. The dust is ever-present, mixing with sweat to give the characters a subtle muddy sheen. Even Lauren Hutton, who chats with Halsy about his ugly scar on his back, all the while having her bare bottom in view, winds up in a preggo smock, and she looks beaten, gritty, and ready to go home to the folks in San Francisco.

She hasn't much to do in the movie other than getting pregnant and abandoned, thereby cementing Halsy Knox as charmless and in possession of a terrible character.

So, why do I recommend this 52-year-old film? Nothing is ever new in movies. The value of watching is seeing how the story we already know is remolded into something fresh. Little Fauss and Big Halsy is a fresh movie, one that very few people saw or will see in the future. It's an actors' movie, and with the glut of pornographically stupid super-hero movies out there, it may be a refreshing change.

Real people, real situations, and a thoughtful good time.
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A Cult Classic?
olhipe6918 August 2002
Saw this in the drive-in back in '71 and thought it was pretty good! Saw it again on Speedvisions "Lost Drive-in" some time ago but some of the scenes were "edited for TV". I don't believe it was ever released on video...too bad!
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7/10
A good movie, just a little strange. (Some light spoilers)
mrpoizun3 June 2020
Warning: Spoilers
I didn't know how to rate this movie. It's such a strange slice of seventies life. The main character, Redord's Big Halsy, is a totally amoral drifter and grifter. He never changes throughout the entire movie, not one bit. Oh, he lets slip a few moments of doubt, here and there, but he's incapable of being someone anyone can depend on. Ever. Then there's Michael Pollard's Little Fauss, his real name, apparently. A strange, shy, bumbling incompetent, his mannerisms make him hard to feel sorry for, much less root for. His parents, with scenery-chewing peformances by Noah Beery and Lucille Benson- everyone of a certain age will recognize these two fine supporting actors- are just as odd, speaking with strange country accents and living just awful, hard-scrabble lives. The only difference in their living circumstances is at least they have a house. Halsy, on the other hand, lives wherever he can con someone into a bed, even if he has to pimp his girl to a sleazy photographer at the motorcycle race, a guy who might have his eye as much on Halsy's often-uncovered torso as on his bikini-topped girl. If he can't find a bed, Halsy sleeps in abandoned buildings or sheds. And the girls he picks up put up with it. It's such strange movie, but the thing is, to play these roles the acting has to be superb, and Redford's is. It's an artistic tour de force for him to plaster that phony, toothsome smile on his face, or try to be convincing as he boastfully and obviously lies. He makes you understand every nuance of what Halsy wants out of the people around him and why he wants it. Pollard, Beery, Benson and every supporting actor manage to flesh out these strange characters in a convincing and entertaining way. I guess in the end, despite the fact I find the movie very entertaining, I don't think it deserves an eight for the ultimate nihilism of its story. Although Little learns a life lesson on how to judge people by their actions rather than their looks or charisma, that's hardly a difficult or life-altering discovery. It's a movie that isn't going to grab you with any new insight into life, but it's enjoyable to watch and I recommend it.
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4/10
Hardly worth the wait
wilvram28 April 2020
Had always been intrigued by this title ever since seeing the trailer 'arriving Sunday for seven days' almost half a century ago. Something in the voice-over resounded with me, which I was always reminded of when Ronnie Barker did his country and western skits. I never heard the film mentioned again, though believe it got a couple of airings with little fanfare on the BBC decades ago. Finally got a chance to see it courtesy of Talking Pictures TV - what would we do without them? Should like to say I loved it but it generally left me cold. Perhaps it is fair to say that along with one or two other films of the same period - Peckinpah's Junior Bonner springs to mind - it is essentially a slice of Americana with limited appeal outside the US except for the star. Still I did enjoy the songs from Johnny Cash.
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7/10
A character study from the psychedelic seventies
theeht27 September 2000
Robert Redford and Michael J, Pollard give good performances in this character study of two opposites who form an alliance as motorcycle racers down South, Lauren Hutton is the girl who comes between them. Nothing great, but watchable, and a rare chance to see Redford as a heavy.
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4/10
Nothing special
Leofwine_draca30 April 2020
Warning: Spoilers
This film, about a pair of motorbike racers, is notable for starring Robert Redford, then on the cusp of megastardom. Here he's teamed up with the diminutive Michael J. Pollard for a friendship drama laced with the expected racing sequences, dust, and heat. There's also some relationship stuff thrown into the mix too and it's not all easy sailing. I was interested in watching this both for Redford's typically charismatic turn - although he's a little more subdued than usual here - and for Canadian director Sidney J. Furie, who turned his back on British B-movie cinema in favour of America. LITTLE FAUSS AND BIG HALSY is rather forgettable compared to other movies in both of their careers, but Redford fans will lap it up regardless.
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7/10
Looking for tape of this movie
kvon5618 August 2000
Does anyone know if this film was put on tape. I can't seem to locate an authentic copy. I enjoyed this movie back in the 70's. It wasn't very realistic as far as the motorcycle racing went but it had some funny lines.
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3/10
A few laughs, though far between
coolplanter5 September 2017
Watch this if you like films where a beloved, sainted, actor in a later days, has gotten to that pinnacle by taking his share of poorly-produced, box-office miss-steps, accepting the part of a genuine heel--a character seeing very little benefit in having any integrity-- maybe Redford saw himself accepting those roles? Johnny Cash sings some vocals written for this film that probably did him about the same amount of good that the film did for Redford. Michael Pollard's part, however, as someone learning not to accept the role of the "blame-catcher" is entirely believable. Parts of movie are amusing, but probably not to women that envision Redford as a likable person.
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10/10
"Mission to Nowhere"
ramblin-jack8 May 2006
ROBERT REDFORD plays 'hunk' Halsy Knox, who demands and receives everything he desires except his self-respect. A God-given talent at motocross racing becomes his albatross in his quest to achieve what he believes is his destiny. Along the way are numerous characters of this hobby/religion's entourage including a gear-head named 'Little' (MICHAEL J. POLLARD). They all accommodate his every whim based on his good looks, charm and 'somewhat winning' first impression. It's not until later that an observant witness realizes that he has been duped by a 'con-man without a con' in Halsy's mission to nowhere.

Lots of motorcycle racing action and 60's introspective brings this one up to cult status. Redford is absolutely gorgeous in his appearance/role as a cad. Seems one-half the film has him bare chested! A goodly amount of nudity abounds (full-frontal LAUREN HUTTON, etc.) and if '70's film-liberalism disturbs you then I recommend Olsen twins films.

A GREAT soundtrack with songs by JOHNNY CASH and the TENNESSEE THREE, & CARL PERKINS! Some of the music was written by BOB Dylan.

Filmed on location in Antelope Valley, Ca, Sonoma County, Ca and Sears Point Raceway in San Francisco.

Postscript: "I have seen this film about ten times now and it ALWAYS leaves me thinking about it for days. RR chews up the scenery and gives a bravura performance as Halsy as he stretches his interpretation of the cad to subtle brilliance!"
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6/10
A surprisingly dark, uncomfortable but meritable thesis on toxic masculinity, misogyny & narcissism
danieljfarthing18 August 2022
With Robert Redford blending Brad Pitt & Burt Reynolds to a kick-ass Johnny Cash soundtrack in a tale of motorbikes, booze & womanising, 1970's "Little Fauss And Big Halsy" COULDA been iconically fun... but writer Charles Eastman & director Sidney J Furle made it a serious thesis on what's now known as 'toxic masculinity' with the misogyny, narcissism & crass selfishness that Redford's 'charming' character bleeds over all around him (like Michael J Pollard, Lauren Hutton & Linda Gaye Scott) as he uses them. Without humour, or the usual 'character redemption' it's a dark character study but an interesting view of that era that some may prefer not to remember.
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4/10
The Ballad Of Big Hollowsey
seveb-2517920 February 2020
Warning: Spoilers
Interesting to see Robert Redford doing something different, and doing it well. Not the usual type of character he plays in most of his movies (himself), showing us that he could be more multidimensional, and play against type, when he set his mind to it. He seems to spend most of the movie with his shirt off, his golden looks never better displayed than they are here. Which is perfect for the part of Halsey Knox, a hollow man who is living on his looks (plus some half-fulfilled talent as a motorcycle rider). Perhaps that is why Redford took the part; - to poke fun those people who viewed him as just another pretty face? Halsey is a man who always takes the easy way out, coasting through life on minimum effort. He has a sense of entitlement, feeling that success is rightly due to him based on his looks and talent alone and frustrated that he hasn't received all he feels he deserves. He finds it easy to attract women, but later despises them for falling for his patter, and also despises himself, for not being able to resist indulging in this behaviour. However most of the time he is in denial. He is a fast rider but lazy, failing to achieve his potential due to sloppy maintenance of his bike. He takes advantage of the goodwill his good looks bring him; - people want to be around him and so they often accept his lies and put up with his petty theft, even when they see through him. He has been doing it so long he half believes it himself. In my opinion, Michael J Pollard was miscast as Little Fauss. He is fine as a lonely outsider-nerd in the first two thirds of the movie, mechanically talented but lacking in social skills, worshipping the false idol that is Halsey, and then slowly recognising the emptiness behind the façade, but his weird "Hobbit-esque" looks do not translate well into the character that Little Fauss becomes. No matter how often he won races, Michael J Pollard would not have the looks to pull attractive but shallow women on a casual basis (or alternatively display the type of larger than life personality required make up the difference). The women in this movie are interested in Redford for his shiny surfaces and Pollard has none of that. Speaking of womankind, they don't come off well in this movie at all; they are all promiscuous and easily manipulated, and just as shallow as the men are. Either dull witted trailer trash or scatter brained hippies. Trophies of a lifestyle, who always become inconvenient after a while. In the end Little Fauss rides off toward victory, on the racing track at least, leaving Halsey Knox having a tantrum in the dust, having been let down by his poorly maintained bike yet again. I guess the main lesson is that good looks and talent aren't enough, that hard work is also needed to succeed in life? (Except with women, that only requires good looks)
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5/10
Medium sized at best
tomsview16 February 2013
Warning: Spoilers
Robert Redford starred in two of the greatest buddy movies of all time: "Butch Cassidy and the Sundance Kid" and "The Sting". In between, he made "Little Fauss and Big Halsy". It too is a buddy movie but there the resemblance ends.

Redford's buddy in this film is Michael J Pollard, a mumbling, quirky star of the period. He is at the opposite end of the charisma scale from Redford's buddy from the other movies, Paul Newman.

This movie is about men who love bike racing to the exclusion of just about all else. However for all the excitement that might suggest, the film tries so hard not to be obvious that it fails to deliver much of a punch.

Little Fauss, Pollard's character is assisted in his racing ambitions by his doting parents, Mom and Dad Fauss, played by Lucille Benson and Noah Beery Jnr, who supply portable toilets to race venues. All three actors compete to see who can deliver the most mannered, offbeat and quirky performance.

Little Fauss meets another bike racer, Big Halsy. Redford's Halsy Knox is an unpleasant character. Shirtless much of the time, he sports chest hair, a grin and a scar that runs the length of his spine, Halsy is also an opportunist who is not above petty theft. Fauss is drawn to Halsy's confident and outgoing nature. After Fauss breaks his leg, Halsy convinces him to let him use his name and licence to race in California. The two men load their bikes onto Halsy's truck and hit the road. Wherever they travel, women are drawn to Halsy while "Little" is occasionally allowed a peek at the latest conquest.

The arrival of Lauren Hutton's character, Rita Nebraska, finally causes the end of the friendship between the two men. This was Hutton's screen debut and she enters the movie as she entered the world – naked – running down a racetrack after being dumped by other bikers. She ends up in Halsy's truck and Fauss talks him into letting her tag along.

Hutton gives an animated performance in this film although her character is also quirky and dysfunctional. Among all the character's odd traits is a fixation with the oral; Halsy cleans his teeth compulsively, Fauss constantly sniffs and rubs his nose and Rita uses her chewing gum like play dough.

Rita falls for Halsy and they begin a relationship. Fauss leaves knowing his feelings for Rita can never be realised while Halsy is around. Rita becomes pregnant and has a baby. Not unexpectedly, Halsy becomes the epitome of the 'dead-beat dad'. Rita eventually leaves the story, presumably with the intention of returning home.

Fauss and Halsy face each other as competitors in the Sear's Point race. By this time, Fauss's regard for Halsy has turned to contempt. Eventually 'Little' has a good chance to win but we never find out, we are left hanging and wondering.

The filmmakers' penchant for the oblique makes "Little Fauss and Big Halsy" a frustrating experience. However it does capture a certain sense of disillusionment – positing that characters who possess outward charm often have little substance to back it up. Fortunately Robert Redford soon showed his toothy charisma to better effect in "The Sting" – a far more rewarding experience for everyone.
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3/10
Surrealist grab-bag...engineered to be offbeat
moonspinner5518 February 2009
A genuinely odd, surreal jumble of visual ideas which probably looked extremely puzzling on the printed page--just what drew Robert Redford to the project, one may never know. Sidney J. Furie directs this knockabout journey of an egotistical motorcycle racer taking a milquetoast juvenile under his wing. The kid looks up to this anti-hero, and eventually begins to ape his amorality. Disjointed and off-putting, although for some the sight of Redford disrobing, about to disrobe or having been disrobed might be enough to warrant attention. Lauren Hutton gets naked, too, however all the sexy flashes are just teasers for the prurient-minded; there simply is no story. Perhaps Furie was making an esoteric comment about feckless wheelers and their flock circa 1970. If true, then this pre-Blank Generation approach backfired, as the film was not a success. *1/2 from ****
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4/10
Little Faust and Big Halsy
henry8-323 November 2020
Womanising, doesn't give a damn bike rider Fauss (Redford) befriends naive / simple soul Fauss (Pollard) who acts as mechanic for Redford and lets him ride using his name after Redford is banned. All is fine until they both fall for new girl Lauren Hutton.

Rather dull, of its time quasi road movie hampered by an overly simplistic morality tale and a non existent relationship between the leads, such that you feel very little for either of them. Pollard is more exuberant than usual in the last third of the film, but still does his usual mumbling, staring at the floor act for most of it. The only significant plus point is Redford's performance where he atypically plays a somewhat unsavoury character but one that keeps us interested - he is the only reason to see this rather disappointing effort.
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8/10
Noteworthy
doc-26014 August 2006
If you've ever been on a motorcycle racing circuit or been around other real life circuits with those of the egotistical boaster class, you will love this movie. On both the motorcycle racing circuit and in business, I've met Halsey Knox; well, not really but a true to life, full blown, likeness thereof.

Having not really been a fan of motorcycle racing, but a fan of the scene, I immediately can identify with those of the "Halsey" genre, who not only know everything and been everywhere, but are the best and foremost authority on nearly every subject, let alone get all the women and nearly always screw up everyone's life around them by capturing the heart mind and soul of the unsuspecting and then "use" that person for what can be accomplished for the host.

Robert Redford plays the part like a pro. And poor unsuspecting Little Fauss is literally taken by the style and non-chalaunt attitude of Halsey. The two team up and when Fauss finally wakes up to the reality of being used by a bluffer and boaster, he finds the nerve to move on and locate success on his own.

Definitely a classic and no wonder Robert Redford didn't like the part, after all who wants to be seen as a loser with an egotistical "know it all" attitude, except of course for the part where he "gets all the women" :o)
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8/10
Blu ray version is now available
jimw-6359217 December 2016
I just got this movie on Blu ray from Blu ray.com/amazon and it looks fantastic! For a low budget movie in 1970, the transfer is amazing, crystal clear and the audio is great. It's funny because Redford wears sun glasses in about 60% of the film and you can see the reflection of the movie lights and even film crew in a number of scenes. You'd think they would have noticed this when filming. The movie isn't the greatest, but it is a cult classic. It's weird seeing Redford playing such a jerk of a character. He was actually really good at it in this movie. I found it interesting that Redford and Michael Pollard couldn't stand each other while filming this movie. I wonder what caused it?
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9/10
Very underrated
dcdannny2 November 2008
Warning: Spoilers
I like Redford as an actor and he made this film before he started polishing his image and playing it safe. To hear this film is one of his least favorites, I suggest he should sit down and screen INDECENT PROPOSAL, SNEAKERS, that terrible thing with Debra Winger and Darryl Hannah, the almost unwatchable THE CASTLE, and the cure for insomnia, LIONS FOR LAMBS.

Redford's Halsy Knox is like the male version of the shallow pretty girl who skates by on looks, charm, and minimal talent. And he plays it to the hilt with great effect. Pollard is the perfect counterpoint and it's fun to watch how Redford's character keeps reeling back in despite betraying him on all levels.

This film belongs in the same group as DOWNHILL RACER, THE CANDIDATE, and TELL THEM WILLIE BOY IS HERE - all good, if not big box office movies.
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8/10
A great film...
wmann-924 November 2007
This was a great movie if you were a kid growing up around motorcycle racing. I was just 14 when this movie came out. I went to the theater to see it because I had heard it was about motorcycle racing. It was great! It captured the eccentric attitude of racers in general and was really very accurate as to the characters one could find in AMA racing. "On Any Sunday"! We would trailer our bikes all over the northeast to any race we could find. Enduros, motocross, flat-track, scrambles... whatever was going on, we'd go! Change tires, fenders, or what ever we needed to do to the bikes and take off. Great movie and great times! when you were involved with the racing scene, you got to know the other regulars that would show up at the various races and there were the personalities found in the movie. Every one knew a Halsey! Most of us were more Fauss, however. we were more interested in riding and tuning than partying and chasing skirts! This movie is one of the only movies I actually searched for and purchased just so I would have it as the years go by.
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10/10
Old School Motorcycle Racing Classic
tox_medic10 February 2006
As a 17 year old Arizona motorcycle racer, I had the privilege of working as an extra/ stuntman on the racing scenes in this movie, so I'm somewhat biased about the quality of this feature. It IS schmaltzy and VERY early 70s in its content and cinematography, but it paints a GREAT picture of what it was like to race motorcycles in the early days of American motor sports (back when no one but the Europeans EVER won anything!). Before Supercross, before motor sport superheroes when us folks that rode motorcycles were known as LESS than desirable, and no one ever called us athletes.

So, from a historical perspective, or just to see ME as a 17 year old tearing around a couple dirt tracks and out on a desert run aboard a hot Yamaha, I feel this movie can't be beat. It'll never take the place of such greats as On Any Sunday or On Any Sunday 2, but it's still a worthwhile 99 minutes of lighthearted flashbacks for anyone that lived through those times, or those that wish they had.

Oh, and Robert Redford wasn't too bad either...

John in AZ
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10/10
A Classic Tortoise & Hare Allegory
zardoz-1317 July 2014
Warning: Spoilers
"Little Fauss and Big Halsy" qualifies as an allegorical work of sheer genius. "Ipcress File" director Sidney J. Furie and "All-American Boy" scenarist George Eastman appropriate the animal fable about the tortoise and the hare. Cocksure, extroverted, ladies man Halsy Knox (Robert Redford of "The Sting") is the hare and shy, bespectacled, introvert Little Fauss (Michael J. Pollard of "Bonnie & Clyde") is the tortoise. Together, they make a memorable pair of opposites who hit the road on the motorcycle dirt bike circuit. Ironically, neither Redford nor Pollard liked each other. "Little Fauss and Big Halsy" essentially is a story about losers, but each of them is a genuine character. The scenic, sun-blasted, settings are atmospheric and the cast convincing, especially Lauren Hutton and her Lady Godiva act. Little and Halsy hate each other, and they refuse to believe that they need each other. Noah Beery Jr. is splendid as Pollard's father who has nothing but contempt for Halsy.

The Johnny Cash songs are fantastic as is Carl Perkins' jukebox tune about a woman used and abused. Recently, I located a full-frame bootleg copy of this public domain classic. The scene near the beginning when Halsy nonchalantly strolls obliviously across the race track as scores of bikers narrowly avoid hitting him is terrific. This movie is so neat and symbolic that it serves as a commentary on mankind. Redford delivers a spectacular performance and looks a Cosmo centerfold boy. He spends half of his time stripped to the waist with sunglasses and looking virile. This is the kind of movie that looks tailored made for Burt Reynolds, except the Eastman script teems with interesting characters rather that broad comedy. "Little Fauss and Big Halsy" is probably Redford's most stylist performance since "Butch Cassidty."
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10/10
A boisterously sweet natured, surprisingly intimate comedy!
Weirdling_Wolf31 March 2021
One of uber-blond bombshell, Robert Redford's earlier films, while infrequently documented remains a boisterous, frequently sweet natured, surprisingly intimate dramedy about two disparate motorcycle misfits, Little Fauss (Michael J. Pollard) and devilishly handsome serial womanizer, Big Halsy (Robert Redford) who slowly form an uneasy partnership to race, Little Fauss's fleet, expertly-tuned bike. The grossly self-absorbed rapscallion, Halsy has selfishly contrived to use the ingenuous and trusting, Fauss's bike and racing licence number, due to his current suspension for numerous boozy transgressions, and, sadly, the introverted, homely Little Fauss forgoes his own undemonstratively expressed ambitions as a single racer, browbeaten by, Big Halsy's relentless charisma and no less beguiling rhetoric, his cumbersome ego, vanity and a seemingly limitless facility for fabricating vividly colourful myths about his own dubious racing prowess that far outweighs his actual, all too modest talents on the track!

'Little Fauss & Big Halsy' is not only a breezily wonderful, sun-hazed view of early 70s dust bowl California, and the wholesomely greasy, high octane, hyper adrenalized risk-laden life of poor, itinerant dirt riders, but the delightfully awkward pairing of perma-twitchy, Michael J. Pollard and magisterial matinée macho, Redford was quite an inspired bit of casting; their vastly contrasting personalities, world views, philosophies and acting styles made for a ceaselessly fascinating pair of ill-matched racers! While Little Fauss and Halsy Knox's sporting alliance never quite gels, even as their working partnership becomes ever more volatile, you can still see genuine flashes of appreciation for the others unique, wholly contradictory talents.

Off the chaotic track and away from Halsy's noisome grandstanding there's an earnest humanity beneath all the broad, alpha male theatrics, especially endearing are, Little Fauss's delightfully earthy, kind-hearted parents whose genuine love and almost smothering affection for the shy, expert racer is, for me, the warmly pulsing heart of this utterly disarming film. Perhaps, no award-laden classic of vintage Americana, but still rather beautiful in its singular fashion. While Redford's striking star quality is undeniable, you can't help but feel this is ultimately about the softly-spoken Little and his hard-earned moment in the sun! Sidney J. Furie's unassuming, 'Little Fauss & Big Halsy' is a well-made, fundamentally light-hearted, nicely observed character piece with some zestily memorable performances from a fine supporting cast, Noah Beery Jr. Is a sheer delight as blustering 'Pop' Fauss, playful Lucille Benson oozes palpable maternal warmth as 'Mom' Fauss, with a young and lissome, Lauren Hutton positively crackling as a witheringly sexy, William S. Burroughs reading kook! And the righteously choice, sawdust kickin', boot stompin' score by the Man in Black is certainly no less enticing!
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10/10
need a copy of this movie
crillymon4 June 2008
I too was growing up in the 60's and 70's (still growing) and remember this particular movie with a certain fondness. Mainly for the motorcycles and characters portrayed in it. All of us know Little and Halsy in some form or other...I don't usually go to all the trouble of trying to dig up old stuff. Normally, you can find most of the old movies you need at any number of sources. However, this film is proving very difficult to find. Personally, I liked the movie and have been looking for a copy for years. Generally, I don't look for mind expanding symbolism or intelligence in any movie, I'm just satisfied with the entertainment factor...If anyone has a copy out there, let me know if you would like to sell it...
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