Best Friends (1975) Poster

(1975)

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6/10
An Interesting Tale That Spirals Into Mayhem
BloodTheTelepathicDog29 April 2011
Richard Hatch and Doug Chapin have been best friends all their lives. They have done everything together, including enlisting in the Army for service during Vietnam. The two served stints as paratroopers during the war but the war had a different effect on each young man. Richard Hatch wants stability and has proposed to his flame Susanne Benton while Chapin wants the good times to keep on rolling.

Hatch, who was discharged before Chapin, goes to pick up his old buddy with Susanne Benton and Chapin's on-again-off-again love interest Ann Noland in tow. Hatch's plan is to have a relaxing road trip back home in their rented RV--one last adventure with his closest chum before he enters married life. Chapin on the other hand wants the adventure to last forever and has no intentions of settling down. When he realizes that his best pal is eager to enter the domesticated life of a husband, Chapin tries everything to dissuade his chum from tying the knot.

STORY: $$$$ (The story is very strong until it takes that seedy turn at the end, which I won't spoil for you. The characterization for all the actors is quite strong. Richard Hatch's character is pulled from both sides by the woman he loves and the best friend he has done everything with. The story boils over near the end when Chapin gives him the most uncompromising of ultimatums. Would any soon-to-be husband agree to what Chapin proposes? I doubt it. Watch and answer for yourself).

ACTING: $$$$ (Very strong. Everyone is convincing in their roles. Doug Chapin is brilliant as Pat who would do anything to keep the good times rolling. He adeptly plays the devil on Richard Hatch's shoulder. He uses every ploy he can think of to get Hatch to call off the wedding, including setting his girlfriend on Hatch. Hatch is equally strong as Jesse who wants the stability that comes with a job and family but struggles to let go of his best buddy even when all hope is lost. Ann Noland shines as the free-spirited Jo Ella who is eager to settle down with Chapin but when he rebukes her, her world is leveled and she seeks to restructure it any way she can. Susanne Benton, from A BOY AND HIS DOG, is great as Jesse's prim-and-proper betrothed. When Ann outstages a stripper at a bar, Susanne jokes about going up there with her but it is against her nature. Her nature, the good girl next door--the type you marry--is in stark contrast to Ann Noland's free-spirited Jo Ella).

NUDITY: $$$ (Ann Noland has a striptease scene as the aloof dame takes her top off in the most foolish of settings. With nothing but rowdies about, and just two guys to protect her, he shucks her top with a devil-may-care attitude. Ann also has a sex scene in the RV with Chapin and an outdoors romp with Hatch. Susanne Benton, by contrast, refuses to accompany Ann on the stripper's stage and gives the modest gal nude scene in a shower--keeping her goods for one man. Not only are Noland and Benton's characters in contrast but so are their bodies. Noland is a lithe-bodied lady while Susanne boasts an ample chest).
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6/10
"We've been together for so many years..."
Wouldyabelieve3 December 2008
Warning: Spoilers
Quote is from the Beach Boys tune "Friends" which is what this movie is about. First, let me say off the bat that the movie was watchable given its genre. What kept bugging me, however, was that the character Jesse (Richard Hatch)looked so familiar but I just couldn't place him (until checking IMDb!).

This is a buddy movie between two very close friends who even shared a stint in the air force together. However, Jesse is now ready to settle down while his pal Pat (Doug Chapin) still wants to roam the countryside with his buddy like old times. They cruise the southwest in a rented motor home with their respective girlfriends. Although Jesse plans on marrying his girlfriend Kathy and taking a truck driving job in California, Pat has let his girlfriend Jo Ella know he has no intentions on settling down.

The rest of the movie shows Pat becoming increasingly unstable about Kathy's plans to marry Jesse and he increases his attempt to drive them apart. He eventually gets his girlfriend Jo Ella to sleep with Jesse to further his cause. The end could have been better as Pat causes Jesse to accidentally shoot and kill Kathy. However, we are left with the 3 remaining "friends" just sitting on the beach without wrapping up whether or not Jesse will join Pat in his travels. Jo Ella just hangs around and we are left to wonder what will become of her.
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4/10
Boring road trip movie
Leofwine_draca16 July 2016
BEST FRIENDS is a boring, laid back road movie courtesy of Crown International Pictures. The cheapness of the production is apparent in the seeming lack of a script and the random aimlessness of the direction. It's almost like RACE WITH THE DEVIL as two couples go on a journey of self-discovery across America, but without any actual story.

This is a good film to watch if you want to know what Richard Hatch was up to before he starred in BATTLESTAR GALACTICA. Sadly, the slow pace and the resolute lack of action and incident makes it feel very dull from the start. I suppose you could argue that the film has a naturalistic feel to it and some realism, but what's the point when nothing happens?

Being a 1970s movie, there's plenty of nudity here, included in random moments like the lengthy strip show in the bar. The actresses are naturalistic and 'real', a far cry from the modern plastic surgery-enhanced women you tend to see in American B-movies. Only in the second half does an oddly nihilistic plot line rear its head, but by that time I didn't care anyway.
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A strange drive-in movie
Wizard-817 February 2012
"Best Friends" is a real obscurity. It doesn't seem to be listed in any movie reference books. Also, it was never released on VHS, and it was only quietly given a release on DVD (in box sets containing other Crown-International movies) a few years ago. If you know what Crown-International typically released, you will see that their pickup of this movie was a very atypical choice. Although there is some nudity and sex, the movie never feels like exploitation - the events of the movie unfold in a very serious dramatic fashion. I can only wonder what drive-in audiences thought of it. As for what I thought, it is kind of slow-moving, but at the same time I found it strangely compelling; I was really interested in seeing how things would turn out for the four central characters. This movie is definitely not for everyone, but if you like dramatic and unconventional films from the 1970s (and like movies about road trips), you might find enough interest here.
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3/10
Squandered opportunities
fjaye21 April 2012
Warning: Spoilers
An interesting premise: two young couples decide to rent a motor home for a long road trip before marrying and settling down. All kinds of things could happen. Unfortunately, "Best Friends" fails to develop its many story lines.

**Other reviewers have noted a strong homoerotic subtext, and I must agree; Jesse and Pat spend an inordinate amount of time together, even for best friends—especially with two good-lookin' babes in tow—but it remains a subtext. I wasn't expecting gay porn here, but (for example) they might have formed a united front against the women…which would have certainly complicated the trip.

**Jo Ella's impromptu, and rather attractive, bar-dancing performance is the impetus for a possible major-bar-fight storyline…but it doesn't happen. Pat later exacts his revenge by clocking the guy with a plank, and the plot moves on.

**Pat leads Kathy to a rock ledge where a rattler lurks and then "saves her life"—but neither of them mention it again.

**Jesse and Jo Ella have a romp in the woods (after subtle instigation by Pat), but we're never sure if they actually "did it", or not, and it's never really discussed. Another vehicle for dramatic tension that was abandoned.

**And after numerous similar dead-ends, we come to the conclusion of the movie: Jesse has killed Kathy (who reminds me of Jane Curtin)…and while Jesse weeps, Pat continues to babble about the old days, after flinging clods of dirt at Jo Ella and chasing her away. At which point, things just kind of…stop. No resolution, no nothing.

Given the subtext, I had half-expected Jesse to finally snap and kill Jo Ella…so the two best friends could continue to roll along the highway of life together. But no.

So many good opportunities squandered.
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5/10
Wasn't Too Bad
Uriah4312 February 2014
Two friends since childhood named "Jesse" (Richard Hatch) and "Pat" (Doug Chapin) get out of the army and decide to rent a mobile home and tour a part of the country with their girlfriends "Kathy" (Susanne Benton) and "Jo Ella" (Ann Noland). Although Jesse loves Kathy and wants to get married, Pat desperately wants things to remain the same. Soon his fears get the best of him and he tries everything he can think of to cause Jesse and Kathy to break up. Now, rather than reveal what happens next and possibly ruin the film for those who haven't seen it I will just say that for a low-budget drive-in type of movie this wasn't too bad. Yet while there were some parts that were a little slow and I would have preferred a bit more action or passion it still kept my interest for the most part. Having said that, although it certainly isn't a great movie by any means I didn't think it was that bad either. If anything I would rate it as about average.
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5/10
A downbeat drive-in drama.
BA_Harrison26 August 2018
I can only imagine what the drive-in crowd thought of Best Friends on its original release: it's a downbeat drama that is a far cry from Crown International's usual breezy/cheezy output.

Richard Hatch and Doug Chapin play long-time pals and ex-army buddies Jesse and Pat, who, together with their partners Kathy (Susanne Benton) and Jo Ella (Ann Noland) embark on a cross-country road-trip in a rented Winnebago. Once the trip is over, Jesse intends to marry his girlfriend and get a job, but Pat has different ideas: he wants to continue his care-free friendship with his old buddy and proceeds to try and ruin Jesse's relationship with Kathy. Naturally, things spiral out of control for the foursome, with an unexpectedly tragic ending.

Competently directed, with reasonable performances from its leads, Best Friends isn't a bad movie, but hardly makes for fun viewing. Avid Crown International fans might struggle with the film's rather depressing nature, but will at least appreciate Jo Ella's topless dance at a strip bar and Kathy's shower scene.
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7/10
Laid-back and unusual American road movie
Red-Barracuda14 July 2015
This buddy movie/road trip flick is one of a type of movie that I automatically have a soft spot for and always cut serious slack to. It's one of those early 70's oddities that has a bit of a mild counter-culture feel and has an overall vibe that I am a bit of a sucker for. It's about two male friends, both not long out of the army after serving in Vietnam. They now find themselves moving in different directions in life. One wants to settle down, while the other still wishes to remain a free spirit, not only that but he is jealous and unhappy to be losing his friend to a domestic life with his fiancé and so tries ever increasingly dangerous ways to break up their relationship. Events play out on a road trip where these young men travel in a camper-van with their girlfriends in the American south west.

Released by Crown International Pictures who were known for releasing low budget B-movies, this film is decidedly different from most of the films in their catalogue. For one thing, it isn't really a genre flick and instead is a psychological drama about friendship, relationships and growing up. It's only in its final act that it enters territory more closely associated with a traditional genre picture. In all honesty it is quite a strange movie and its very unpredictability makes it oddly compelling. It's also very nicely photographed too with some beautiful shots that capture the vast desert landscape. I also have a strange weakness for 70's films that have folk pop soundtracks and this one sure has its fair share of that too, with an assortment of laid-back soft rock complimenting events. In terms of a story-line, it's not particularly strong, with its strengths lying more as a character driven piece as opposed to a bit of narrative film-making. Sequences come and go in a fairly casual manner, I quite like this and, in any case, some scenes are somewhat distinctive, such as an oddball sequence that plays out in a Native American strip bar of all places.

This is one of those flicks that is either going to connect with the viewer or it isn't. However, if you appreciate a certain kind of oddball, low-key 70's American movie then I reckon this could be up your alley.
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4/10
I wish that I had Jesse's Girl.... not
Quinoa198416 November 2008
Warning: Spoilers
Best Friends is a part of the 8-movie 2-disc set of "drive-in" movies just released to DVD. They're packaged as obviously being filled with sex and some racy and dangerous scenarios. This one is probably not the best of the lot, not by a long-shot. The whole film's story is predicated on the fact that a) these two guys have been friends for 12 or 13 years without any kind of snafu, b) that nothing, *nothing*, has come between the two until Pat (Doug Chapin) is released from jail (I think it's jail, wherever he got the burn) and Jesse (Richard Benton)has found a girl he wants to settle down with, and most important c) that Jesse has never, not once, picked up on the homo-erotic tension from a lecherous being like Pat until this road trip to California.

That was three facts, but besides the point: this is trashy soap-opera stuff, acted with at best 1 1/2 dimensional prowess by its cast (it's not hard to see why Chapin, who could potentially be OK in bit parts or one-scene appearances and coincientally never acted again after thi, way overstays his welcome as the shifty 'friend' with the "tude" on the motorcycle), and with one exception- a disorientating fight on a beach- is filmed with barely minimal competence. I guess Susanne Benton is a nice eyeful, as is Ann Noland who, by the way, has a one-scene 'slip-up' with Jesse on a picnic blanket that is not used at all for any of its dramatic potential. It's not particularly horrendous (although Kathy's line "Jesse, he's trying to kill me!" during the climax had me howling), but don't rush out to see it first among the Drive-in collection.
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7/10
Best Friends
Scarecrow-8820 September 2009
Warning: Spoilers
Pat(Doug Chapin) returns from Vietnam and his best friend from youth, Jesse(Richard Hatch)introduces him to fiancé Kathy(Susanne Benton). Jo Ella(Ann Noland)is Pat's former flame and the four of them decide to go on a cross country escapade before Jesse and Kathy get married. Pat, as the others slowly learn, isn't the same man he was before Vietnam, and his obsessive desire to have Jesse all to himself, friends without the interference of others, yields destructive consequences.

Fascinating character study documents the desperate lengths a friend will resort to in regards to maintaining a relationship with his pal from childhood. Doug Chapin is a revelation as the obviously disturbed Pat, jealous of how Kathy has "ensnared" his buddy's love. I think there's an apparent homo-sexual subtext involved as Pat will commence in destroying the bond between Kathy and Jesse by any means possible. Jo Ella becomes an unfortunate tool used in this process, but when a sexual incident with Jesse doesn't erode their pact, Pat will eventually threaten to both rape and harm Kathy(..including a despicable action where Pat purposely leads Kathy towards an area where a slithering rattler is located).

Truly a sad picture(..through Chapin's stellar performance, you can see the traumatic damage of what war can cause, his psychosis fueled further by Jesse's love to another) with a tragic conclusion as Kathy yearns for Jesse to drive their RV home as it becomes clear that Pat is unstable and dangerous. The inevitable climax, after Jesse denounces Pat's demand to have Kathy to himself, is haunting and grim. Good performances, with a gripping narrative that explores the corrosive nature of a friendship that interrupts the bliss of a couple whose love is tested in every conceivable way. Beautiful photography and scenic locations where our four travel enhance the story.

What will remain with me is the fact that in not departing from his troubled, unpredictable friend, Jesse places Kathy in grave danger, not understanding(..or maybe, accepting, is a more appropriate word)just how serious a threat Pat really is to her.
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3/10
Scum fun
BandSAboutMovies5 August 2020
Warning: Spoilers
Jesse (Richard Hatch, Battlestar Galactica) is the mature one. Pat (Doug Chapin, Where Have All the People Gone) is the goofy one. Together with their girls, Kathy (Susanne Benton, A Boy and His Dog) and Jo Ella (Ann Noland, Satan's School for Girls), they decide to go on a RV trip across the country. For everyone that has told me what a good idea that sounds like, I point them to movies like this. Actually, have any movies about being on a Winnebago trip ever gone well?

Director Noel Nosseck made the move from movies like this into TV movies like this. Good for him. As for this movie, well, this movie promises some drive-in scumbag narrative and delivers a relationship film. No matter what, I always end up judging movies by their cover.
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8/10
An offbeat and interesting 70's road movie curio
Woodyanders4 April 2008
Warning: Spoilers
Mature, stable Jesse (a solid performance by Richard Hatch; Apollo on "Battlestar Galactica"), his more nutty and impulsive immature best friend Pat (an effectively loopy and intense portrayal by Doug Chapin), Jesse's caring fiancé Kathy (nicely played by the lovely Susanne Benton of "A Boy and His Dog" fame"), and Pat's fragile gal pal Jo Ella (essayed with sweet charm by the cute Ann Noland) all decide to embark on a cross country road trip in a Winnebago prior to facing the challenges of encroaching adulthood. Relationships between everyone become increasingly strained by this journey: Jesse has a fling with Jo Ella, Pat attempts to rape Kathy, and the whole thing culminates with the now deranged Pat terrorizing the other three on a beach while riding around on a motorcycle. As the above plot synopsis alone suggests, this film sure ain't your standard crude'n'sleazy Crown International Pictures drive-in exploitation fare. Granted, this feature does deliver the expected soft-core sex and tasty female nudity (Jo Ella does a wild impromptu tabletop striptease at a funky bar), but director Noel Nosseck and screenwriter Arnold Somkin focus more on low-key and incisive introspection rather than the usual seedy thrills. The gradual pace and character-driven plot take a little getting use to, but thankfully this movie hits an appealingly mellow and laid-back distinctly 70's groove early on and offers some poignant insights into the difficulty of growing up and facing responsibility. Moreover, there are quite a few bitter truths to be found in the tense and homoerotic friendship between Jesse and Pat. The acting from the attractive and personable young cast is uniformly strong, with Hatch in particular the stand-out among the bunch. Stephen M. Katz's bright, sunny, sparkling cinematography makes exquisite occasional use of fades and dissolves. Rick Cunha's catchy country-rock score likewise does the trick. An intriguing and ultimately pretty touching oddity.
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7/10
Surprisingly solid existential-psychological thriller is more than just exploitation fare
OldAle125 July 2009
Warning: Spoilers
Handsome (and frequently shirtless) young Jesse (Richard Hatch) arrives at an army discharge center with his fiancé Kathy (Susanne Benton) and her rather flaky friend Jo Ella (Ann Noland) to pick up his best buddy, Pat (Doug Chapin). Pat and Jesse have been friends since childhood as we see in the opening montage of B/W photos. Now they are both out of the army, an experience which (very subtly implied) seems to have affected Pat a bit more than Jesse. The two and their girls are going to drive across the desert with an RV and then Jesse and Kathy are going to get married and settle down. But Pat has some different ideas in mind....

This is definitely the most psychologically interesting, and best acted and overall most professional entry in this group of films (from the "Drive-in Cult Classics" DVD set) so far. Hatch and Chapin are both pretty solid, as the just-grown-up man starting to take responsibility, and his younger friend who refuses to and Ann Noland's Jo Ella is convincingly on-the-edge; only Benton's Kathy really comes up short. There's clearly a lot of homo-erotic subtext here -- though Pat keeps explaining that he just wants to screw around, pick up girls, that he doesn't want to settle down with Joe Ella or want Jesse to settle down either, it's obvious that he can't envision a life in which Jesse isn't his main partner, sexual or not. There's a fair bit of nudity here for the exploitation angle, but it's not really gratuitous, rather pretty ordinary as you'd expect with a bunch of young people on the road; even the strip club sequence where Jo Ella impulsively gets up on stage and starts taking it off in front of a bunch of mostly Native Americans on a reservation, leading to some momentary troubles, is very natural and feels quite realistic. Only at the end, as Pat goes really psycho and terrorizes the rest of the quartet on his motorcycle at night, resulting ultimately in an (apparently accidental) death does the film really falter -- it seems to be striving for some kind of existential ending on the one hand, and a more obviously satisfying and cathartic resolution on the other, awkwardly melding the two -- though the last moments I thought were pretty fine.

Offbeat and more serious than the typical Crown International drive-in fare, this has a nice instrumental score by Richard Cunha and some fairly dull country-rock songs interspersed; think low-rent Grateful Dead and Allman Brothers. The photography of the day scenes ranges from nice to excellent - the night stuff looks rather faky. Director Nosseck has kept busy doing cheesy stuff like this and a fair amount of TV work; this was his first film and shows a little bit of promise that he seems to have lived up to, but not really surpassed. Star Richard Hatch of course has played significant roles on both versions of Battlestar Galactica; this was apparently his first theatrical feature and though it's better than its reputation, it's not really something that was going to make him a star. At any rate, another fun entry in this fascinating cycle of cheesiness...
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7/10
The beat goes on....
metropolitansales2 September 2013
Excellent all the way! Not one bad scene in the whole movie. The only problem is the curse of Richard Hatch. No matter what he does film wise it turns out a loser. He's had the curse all his life, look up his film/TV credits and see what I mean. He ruins it in Best Friends by schlepping his way through most of the films scenes, and being too old for the part. His acting was fine per say but didn't compare to the exceptional performances by Noland and the rest of the cast. The ending was considered bad by most viewers but actually was kinda status quo for the era. ...Many films between 1967 and 1978 had the rather unfinished "imagine" type ending that left the viewer to determine the outcome in their own mind's eye.
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10/10
Great!
IcyRoses22 December 2009
I usually like films that focus on a few characters rather then many or even a lot. And "Best Friends" focuses exclusively on 4 characters.

Jessie (Richard Hatch) and Pat (Doug Chapin) have been friends since perhaps childhood. And they've done everything together. In the beginning we get a montage of pictures showing they've been through everything to the prom to the war. And this is how the movie gets it's edge. Jessie came home from Vietnam before Pat did, and it's pretty obvious the war has affected Pat, not Jessie. But, anyways, Jessie and his girlfriend Kathy (Susanne Benton) decide to drive to California to meet Pat when he gets off the airplane. See the thing is they want to take a cross country trip/vacation, and along comes Pat's estranged girlfriend Jo Ella (Ann Noland).

The movie starts off perfectly normal, when everyone see's each other again, it seems like this is going to be a fun road movie. But, soon tension starts to amount. Kathy is clingy to Jessie, and Pat is jealous. Plus, Kathy and Jessie has a much better, loving relationship, then Pat and Jo Ella. Pat is stilted and wants to enjoy life, Jo Ella wants to settle down and be married.

Things get even more heated when Jo Ella makes a fool out of herself by taking her top off at an Indian bar and a fight emerges with the group. Pat wants to protect Jessie (who was hit) but Kathy won't let him. It seems like Pat is becoming more and more obsessed with getting Kathy completely out of the picture and having Jessie to himself.

Then, the film takes a hard left turn. Pat sits Jo Ella down and tells her he has no intention on marrying her. Her life is immediately shattered. He then lies to her and tells her Jessie has been interested in her all this time and she should try to sleep with him. And then another turn comes when Pat sees Kathy alone and tells her Jessie would be a horrible husband and would probably cheat on her.

Jessie and Jo Ella sleep together, Pat tries to rape Kathy, and Jessie beats the holy hell out of Pat. This sets up the last half of the picture where Pat and Jessie try to regain their friendship, through what else, trying to find younger girls to have sex with.

In an ultimate turn of events in the movie (which I won't reveal for you loyal readers out there who will go see this), each one of the four's life are effected by the horrible tragedy that occurs at the end. It's a moment full of empathy, regret, and sadness. Pat ends the picture by saying "We've been together for so long.....we can have it all....." "Best Friends" was mismarketed as a grindhouse/drive-in film in 1974, so the company that released it decided to release it in theaters in early 1975, and I'm sure if it had the proper advertisement and some Academy members actually took the time to see it, it would have got some kind of Academy recognition.

The part of "Best Friends" that keeps coming up is, Ann Noland. She easily gives one of my favorite performances of all time as Jo Ella.

Ann Noland's Jo Ella is multi-layered. She is seemingly happy and carefree, yet she worries about her future nearly every day. She stays "Best Friends" most interesting character. The scene right before her and Jessie have sex where she throws leaves on him and seems playful, then starts crying and says "We're not getting married..." She is heartbreaking! For it's mellow and tense atmosphere, hippie soundtrack, and surprisingly great acting, including Ann Noland's shattering Jo Ella, makes "Best Friends" one of my favorite movies!
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Not Bad For A Drive-In Movie *SPOILERS*
eeleyebrown25 January 2011
Warning: Spoilers
Jesse and his best friend, the fun-loving and reckless, Pat have just gotten out of the army and are headed to Stocton, CA in an RV/mobile home with their girlfriends. Jesse is ready to marry his sweetheart and settle down. Pat reckons they're both too young to settle down and should go out and relive their teen years of drinking and bedding down girls. Pat ignores his own gorgeous girlfriend to try and convince his pal to return to their days of good times and debauchery. The mood turns ugly then deadly as it becomes obvious Pat isn't taking "no" for an answer and Jesse has to defend himself and the girls against his old war buddy/childhood friend.

I bought this at a flea market as part of a double feature of drive-in flicks. It was actually very good. Better than most B- movies of the time. The story was the typical "two best friends, one's growing up while the other is stuck in a time warp and still wants to relive the fun times of their youth" story. Though it looks cheesy and is a run of the mill drive-in movie with lots of bare flesh, the story is timeless. Lots of decent acting from all the leads, especially Richard Hatch, who would go on to star in "Battlestar Galacitca" does a great job as the level-headed, future- minded Jesse. Ann Noland also does a good job as Pat's fun-loving but fragile and heart- broken girlfriend. She turns out to be the soul of the movie. And she's got a hot body and a great set of legs.
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