Cross Country (1983) Poster

(1983)

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Canadian-made entry into the American road-trip/thriller genre
lazarillo21 August 2011
Although set entirely in America (a violent road trip from Philadelphia to Arizona), this is very obviously a Canadian film directed by Paul Lynch, the hoser who did "Prom Night" and "Humongous", and featuring a whole roster of Canadian character actors. It starts with the bloody murder of a prostitute in Philly. The main suspect, a local businessman (Richard Beymer) suddenly leaves town for Arizona. Along the way he meets a stripper (Nina Axelrod) and later picks up her and a male friend (Brent Carver) hitchhiking. The relationship between the stripper and the male friend is a little ambiguous, but it doesn't take long for Beymer's character to start schtupping Axelrod's. A romantic triangle develops for awhile (and a suspicious Beymer roughs up the other male at one point). They later stop at a bar on the Mississipi River and Carver's character tries to add a fourth member to the party, a woman of easy virtue played by Robert Weiss. Meanwhile, the main trio is being pursued by such Canadian character actor/heavies as Michael Ironside and Arthur Schellenberger.

This is one of those offbeat thrillers where pretty much EVERYONE acts suspicious, and it's hard to figure out until the very end exactly what the hell is really going. Still, while it's perhaps not a high compliment, this is generally a more successful film than Paul Lynch's two more famous ones. The American star Richard Beymer is perhaps best known today for his work with another Lynch, David Lynch, in his seminal TV series "Twin Peaks" (he was also earlier in this thing called "West Side Story"). Nina Axelrod had a brief career in 80's low-budget/genre fare, but I still always manage to get her confused with 80's MTV "VJ" Nina Blackwood or 80's porn star Nina Hartley. Although she was always a supporting actress, nubile Canadian cutie Roberta Weiss was always pretty memorable--as a victim of the Castle Rock Killer in David Cronenberg's "The Dead Zone", as a reform-school girl who gets a spanking in "Autumn Born", and as teen witch who seduces her teacher in an episode of the Canadian-lensed anthology series "The Hitchhiker". (Just for the record, Weiss spends about half her screen time here lolling around topless on a bed as Carver tries to induce her into a three-way with Axelrod while Beymer looks on). The most famous actor today, however, is no doubt Michael Ironside, but he has a relativey small role here.

At the moment this film seems relegated to the VHS graveyard with a DVD release anytime soon looking pretty unlikely. Still as 80's-era Canadian tax shelter products go, this isn't too bad, and it certainly deserves at least a LITTLE better of a fate.
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3/10
The book was better.
Flixer195717 August 2002
**Possible Spolers ahead**

Crazed ad exec Richard Beymer heads west with stripper Nina Axelrod and drifter Brent Carver in tow. A hooker has been butchered back on the East Coast and all signs point to Beymer so you know he probably didn't do it--which doesn't stop corrupt cop Michael Ironside from going to shake him down. Beymer goes through the entire picture with a look of perpetual pain on his face--as will any viewers who enjoyed Herbert Kastle's 1975 novel. The book was not only pornographic but full of severed limbs and spilled guts to the point where you had to wash the blood off your hands after reading it. In spite of some R-rated sexcapades and violence the film is a kiddie cartoon by comparison. Toning it down for an R was a necessary evil considering the power of the MPAA but scripters Logan N. Danforth and William Gray made too many arbitrary changes and took too many detours from Kastle's original plot.

When I make my fortune I'll buy the rights to remake CROSS COUNTRY, follow the book to the letter and shoot for an NC-17. I'll hang on to my copy of the 1983 travesty in the meantime, if only because Ms. Axelrod is so darn easy on the eyeballs.
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7/10
A sexy, suspenseful who-done-it!
divaaa26 December 1998
Someone is a killer. In New York a brutal murder leaves a beautiful young woman dead in her bedroom. By the time the corpse is discovered in a pool of blood, her estranged husband is on the way to Arizona after an angry confrontation between the two. Is he the killer - the cops think so - or is it the sexy babe who he picks up in a bar? Or maybe the handsome odd-ball that hitches a ride? Alliances change and the plot twists as they drive from the east coast to the Grand Canyon - an obsessed cop in pursuit.

The plot twists and weird relationships will keep you on the edge of your seat.
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7/10
Worth a look.
johnbalance20 August 2017
Warning: Spoilers
As stated in some previous reviews this is one that hasn't been released on DVD or Blu Ray to date. I watched it on a 1983 Thorn EMI VHS cassette which I found in a charity shop. Richard Beymer's advertising exec Evan Bley becomes a murder suspect when he hits the road after his ex is found dead in her apartment (which is in Philapelphia, not New York as this site states). He hooks up with sexy blonde stripper Lois (Nina Axelrood) and her "friend" John (Brent Carver). This pairs relationship is kept ambiguous.Is John her lover, pimp or ex? He certainly harbors something dark in his feelings for her. My hunch is that they might be brother and sister but it's really open to interpretation. There's a great sleazy scene where Nina puts on a lesbian show with a buxom floozy John picks up in a bar. This turns out to be part of Johns mind games with Nina and Evan. During this time Michael Ironside's detective is on Evans trail and he has his own agenda for tracking him down. It all comes to a head in the Grand Canyon. It does keep you guessing but the astute viewer will have worked out the identity of the murderer halfway through. Well worth a look if you get the chance.
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7/10
"He's a very tense man."
lost-in-limbo30 December 2011
Warning: Spoilers
Director Paul Lynch (known for films like the original "Prom Night", "Bullies" and "Humungous") churns out one very interestingly dramatic, if sleazy pot-boiler that weaves together two plot threads becoming a psychological tense, but lingeringly stark Canadian-made killer on the road movie. A young woman is found brutally murdered in her apartment with the suspicion falling on the victims ex-boyfriend Evan. Who happens to be an advertising executive that has just taken leave, heading on a road trip to California and coming for the ride is a dancer/actress and her male friend. But on his trail is detective Ed Roersch. The unconstrained plot (adapted from Herbert Kastle's even more exploitative novel of the same title) never telegraphs that much, but builds suspicion accordingly against our protagonist (victim or not?) and everyone else. Something dangerous and unsettling seems to be there and the script keeps the energy quite nervy, especially the complicated connection between the three; our protagonist, the nymph girl and her ex-con "friend" who seems to have a certain, ambiguous influence over her in their cross-country journey. The amount times he puts her in trouble, for her only to stick up for him… like keeping hold of the protagonist's wallet after getting in a bar fight, pulling out a knife on him, stealing his gun and then the unforgettable sexual hotel exchange involving Roberta Weiss' flirty character and Axelrod. There's something sly growing, but the narrative keeps it hidden and the few murders (which we don't see) are purposely calculated. While this road trip is going on, we have the homicide detective doing his job putting the pieces together in this murder investigation and then doing something that he wouldn't have done but certain circumstances surrounding him (a very sick wife) put him in a position that is hard to pass up. Even if it's only small, Michael Ironside's weathered performance as the detective is fitting. Richard Beymer as the protagonist is steely poised, but it's the likes of a lively Nina Axelrod and a twitchy Brent Carver who leave an impression as the two hitch-hikers. All of these character's (from the trio to the detective on the case) seem to have a shady side and to be motivated by their underlining passions, which lead on to obsession to seeing it through and this somehow destroys them in some shape/or puts them into comprising positions. It's a moodily compelling set-up, if unconventional and its revelation opens up a real can of worms. When it comes to its finale, it's fairly risible but spectacular in its way of getting rid of unwanted attention ("We belong together"). Paul Lynch's direction is confident and the music score while slight had an unnerving edge.

"We tend to repeat our mistakes than correcting them."
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9/10
An excellent and unjustly overlooked 80's thriller gem
Woodyanders16 September 2006
Warning: Spoilers
Uptight Philadelphia advertising executive Evan (coolly played with utmost assurance by Richard Beymer) immediately skips town in his Mercedes following the murder of a high class call girl. Prior to embarking on a cross country road trip to California Evan picks up neurotic prostitute, topless dancer and all-around kooky nympho nutcase Lois (an achingly vulnerable open-wound performance by luscious blonde honey Nina Axelrod, a flash-in-the-pan early 80's fright film scream queen who eventually quit acting and became a casting director) and her equally high strung ex-con musician boyfriend John (essayed with mucho jittery menace by Brent Carver). The dangerously unstable wacko twosome proceed to greatly exacerbate the severity of Evan's already dire predicament. Meanwhile, ramrod homicide detective and would-be black mailer Ed Roersch (sternly portrayed by the ever-solid Michael Ironside) gives dogged chase.

Paul ("Prom Night") Lynch's stark, sturdy and unwavering direction adroitly milks every last ounce of sweaty tension and dramatic volatility from the wickedly crafty and tortuous script by Logan N. Danforth and William Gray, creating plenty of fierce suspense and edgy atmosphere as the engrossingly dark, deviant and disturbing thriller story unfolds. The central narrative supplies a genuinely startling and provocative meditation on the complex interrelationship between passion and obsession, murder and betrayal, deceit and perversion in which both moral and emotional lines are blurred and nothing is what it initially seems to be. Chris Rea's superbly spare'n'shuddery score, Rene Verzier's polished cinematography and the uniformly stone cold aces acting from a super cast round out the goodies to be savored in this shamefully neglected and undervalued spot-on spine-chilling powerhouse.
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8/10
Take the trip
PeterMitchell-506-56436431 October 2012
If there was ever a movie that had style, this is it... all the way through. I first saw this movie when I was fourteen with my friend. There was a lesbian scene in the latter part of my movie. I remember my Mum saying to my friend who was two years younger, "Should you really be watching this". My eyes were literally glued to the screen. It would've taken the forces of nature to pull em' off. This is one of those movies that doesn't hold back and boldly goes where a lot of others don't, whether violence, sex, nudity. One example that springs straight to mind is a stripper/dancer, flaunting her big and I mean big... you know, near the start of the movie, where successful ad exec, Evan Bley, (old veteran actor Beymer) is having one last drink, before leaving Philly and going cross country through beautiful Canada. Why? He's just tired and needs a break from his job. Or is he the one who's committed this ghastly murder, and I do mean GHASTLY, (even by old day standards) of his ex lover/model/girlfriend/high class call girl, some other names I could mention, mostly unsavory. Accompanying him on his trip, after things get a bit ugly back at the bar, is part time stripper, budding model/actress, Lois and her loser musician friend, John, played with dynamic believability by the great Brent Carver. This movie has a real sense of danger and menace, mostly due to Beymer's character. Is he really the psycho who did the girl? Footnote: I must admit I was shocked who the killer was, but I'll leave that up to you to decide. Moving on, enter hot shot detective, Ed Roersch, the cool Michael Ironside, before he made a name for himself. He has his own reasons for going after Beymer, and they're all selfish too. First, before jetting off and catching up with Beymer, he has make a few calls, question suspects and associates, some real dubious and sleazy types, including an old private investigator who stumbled across the murder scene. You'll remember this guy as the bartender in that other Canadian thriller, Stone Cold Dead. Get this, this PI sleeps in crummy motels, keeps dirty mags, and likes to steal jewellery off dead people, and is LOA-DED! and as Ironside's character tells him, heartlessly, while interrogating him, "You need your mouth washed" Those words precede Ironside, getting physical by literally ramming this guy's head down a toilet bowl, but having the decency to flush it, afterwards. As in thriller form, Cross Country has been plotted very well. It's a tight, compact little movie, that manipulates you-Suspect one here, suspect two there. It really works. That's what a good thriller is, and that this is. That lesbian sex scene is a killer. It always stays with me. I couldn't quite believe it when I first viewed it. A classic scene ending, is where Ironside's rental car, that Beymer steals, goes off a cliff of the real Grand Canyon, and plummets for hundreds of meters, before becoming dreck, fantastically shot against a great Chris Rea Soundtrack. He provides other tracks to the movie also. Another plus. Also the scene with Beymer, stripping off Lois's clothes (eye candy, Nina Axelrod-Motel Hell) in the motel room, is interesting in the fact, to when does rape end, and pleasure begin. Meanwhile, John, solo, is going crazy outside, managing to break into the motel with his little flick knife and stealing a coke out of it's vendor. This movie doesn't deserve to be knocked the way it has. Hopefully you will look beyond the bad reviews, and make up your own mind. So, collect your honey and sit down to a thrilling and engrossing night of viewing. It'll be worth believe me. Cross Country rules. And so does it's striking front cover.
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