Cult Clash: Charley Varrick (1973)

The 1970s was an incredible decade for cinema. One of
my personal favorite films from that era is Don
Siegel's crime film Charley Varrick. Story has it
Siegel's pal Clint Eastwood was originally supposed to
star in the film, but the part ended up going to the
late great Walter Matthau instead. Siegel's earlier
crime classics like The Killers (1964), Coogan's Bluff (1968) and Dirty Harry (1971) were all excellent, but
Charley Varrick had a different feel due in large part
to Walter Matthau's incredibly sharp performance.
The film is set in New Mexico, where Varrick (an
ex-stunt plane flyer) is now working as an independent
crop duster. To make some extra money, he and his wife
Nadine (Felicia Farr) hold up banks. After all, who
would suspect a cropduster to be a bank robber? At the
opening of the film, Charley, Nadine and their partner
Harman (Andy Robinson) hold up a bank in town. Things
begin to go wrong when a couple of local cops arrive
at the bank and notice that Charley's car license
plate number looks familiar. Charley enters the bank
in disguise and holds the place up while Nadine waits
outside. The cops find out their car is indeed stolen
and they circle back and watch her. She knows
something's up and when the cop walks up slowly to
arrest her, she gets the drop on him and shoots him
point blank in the head. The other cop fires off a
shot and Charley and Harman make it out, leaving their
fourth member dead inside. Nadine floors it, and
barely makes it out of the town after driving straight
into an oncoming cop car.
When they get to their rendezvous point, they can see
Nadine is dying from being shot in the hip. Charley
and Harman set up an explosive charge to destroy the
stolen car with Nadine in it. Charley takes the
wedding ring from Nadines hand, gives her one last
kiss and they load up the bag of money in Charley's
crop dusting van and take off. As they drive a long a
cop car roars past, then turns around and stops them.
Charley and Harman are nervous, but soon the
explosions they set earlier go off in the distance and
the cop has to leave. Charley and Harman get back to
his home (a trailer) and the two check out the money
and find they've scored big time.

Later on, the local
news explains there was a bank robbery, but claim the
robbers got away with $20,000. Charley knows
something's wrong because they counted out almost a
million in cash. He quickly puts together that
the money they stole is actually mob money and the
bank was a drop spot. Harman doesnt care, but Charley
knows they'll have to lay low and not spend any of the
money for at least 2 or 3 years. This obvioulsy enrages Harman, so he tells Charley no chickenshit is
gonna stop him from spending his fortune. Charley
decides to let Harman make the call on their next
move. He decides to load up Charley's plane and fly
out of Las Cruces to a safe place where they won't be
found. As much as Charley doesn't want to do this, he
knows it may be his only chance of escaping. Things
begin to get really messy when the mob sends an
eccentric hitman named Molly (Joe Don Baker) to the
area to find out who stole the money. Joe Don Baker is excellent in this film - one of my personal
favorite performances by him.
The great supporting cast includes character actors
such as Woodrow Parfrey, John Vernon and Norman Fell
as well as an early cameo by Walter Matthau's real
life son Charlie.
The opening credits sequence is great, with a completely different feel from what you'd expect for
a crime thriller from this time. Watch for an insert
title shot that actually comes much later in the film.
If you want a fast-paced, crackerjack 70s crime film,
Charley Varrick is a must see.
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