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Sharky's Machine

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Wikipedia article




'Sharky's Machine' is a 1981 American neo-noirSilver, Alain; Ward, Elizabeth; eds. (1992). 'Film Noir: An Encyclopedic Reference to the American Style' (3rd ed.). Woodstock, New York: The Overlook Press. action thriller film directed by Burt Reynolds, who stars in the title role. It is an adaptation of William Diehl's first novel 'Sharky's Machine' (1978) with a screenplay by Gerald Di Pego. It also stars Vittorio Gassman, Brian Keith, Charles Durning, Earl Holliman, Bernie Casey, Henry Silva, Darryl Hickman, Richard Libertini, Rachel Ward and Joseph Mascolo.

The film was released by Warner Bros. on December 18, 1981, and received mostly positive reviews from critics. Ward was nominated for a Golden Globe Award for New Star of the Year Actress.

Plot



Tom Sharky, a narcotics sergeant for the Atlanta Police Department, is working on a transaction with drug dealer Highball. Another member of the force, Smiley, shows up unexpectedly during the sting, causing the drug dealer to run and Sharky to give chase, ultimately shooting the suspect on a MARTA bus, but only after the wounding of the bus driver and a passenger. In the aftermath, Sharky is demoted to the vice squad, which is considered the least desirable assignment in the police department.

In the depths of the vice-squad division, led by Friscoe, the arrest of small-time hooker Mabel results in the accidental discovery of a high-class prostitution ring that includes a beautiful escort named Dominoe, who charges $1,000 a night. Sharky and his new partners begin a surveillance of her apartment and discover that Dominoe is having a relationship with Donald Hotchkins, a candidate running for governor of Georgia.

With a team of downtrodden fellow investigators that includes veteran Papa, Arch, and surveillance man Nosh, referred to by Friscoe sarcastically as Sharky's "machine", he sets out to find where the trail leads. During one stakeout Dominoe is seen having a romantic rendezvous with Hotchkins who promises her a house to live in after he gets elected. During one of the other stakeouts, a mysterious crime kingpin known as Victor comes to the apartment. He has been controlling her life since she was a young girl, but now with lasting happiness in her future, she wants out. Victor seemingly agrees but, forces her to have sex with him one last time.

Sharky watches the affair from the rented apartment and is disgusted with what he sees, as he has privately been developing feelings for her while viewing her and listening to the bugged conversations. He begins to dream of a fantasy relationship with her. The next day, Sharky witnesses Dominoe being killed by a shotgun blast through her front door, disfiguring her face beyond recognition. The assassin, known as Billy Score, is a drug addict hired by Victor to kill Dominoe. He answers to Victor, as does Hotchkins, who himself is a powerless political stooge under Victor's rule.

While walking around Dominoe's apartment, she suddenly turns up to Sharky's surprise, and when asked where her friend Tiffany is, who Dominoe would lend her the apartment from time to time, Sharky comes to the realization that Billy shot the wrong woman. Meanwhile, Nosh telephones Sharky telling him that most of the surveillance tapes have disappeared from the police station, leaving both of them wondering if the investigation has been compromised. Nosh is then confronted by Billy Score, who kills him off-screen. Knowing it's a matter of time before they both end up dead, Sharky takes a reluctant Dominoe to his childhood home in the West End neighborhood. Sharky attempts to coax information about Victor from Dominoe, even going as far as assaulting her in frustration when she refuses but, becomes disgusted with himself and lets her be.

While still in hiding, Dominoe finds photos of herself from the stakeouts and confronts Sharky about it. His sexual obsession now exposed, the two begin to talk and learn about each other, Sharky buying his family home a few years back and fixing it up, to Dominoe finally giving Sharky the story about her past, how she was "discovered" by Victor when she was 12 and, been a sexual pawn of his ever since. Sharky confronts Victor at his penthouse apartment in the Westin Peachtree Plaza and vows to bring him to justice. Victor smugly tells Sharky that Dominoe is dead and cannot testify against him, but is stunned to be told by Sharky that she is still alive.

While attempting to find Nosh at his home, two men spring an attack on Sharky, and he is knocked out cold. He awakens on a boat, and is shocked to see Detective Smiley who wants Dominoe's location. Smiley, it turns out to be working for Victor. He tells Sharky how he ordered the deaths of him of his old narcotics division boss JoJo and Nosh. When Sharky still refuses to squeal, he orders the hitmen from the earlier ambush to cut off two of his fingers. Sharky then escapes capture and Smiley, and the other two hitmen. Later, at a Hotchkins political rally where he is celebrating his electoral win, he catches glimpses of both Dominoe and Sharky to the candidate's considerable shock. Hotchkins is arrested and taken into custody, and Victor finds out about it on the evening newscasts.

Billy Score, in a drugged and agitated state, shoots and kills Victor after the two argue. Almost immediately, Sharky and other police officers arrive at the penthouse apartment in an attempt to catch Billy. He is pursued through the upper floors of the Westin, where like a ghostly apparition he appears and disappears, killing Papa and seriously wounding Arch in a dual shootout where Billy is seriously wounded but is able to get back up again. Billy escapes to another part of the building under construction where Sharky ultimately finds him. Vowing to kill himself as to not give the police the satisfaction Billy is ultimately gunned down by Sharky, crashing through a window and plummeting to his death. In the end, Sharky is seen pushing Dominoe on a tire swing at his childhood home, where the two look very happy together.

Cast



* Burt Reynolds as Sergeant Tom Sharky

* Charles Durning as Lieutenant Friscoe

* Vittorio Gassman as Albert Scorelli / Victor D'Anton

* Brian Keith as Detective "Papa" Marindo

* Bernie Casey as Detective Arch Driscoll

* Rachel Ward as Dominoe Brittain

* Darryl Hickman as Detective Smiley

* Earl Holliman as Donald Hotchkins

* Henry Silva as Carlos "Billy Score" Scorelli

* Richard Libertini as Nosh

* John Fiedler as Barrett

* Hari Rhodes as "Highball Mary"

* Joseph Mascolo as Detective Joe "Jo-Jo" Tipps

* Carol Locatell as Mabel

* Tony King as "Kitten" Holmes

* James O'Connell as "Twigs"

* Suzee Pai as Siakwan

* Dan Inosanto as Chin #1

* Weaver Levy as Chin #2

* Aarika Wells as Tiffany

* May Keller as May

* Sheryl Kilby as Lisa

* Val Avery as Manny, Man With Siakwan

* William Diehl as Percy Sinclair

* Bill Nunn as Kitten's Bouncer (uncredited)

* Dar Robinson as Stunt Performer (uncredited)

Original novel



The film was based on a novel by William Diehl, a former journalist and producer, which was published in 1978. It was Diehl's first novel, written when Diehl was 53 and broke. It sold to Delacorte Press for $156,000 on the basis of a six-page outline and 120 pages. "It's a total fantasy come true," said Diehl.Front Page People: It's A Big Hit First Time For Author

By Rudy Maxa. The Washington Post 6 Aug 1978: SM4.
WESTWARD THEY COME, BIG BUCKS FOR BIG BOOKS

Rosenfield, Paul. Los Angeles Times 18 Feb 1979: n1.


The 'Washington Post' thought the novel "may make a decent movie" but "it tries to be three or four novels at once and manages to be none of them."'Sharky's Machine' -- Themes in Search of a Plot: Book World SHARKY'S MACHINE. By William Diehl (Delacorte. 374 pp. $8.95)

Reviewed by Joseph McLellan. The Washington Post 10 Aug 1978: B7.
The book did not become a best seller in hardback but did in paperback.

Production



Development

Film rights were bought prior to publication by the newly-formed Orion Pictures in 1978 for $400,000.Orion: A Humanistic Production

Kilday, Gregg. Los Angeles Times 5 Jan 1979: f13.
Burt Reynolds was to star and possibly direct.Book by Robin Cook Brings $1 Million

By ALJEAN HARMETZ Special to The New York Times 9 Jan 1979: C9.
FILM CLIPS: Orion Pictures Adds to Its Roster

Kilday, Gregg. Los Angeles Times 1 Nov 1978: h13.


"Sidney Sheldon sent me the novel, and I found it highly cinematic," said Reynolds.



Reynolds said he was attracted to the film because it was similar to the classic 1944 film noir 'Laura', his favorite movie. He talked to John Boorman about directing, but Boorman was too busy on 'Excalibur' and suggested Reynolds direct himself.

"I figured it was time to get away from 'Smokey'," Reynolds said. "I'd been doing a lot of comedy in recent years, and people had forgotten about 'Deliverance'."BURT REYNOLDS GOES STRAIGHT' IN SHARKY': [FIRST Edition]

Bob Thomas Associated Press. Boston Globe 19 Dec 1981: 1.


Casting

Reynolds says the "key" to the cast was getting Brian Keith to play a role. "After that it was easy to get actors."



Fashion model Rachel Ward was cast in the female lead after being spotted in Time magazine as "the face of the 80s".Reynolds to play tough cop

Daly, Maggie. Chicago Tribune 26 Feb 1981: b18.
She was cast six days before filming. Reynolds:

That was like starting King Kong' without the gorilla. I kept saying, She'll turn up, she'll turn up.' Then I saw Time magazine... I wanted an actress who could speak Italian and French, and since she was English, I thought she might have the kind of foreign attitude that I was seeking. When she came in my office and I heard her voice, deep like Bacall's, I thought she would be ideal. But Catherine Deneuve once told me that to judge how a beautiful woman will appear on the screen you must look through the camera and see if it has a love affair with her. I picked up a viewfinder and looked at Rachel. I damn near fell over.


"She's going to be a big star," said Reynolds. "She just jumps off the screen. She has the kind of sensuous appeal that Ava Gardner had."RACHEL WARD: HER FORTUNE IS HER FATE: RACHEL WARD

Mann, Roderick. Los Angeles Times 15 Dec 1981: g1.


Shooting

Filming took place in Atlanta from January to March 1981. "I liked the idea of working in Atlanta, where I've spent a lot of time," said Reynolds. "I made 'Deliverance', 'Smokey', 'The Longest Yard' and 'Gator', my first film as a director, all in Georgia."

At 220 feet, the stunt from Atlanta's Hyatt Regency Hotel (doubling for the Westin Peachtree Plaza) still stands as the highest free-fall stunt ever performed from a building for a commercially released film. The stuntman was Dar Robinson. Despite it being a record-setting fall, only the beginning of the stunt, as he goes through the window, was used in the film. A dummy was used for the outside wide shot of the fall beside the skyscraper.Filming jumps off to early start

Daly, Maggie. Chicago Tribune 3 June 1981: 16.


Diehl, who was 50 when he wrote the novel, saw the movie shot on location in and around his hometown of Atlanta. El Mongol played the part of the limo driver in the film.

Reynolds talked about his directing:

Most directors cast actors on the basis of what they've seen before, and they don't want surprises; they want the actor to give another version of what he's already done. I try to do the opposite. I tell the actors, 'You've done that before, so let's go for something else.' On this picture I did with my actors what I always wanted other directors to do with me, which is to say, 'O.K., I have what I want, now you do what you want.' Sometimes magical things happen that way. I had lots of ideas, but I was open to any ideas the actors had. There really was a wonderful feeling of camaraderie.


"In my picture the good guys win and the bad guys, the dopers, lose," said Reynolds. "That's important to me: I don't like dopers. I get mad as hell when I hear that studios are coddling actors who are always high on cocaine." Reynolds himself battled addiction to painkillers through the 80's and 90's.

Music

The opening credits use the 1979 hit song "Street Life", originally performed by The Crusaders with vocalist Randy Crawford. The recording in the film is a newer version (song length ~4:17) orchestrated by Doc Severinsen, inviting Crawford to reprise her vocal and who composed the original score, as well. This version is a much more powerful and faster-paced version with a full orchestra, and it was the one that Quentin Tarantino included in 'Jackie Brown' (1997) (Crawford is given the only credit on the song title).

As was standard for the time, little of Severinsen's score is included on the album, with many of his contributions being edited for the album tracks and several, like his version of "My Funny Valentine", being omitted altogether.

The soundtrack album has been re-released after more than 30 years on the Varse Sarabande label.Sharky's Machine original soundtrack, film credits

Soundtrack



The 'Sharky's Machine' original motion picture soundtrack contained these tracks:

# "Street Life" - Randy Crawford

# "Dope Bust" - Flora Purim and Buddy De Franco

# "Route 66" - The Manhattan Transfer

# "My Funny Valentine" - Chet Baker

# "High Energy" - Doc Severinsen

# "Love Theme From Sharky's Machine" - Sarah Vaughan

# "8 To 5 I Lose" - Joe Williams

# "My Funny Valentine" - Julie London

# "Sexercise" - Doc Severinsen

# "Let's Keep Dancing" - Peggy Lee

# "Sharky's Theme" - Eddie Harris

# "Before You" - Sarah Vaughan and Joe Williams

Reception



Critical reception

The film received mostly positive reviews from critics. As of April 2022, review aggregator Rotten Tomatoes reports that 83% of 23 critics have given the film a positive review, with an average rating of 6.4 out of 10.

Roger Ebert gave the film 3 out of 4 stars, writing that "'Sharkys Machine' contains all of the ingredients of a tough, violent, cynical big-city cop movie, but what makes it intriguing is the way that Burt Reynolds ... plays against those conventions.... The result of his ambition and restraint is a movie much more interesting than most cop thrillers."Ebert, Roger. [http://www.rogerebert.com/reviews/sharkys-machine-1981 "Sharky's Machine,"] Roger Ebert.com (Jan. 1, 1981). Janet Maslin wrote in 'The New York Times', "Burt Reynolds establishes himself as yet another movie star who is as valuable behind the camera as he is in front of it. Mr. Reynolds's third and best directorial effort ... is an unexpectedly accomplished cop thriller." 'Variety' noted, "Directing himself in 'Sharky's Machine,' Burt Reynolds has combined his own macho personality with what's popularly called mindless violence to come up with a seemingly guaranteed winner. Borrowing from buddy Clint Eastwood, Reynolds has already dubbed this one 'Dirty Harry Goes To Atlanta' and that's about as good a description as any.""Film Reviews: Sharky's Machine". 'Variety'. December 16, 1981. 16.

Gene Siskel of the 'Chicago Tribune' gave the film two-and-a-half stars out of four and lamented its "unfortunate split personality," explaining, "Obviously, Reynolds decided to hedge his bets in the film and play some of it for laughs. That's too bad, because although 'Sharky's Machine' is miles ahead of such recent Reynolds' trash as 'Smokey and the Bandit II' and 'The Cannonball Run,' what Reynolds could use most in his career is a solid dramatic role in which he didn't leer at the audience."Siskel, Gene (December 21, 1981). "Too bad: Burt's 'Sharky' gags on split personality". 'Chicago Tribune'. Section 5, p. 5. Sheila Benson of the 'Los Angeles Times' called the film "a brutal, fast-moving cop action film about love, corruption and politics in Atlanta ... Before the picture falls into lunatic excess in its last quarter, its best moments happen between Sharky and his team members, especially his wiretap expert played with impeccable timing by Richard Libertini."Benson, Sheila (December 18, 1981). "'Sharky': A Familiar Film Album". 'Los Angeles Times'. Part VI, p. 6. Gary Arnold of 'The Washington Post' wrote, "'Sharky's Machine' should become the runaway box-office smash of the season, unless a vast moviegoing public has suddenly sworn off glossy, viciously provocative diversion. Directing his own starring vehicle, that sly boots Burt Reynolds gives the audience a shamelessly lurid but stylish going-over, while putting a clever new wrinkle or two on his own status."Arnold, Gary (December 19, 1981). [https://www.washingtonpost.com/archive/lifestyle/1981/12/19/provocative-machine/3ee6e4e1-99aa-408d-b17f-be8ec037eda1/ "Provocative 'Machine'".] 'The Washington Post'. C1.

Box Office

The film was considered a moderate hit on initial release, making $35.6

million in North America.Seventh Annual Grosses Gloss

Meisel, Myron. Film Comment; New York Vol. 18, Iss. 2, (Mar/Apr 1982): 60-66,80.


Release



'Sharky's Machine' was released in theatres on December 18, 1981, and on DVD on October 20, 1998, by Warner Home Video. 'Sharky's Machine' was released Blu-ray on April 7, 2015, by Warner Home Video.

Legacy



In popular culture

The film has a major role in the backstory/lore of the television series 'The Venture Bros.' The season one episode "Careers in Science" states that in 1987, on the space station 'Gargantua-1', a showing of the film on VHS was the scene of a massacre of the space station's crew, as an unknown figure in a spacesuit opened the bay doors sucking the entire crew into the void of space, killing them.

References




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