I have always wanted to be in the movies, a dream shared
with billions of others, a number I do not feel is an over-estimate at this
point in time. After all, the movies have been around for well over a century
now (so have I) and, since their inception, inspired the dreams of oh-so-many
as they continue to do day in and day out. For me, I wanted to be a movie star, plain and
simple. This lifetime wish has made me no more significant than a grain of
sand. However, if it had come true, I
would have been an extremely famous grain of sand. And rich.
It took me a long while to fulfill any semblance of my
silver screen dreams. Like real estate, it was a matter of location, location,
location and Stockton, California wasn’t exactly the Entertainment Mecca of the
Universe. But, as I mentioned in previous posts, major and minor productions
did find their way from Hollywood to this hub of the San Joaquin Valley. I did
what I could to hunt down them while they were in the area with mixed results.
Stanley Kramer, legendary producer/director of The Defiant Ones, Judgment at Nuremburg and It’s a Mad, Mad, Mad, Mad World filmed a major
motion picture disaster about student unrest called RPM at the University of
the Pacific starring Anthony Quinn and Ann-Margaret. During a riot scene, I
snuck onto the set and hid in the bushes, filming the entire thing from my
vantage point with my Super 8. The footage turned out to be useless since it
turned out to be nothing but feet and foliage. When I finally saw the finished product, I couldn't find me anywhere in the riot footage, so I was very well camouflaged. Well, maybe too camouflaged. If there was a trace of me in this piece of dung, it would have made up for wasting any time at all slogging through Kramer's krapfest.
Not long after, Quinn returned to Fat City, scouting
locations for a feature he was developing to be shot, among other places, at Stockton
Jr. High. I recall Zorba himself standing in the courtyard between classes,
surrounded by admiring kids and signing autographs. Two guys my age, Paul
Stewart and Jeff Passegi, were walking past when Paul called to his friend in a
voice loud enough for the Oscar winning actor to hear, ”Hey, Passegi! That guy
kinda looks like Anthony Quinn!” This sarcasm caused Quinn turn to my smart ass
friend with a slow burn. Even though a pair of local girls had been cast in the
leading roles, complete with a feature in the Stockton fish wrap, the movie
fell through. I blame Paul.
It took me until after high school, but I finally made my
way legitimately onto a working set as an extra in the TV movie, Senior Year
(See post: Special Guest Star: Richard Donner) But I craved more and time was passing
me by. Eventually, I had the good fortune to find my way into not one but three
different shoots, not majors by any means, but minors of the memorable kind.
In 1981, I was deeply ensconced in Pollardville, an
independent company arrived in the area for a film of unknown origin and
content entitled Under Arrest. Thanks to Bill Humphreys, who had previously worked
in television production down Los Angeles way in the 1970s, scored a casting
gig on UA. This insured that most of us Pollardvillians were hired for roles
big and small for this movie that was to be shot in locations in and around
Stockton, Morada and Amador County, not to mention on the streets of our very
own Pollardville Ghost Town.
A period piece of sorts, set in perhaps the late Thirties or
early Forties, I was cast a newsboy (an honest to Buddha speaking role, no
less!) who had to alert the main character, a small time thief, that the cops
wuz watchin’ him. It had this Warner Brothers gangster vibe, so I affected some
kind of a bastardized Bowery Boys accent that would have made Leo Gorcey wince.
Little did I know that Under Arrest was a fabled Based on True Story and shot
on the same locations where this tale actually unfolded. Therefore, my sequence
was filmed in downtown Jackson in the foothills of Northern California, not the
streets of Flatbush where I thought I belonged. Here I am, Frankie Darro’s long
lost littler bruddah from Brooklyn in the middle of the Mother Lode. Oy.
I also managed to grab a couple of non-speaking roles as
well. The first, a carnival barker (in appropriate disguise, of course) and as
a double for my friend Ed Thorpe who had played a deputy to Bill’s country sheriff.
(We went from Bedford-Stuyvesant to Mayberry in one fell swoop!) Ed had moved
to Santa Barbara long before the crew returned for some re-shoots and pick ups,
so I filled in as the deputy loping down the street calling for the sheriff in
long shot.
Once completed, we were granted an advanced screening of the
finished product at our very own Palace Showboat. Projection wasn’t an issue in
our theater since Under Arrest was shot on 16mm, a format we could easily
accommodate. A borrowed projector and a screen set center stage later, poof!
Instant cinema!
Under Arrest turned out to be a revelation in more ways than
one. First of all, it had the look and feel of a higher budgeted production. As
a whole, we Palace Showboat Players came off quite nicely and we had every
reason to be proud of what we did on screen, even me, not the Guys and Dolls
reject I had imagined. (Our own D.W, Landingham liked to kid that he had three
lines as a shopkeeper robbed by the main character: “I don’t know what you’re
talking about”, “I don’t know what you’re talking about” and “I don’t know what
you’re talking about.”) The film’s main cast, while mostly unknowns, did
include two actors we had no idea had been involved since their scenes were
shot after we had all wrapped and may have been filmed in L.A. Richard Moll,
only months shy of appearing as Bull in the Harry Anderson sitcom Night Court
was totally unrecognizable at first glance since he sported a full head of
hair, not the scalping he had on the show. The other cast member had been
associated with another film, though not as the main character not as a
performer. Billy Hayes was the subject of his own Based on a True Story,
Midnight Express, all about the hash smuggler who spent time in Turkish prison,
played in the film by Brad Davis. Hayes must have been dipping his toe in the
acting game, though nothing much more came out of it after this movie. Hope he
didn’t return to his wicked, wicked ways.
What really blew our minds was that Under Arrest turned out
to be, not a period crime drama, but a faith based story. Based on the
autobiography of Phil Thatcher, this story is a classic Bad Boy Meets Jesus and
Makes Good story and, for a film of this nature, really didn’t seem
particularly preachy. Maybe the director, William Fields, had something to do
with this, downplaying what could have an infomercial for Christianity and
taking a more subtle approach. To be sure, its message was effectively signed,
sealed and delivered, only not with the usual sledgehammer to the soul.
Overall, I gave Under Arrest the full Ebert.
What became of Under Arrest in the years that passed is open
to speculation. Only an hour in length, it wouldn’t have a theatrical release.
I imagine it was carted around the country and shown to church groups, maybe
even with a Q and A with Mr. Thatcher himself. I found a VHS copy in a
Christian bookstore around the turn of the century. When I saw it on the shelf,
I placed it over one of Willie Aames’ Bibleman episodes because…well, do you
have to ask? Over time, I’ve had difficulty finding it on DVD until recently.
It seems that an outfit called New Liberty Videos, a company owned by the film’s
editor, Brian Barkley, acquired it and changed the title to The Phil Thatcher
Story, a title even more generic than the first, but at least it’s been rescued
from obscurity. It's available with two other movies under a separate title, Free Indeed. Also, the Christian Film Database which lists the film on their
site, has mistakenly credited Mr. Barkley as the director when it was helmed by
William Fields. Still, the preview offered on CFDb, the New Liberty page as
well as YouTube confirms that first impression I had those many years ago. It
looks pretty damn good.
UNDER ARREST aka THE PHIL THATCHER STORY/FREE INDEED
UNDER ARREST aka THE PHIL THATCHER STORY/FREE INDEED
From top to bottom, Under Arrest was a downright pleasant
experience, virtually stress free to the point that it almost spoiled me. This movie was the polar opposite of the next
two productions with which I became involved further down the road, not just in
content, but behind the scenes as well. Divine Intervention, perhaps?
At the end of the day or the beginning or sometime late in
the afternoon, I’m proud to have Under Arrest on my resume. After all, it’s responsible for my very first
IMDb credit.
Newsboy: Scott Cherney.
Newsboy: Scott Cherney.
For that, that is only thing for me to say:
Hallelujah!
Maybe that’ll get me on CMDb.