This movie is about Sonny Hooper "
The Greatest Stuntman Alive" and though this character is fictional he is clearly based on events and people from former stuntman, now turned director,
Hal Needham’s life. There have been many movies about the world of filmmaking, and even a few about stuntmen, but
Hooper is not so much a movie about stuntmen as it is a love letter to them.
Sonny Hooper (
Burt Reynolds) is a veteran stuntman who is entering the twilight of his career as years of being “
The Greatest Stuntman Alive” has taken a severe toll on his body. His best friend and fellow stuntie Cully (
James Best)
is concerned for his Hooper’s health all the while reluctantly feeding
him Percocets to ease his pain. His long-time girlfriend Gwen (
Sally Field) wants to settle down but hopefully with a non-paralyzed Hooper. New on the scene is a hotshot kid Delmore "Ski" Shidski (
Jan-Michael Vincent) who is of the new breed of stuntmen that are replacing the old guard.
A very handsome and dashing breed.
Now, the paragraph above may make
Hooper
out to be some kind of an introspective look at one of the most
interesting aspects of the film industry, it’s not. Hal Needham and his
cronies have got together to a have a blast and show off their skills,
and any drama this movie put forth is almost by accident. After the huge
success with
Smokey and the Bandit Needham and Reynolds almost had carte blanche when it came to their next project, and it shows, as
Hooper
is basically a collection of stunt gags with barely a plot to hold them
together. Watching the film I got the impression that they all were
just sitting around a bar asking questions like, “
What’s the world’s record for highest freefall without a parachute?”
“Damn, that's pretty high.”
In
Smokey and the Bandit they had the great Jackie Gleason as the main antagonist Sheriff Buford T. Justice and he was brilliant, while in
Hooper we have
Robert Klein
as prima donna director Roger Deal who is a thinly veiled send-up of
director Peter Bogdanovich. Sadly, he is neither very funny or all that
interesting of a character, nor is his sidekick Tony (
Alfie Wise) who is around for the sole purpose of short jokes.
“Short people got no reason to live.”
At
one point an officer from the Humane Society is on set to ensure that a
dog will not be used during a high fall stunt. He is reassured that a
fake dog will be making the fall with Hooper, but because the fake dog
looks terrible Tony tells Hooper to do it with the real one. What is
hilarious is that because the makers of Hooper can’t use a real dog Burt
Reynolds is seen holding what is clearly a stuffed dog. Totally ruin
the movies “reality.”
The plot, if you can call it a plot, is about a mad director Roger Deal making a huge James Bond type film starring
Adam West called
The Spy Who Laughed at Danger,
and how he keeps upping the stakes to the point where there is a good
chance someone is going to die in the process. Will Hooper agree to do
the dangerous rocket-car jump for the end of the movie, or will he walk
away while he can still walk?
Yeah, that really was never in question.
The
film is chock full of some amazing stunts but for me the truly
interesting thing they do here is make the character of Ski likable and
not a villainous rival. That Burt Reynolds and Jan-Michael Vincent have
better on screen charisma together than Burt has with real-life
girlfriend Sally Field in this movie is odd but at least it makes for a
better movie. I really wish they’d retire the clichéd disapproving
girlfriend that threatens to leave her man unless he quits. It’s
certainly not needed in a movie about car chases, bar brawls and
explosions.
“Adam, I’ll do the stunt if you marry Sally Fields."
Don’t
get it wrong, this is a fun film and if you like big action set pieces
this movie ends with a doozy, and Burt Reynolds has clearly embraced his
charmingly smug persona that made him a star. I just wish that a film
directed by a former stuntman would have been a bit more accurate on how
stunt work actually functions on set instead of the silly Hollywood
version we get here.
Trivia: The title character "Hooper" is a reference to the name "Hooker" as in
Buddy Joe Hooker
who is one of the best stuntmen in the business and who also worked on
this film. The character of Hooper though is mostly based on the
Jock Mahoney, one of the greatest stuntmen of all time and stepfather to Sally Field.
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