Street Machine

SPEEDTRAP 1977

> CRAZY FOR SPEED AND DRIVING FOR REVENGE!

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THERE’S something about the loose nature of a 1970s-era flick that warms my heart, and the opening scenes of Speedtrap quickly drew a smile of satisfacti­on from me. The private investigat­or was a popular lead character for films of this era, and in Speedtrap, we find the flared jeanwearin­g, mutton-chopped ex-detective Pete Novick (Joe Don Baker) front and centre. His Starsky & Hutchvibe is further cemented by the chiselled white stripes plastered down the sides of his suitably jacked red Charger, and it’s in this trusty steed that we find him blasting his way into the local cop shop and making himself right at home.

It seems a crack local high-end car thief and electronic­s genius dubbed ‘The Road Runner’ is causing significan­t financial woes for a bunch of local insurance companies, which team up to hire Novick to investigat­e the thefts.

A chance encounter with his ex-squeeze, computerwh­iz police officer Niffty Nolan (a very young Tyne Daly of 1980s TV staple Cagney & Lacey), sorts Novick with some interestin­g intel on The Road Runner, causing police captain Hogan (Morgan Woodward) to reluctantl­y bring Novick in to assist the cops’ investigat­ion.

With help from his business partner, Billy (Richard

Jaeckel), and Billy’s psychic-medium sister, ‘New Blossom’ (Lana Wood), it isn’t long before Novick and his stink-bugging Charger are embroiled in a swag of chases with The Road Runner – creating a decent tally of stacked black-and-white patrol cars in the process – and Novick soon learns there seems to be more to this case than meets the eye.

It turns out good ol’ Captain Hogan is heavily on the take to local mobster Spillano (Robert Loggia), and when The Road Runner swipes Spillano’s Lincoln Continenta­l with a million dollars’ worth of smack in the boot, the heat is seriously on Hogan to use his influence and recover both the Lincoln and the drugs intact.

A wild chase finale reveals The Road Runner to be someone working well and truly in the loop, his vehicle heists masking a deeply personal vendetta.

VERDICT: 3/5

WITH a paper-thin plot, Speedtrap is mainly an excuse to string together a bunch of cool car chase scenes – and therein lies the flick’s appeal. Joe Don Baker does a pretty good job as the hip Novick, while a random boom mic dangling into shot now and then provides some unintended chuckles and reminds you that we’re firmly in low-budget territory here.

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