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The Grasshopper (1970 film)

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The Grasshopper
Directed byJerry Paris
Written byJerry Belson
Garry Marshall
Based onnovel by Mark McShane
Produced byGarry Marshall
Jerry Paris
Jerry Belson
StarringJacqueline Bisset
Jim Brown
Joseph Cotten
CinematographySam Leavitt
Edited byAaron Stell
Music byBilly Goldenberg
Distributed byNational General Pictures
Release date
  • May 27, 1970 (1970-05-27)
Running time
98 minutes
CountryUnited States
LanguageEnglish
Box office$2 million (US/ Canada rentals)[1]

The Grasshopper is a 1970 drama film directed by Jerry Paris. It stars Jacqueline Bisset, Jim Brown, Joseph Cotten and Christopher Stone. Penny Marshall appears in a very small role.

Plot

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Christine Adams, a cheerful 19-year-old from British Columbia, Canada, travels to Los Angeles to be with her fiance, who works there in a bank. When the relationship doesn't work out, she moves to Las Vegas.

She finds work as a showgirl and meets Tommy Marcott, an African-American former pro football player who holds an executive position at the casino, though in truth he is only used as a "celebrity greeter." They fall in love and get married, but when Tommy gives a severe beating to a wealthy casino patron who had beaten and raped Christine, they flee Vegas, discussing the possibility that the casino patron will seek revenge. In Los Angeles, Tommy is unable to get a good job and his and Christine's relationship suffers, and then Tommy is shot dead on a basketball court, likely the anticipated act of revenge.

After the funeral, Christine has a bad reaction to illicit drugs she consumes in her grief. She returns to Las Vegas and finds work as a V.I.P. "party girl". In that capacity she meets and is persuaded by wealthy client Richard Morgan to return to Los Angeles and be his mistress.

Christine is fond of Richard but she gets bored in her new life, so she becomes romantically involved with Jay Rigney, who she had previously known platonically. She convinces Jay that she can get enough money that they can buy a ranch together. However that plan is doomed when Richard asks Christine to marry him, wanting her to spend all her time with him.

Jay persuades Christine that the only way they can keep the dream of getting a ranch alive is if she becomes a prostitute and he works as her pimp. She ends her relationship with Richard and for a while things go as they planned. However one night she returns to the apartment she shares with Jay to discover he has left her and taken all of their money.

Christine goes to the airport where Richard’s private plane is kept and, by promising “some fun” and sharing a marijuana joint, induces airfield employee Elroy, who she had previously flirted with, to take her up in a skywriting plane. Still sharing the joint, Christine has Elroy write "FUCK IT" across the sky, to the amusement or consternation of those below. The police take away Christine and Elroy when they land. While being arrested Christine is asked her age, to which she replies, “twenty-two”.

Cast

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Production

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Parts of the film were shot in Heber, Utah.[2]

Bisset later said there "were good bits" in the film. "It could have been interesting. The girl in that film was a female Alfie."[3]

Release

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The film opened in Chicago and San Francisco in the week ended May 27, 1970.[4]

The Grasshopper was released March 23, 2009 on DVD by Warner Bros. via the Warner Archive DVD-on-demand service.

Reception

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The film grossed $46,000 in its opening week.[4] Jim Craddock of VideoHound wrote that "Bisset is a starstruck Canadian undone by the bright lights and big cities of America. By age 22, she's a burnt-out prostitute in Las Vegas. Cheerless but compelling". [5]

Tom Lisanti and Louis Paul state that "Bisset gave one of her finest performances, as a naïve woman who abandons her family for the glamour of Las Vegas".[6] Shirley Halperin and Steve Bloom wrote that Bisset is "at the peak of her hotness here, and for some that might be enough to make this pseudofeminist classic worth the watch", adding that she "exudes both naivete and badassness as her character".[7]

See also

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References

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  1. ^ "Big Rental Films of 1970". Variety. 6 January 1971. p. 11.
  2. ^ D'Arc, James V. (2010). When Hollywood came to town: a history of moviemaking in Utah (1st ed.). Layton, Utah: Gibbs Smith. ISBN 9781423605874.
  3. ^ Movies: The decisive, decorative, diplomatic Miss Bisset Kramer, Carol. Chicago Tribune 11 Mar 1973: e6.
  4. ^ a b "50 Top-Grossing Films". Variety. June 3, 1970. p. 9.
  5. ^ VideoHound's Golden Movie Retriever: 2002. Visible Ink Press. 2002. p. 549. ISBN 978-0-7876-5755-0.
  6. ^ Tom Lisanti, Louis Paul (2002). Film Fatales: Women in Espionage Films and Television, 1962-1973. McFarland. p. 67. ISBN 978-0-7864-1194-8.
  7. ^ Shirley Halperin, Steve Bloom (2011). Reefer Movie Madness: The Ultimate Stoner Film Guide. Abrams. p. 237. ISBN 978-1-61312-016-3.
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