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Handlebar
Corral

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Presents


Our feature presentation will
be one of the following
VOTE for the movie you'd like
to see on Friday night.
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The true story of a man who
never gave up on his dreams of doing something big — and doing it very,
very fast — provides the basis for this engaging comedy drama. Burt
Munro (Anthony
Hopkins) was born in 1899 in
Invercargill, New Zealand. From childhood, Munro had a passion for
machines that moved fast, and when he was 21 he bought his first
motorcycle, an Indian model with a 600 cc engine. Motorcycles became an
obsession that stayed with Munro for the rest of his life, as he
constantly tinkered with his beloved Indian machine, modifying the
engine and frame, determined to see just how fast he could make it run.
In 1967, Munro decided it was high time he proved to himself and the
world just what he and his machine could do, and he booked passage for
the United States, with the goal of breaking the world's land speed
record at Utah's Bonneville Salt Flats. As Munro made his way across
America to Utah, he discovered not everyone took his dream seriously,
but some did, and he made a handful of friends along the way, including
Ada (Diane
Ladd), a widow who fell for Munro's
rough charm, and Fernando (Paul
Rodriguez), a car dealer who offered to
help him. However, when he finally arrived at Bonneville, Munro was told
his machine was unsafe to participate in the time trials, and — far
worse — he was too old to ride. It took some intervention from a ranking
American driver, Jim Moffett (Chris
Lawford), before Munro was given his
chance to ride the famous Salt Flats.
The World's Fastest Indian
was written and directed by
Roger Donaldson,
who early in his career made a documentary about the real Burt Munro,
Offerings to the Gods of Speed. |
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When a motorcycle-riding stuntman offers his
soul to Mephistopheles in order to save the life of the one he loves
most, he is forced to play host to a powerful supernatural entity whose
flaming skull visage strikes fear into the heart of his enemies in this
feature-film version of the long-running comic series. By day, Johnny
Blaze (actor and comic-book devotee
Nicolas Cage) is
one of the world's best-known stuntmen, but when the sun goes down and
he is in the presence of evil, the death-defying daredevil bursts into
flames to become the indestructible, motorcycle-riding antihero known to
the world as the Ghost Rider. |
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This documentary is a fascinating
study of legendary dare devil Evel Knievel, the man who jumped his
motorcycle to international fame. The film is narrated by Evel himself,
along with friends and family members, to tell the life story of this
amazing man. Born in Butte, Montana, Knievel started out on the wrong
side of the law, before learning to channel his incredible energy into
motorcycle stunt jumping. Shown in slow motion are his best known jumps
and crashes, including the jump of the fountain at Caesar's Palace and
the awe inspiring attempt at jumping the Snake River Canyon. There are
exciting clips from the 1971 feature film about Knievel, which starred
George Hamilton. The documentary is an insightful and inspiring look at
what it means to be courageous. Ironically, Evel Knievel's most
dangerous adversary has not turned out to be his death defying jumps,
but contracting hepatis C during one of many blood transfusions for
injuries suffered in his stunts. Knievel received a liver transplant in
1999, outdistancing death at least one more time |
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Tossing wristwatches away, two bikers hit the
road to find America in
Dennis Hopper's
anti-establishment classic. After a major cocaine sale to an L.A.
connection (Phil
Spector), free-wheeling potheads Billy
(Hopper)
and Wyatt, aka Captain America (Peter
Fonda, who also produced), motor
eastward to party at Mardi Gras before "retiring" to Florida with the
riches concealed in Wyatt's stars-and-stripes gas tank. As they ride
through the Southwest, they take a hitchhiker (Luke
Askew) to a struggling hippie commune
before they get thrown in a small-town jail for "parading without a
permit." Their cellmate, drunken ACLU lawyer George Hanson (Jack
Nicholson, replacing
Rip Torn), does
them a "groovy" favor by getting them out of jail and then decides to
join them. Babbling about Venusians, George discovers the joys of
smoking grass, but an encounter with Southern rednecks soon proves how
right he is about the danger posed by Billy's and Wyatt's unfettered
life in a country that has lost its ideals. With the straight world
closing in, Wyatt and Billy try to revel in New Orleans with some LSD
and hookers (Karen
Black and
Toni Basil), but
the acid trip is shot through with morbidity. Once they reach Florida,
Billy raves about attaining the American dream; Wyatt, however, knows
the truth: "We blew it." |
Thank you for voting!
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