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Wild Thing (film)

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Wild Thing
Directed byMax Reid
Screenplay byJohn Sayles
Story byLarry Stamper
Produced byDavid Calloway
Nicolas Clermont
StarringRobert Knepper
Kathleen Quinlan
CinematographyRené Verzier
Edited byBattle Davis
Steven Rosenblum
Music byGeorge S. Clinton
Production
company
Filmline International[1]
Distributed byAtlantic Releasing Corporation[1]
Release date
  • April 17, 1987 (1987-04-17)
Running time
92 minutes
CountryUnited States
LanguageEnglish
Box officeUS$84,000

Wild Thing is a 1987 film directed by Max Reid and starring Robert Knepper and Kathleen Quinlan. The screenplay was by John Sayles and the story by Larry Stamper. The film was distributed by the Atlantic Entertainment Group.

Plot[edit]

When his parents are killed in a botched drug deal, a young boy is taken in by a bag lady who teaches him about the Blue Coats (Cops) and White Coats (Doctors). After her death, he becomes an urban Tarzan defending innocents in a large city. He soon becomes an urban legend and champion of street justice, espousing a 1960s philosophy and coming to the aid of the helpless and oppressed. Jane (Kathleen Quinlan) is the concerned social worker who falls for the hero. Armed with a bow and arrow and makeshift equipment such as a grappling hook made from an old umbrella, he and his cat sidekick set out to avenge his parents death when he finds the drug dealer that killed them. The song Wild Thing by the rock band The Troggs is played as a sort of theme music for this unlikely hero, played by Robert Knepper.

Cast[edit]

Production[edit]

According to John Sayles, "there was an original writer and then there was a guy who did a major rewrite on it. The producers didn’t like his rewrite; they had me come in, I rewrote it pretty heavily, but I didn’t come up with the original story. Then they hired the guy who had written the second draft to direct it, but told him" he could not change the script. Sayles said "it was this weird thing—the director working on a script he thought had been ruined." He says the first two writers refused to take credit so he was given sole credit.[2]

References[edit]

  1. ^ a b "Wild Thing (1987)". AFI Catalog of Feature Films. Retrieved October 9, 2021.
  2. ^ Sayles, John (1998). Sayles on Sayles. p. 46-47.

External links[edit]