Eat My Dust

Eat My Dust


Starring:Ron Howard, Christopher Norris, Warren J. Kemmerling, Dave Madden, Robert Broyles, Evelyn Russel, Rance Howard, Jessica Potter, Charles Howerton, Kathy O'Dare, Don Brodie, Lynn Brown, Brad Davis, Mickey Fox, Harry Frazier, Corbin Bernsen, Paul Bartel, Margaret Fairchild, Kedric Wolfe, Clint Howard
Director: Charles B. Griffith
Studio: New Concorde
Product Type: DVD

Editorial Review:
Amazon.com
Way back in 1976, actor-director Ron Howard made a bargain with shlockmeister producer-director Roger Corman. It went something like this: Corman agreed to produce Howard's feature directorial debut, the 1977 Grand Theft Auto, and Howard agreed to star in another of Corman's pieces of drive-in fodder, the quirky Eat My Dust! Written and directed by Charles B. Griffith (a favorite screenwriter of Corman's who penned the original Little Shop of Horrors, among many others), Eat My Dust! is as wacked-out as anything to come out of the American International Pictures factory, and it is still surprisingly fresh and funny. Howard plays Hoover Niebold, son of a small-town, no-nonsense sheriff (Warren J. Kemmerling) and a prime candidate for dreary obscurity with his nowhere job and dull love life. Hoover takes a risk and asks out a popular girl (Christopher Norris), but after she demands that he steal the car of a professional racer (Dave Madden), the young hero abandons his innocence for a wild ride. Griffith hammers on the chase action sequences, bolting a camera to the car's hood to instill maximum vertigo in viewers, and constantly finding new and witty ways to jazz up scenes of speeding autos terrorizing the roads. But the real hook is the film's distinctive mix of youthful energy and comic irony, the latter exploding in Griffith's gallery of rural half-wits and neurotic, middle-class stereotypes. A whole cloth Z vision of teen rebellion writ large, Eat My Dust! is a corker. --Tom Keogh
Eat My Dust
Average customer rating: 3 out of 5 stars
  • Fun 70s Car-Chase Flick and... the Luscious Christopher Norris!
  • Misses the boat
  • A boy and his car.
  • Another good car chase movie.
  • Eat my dust, then vomit it up
Eat My Dust
Starring: Ron Howard , Christopher Norris , Warren J. Kemmerling , Dave Madden , and Robert Broyles
Director: Charles B. Griffith
Manufacturer: New Concorde
ProductGroup: DVD
Binding: DVD

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Brodie, DonBrodie, Don | ( B ) | Actors & Actresses | Stores | DVD | Video
Davis, BradDavis, Brad | ( D ) | Actors & Actresses | Stores | DVD | Video
Howard, ClintHoward, Clint | ( H ) | Actors & Actresses | Stores | DVD | Video
Howard, RanceHoward, Rance | ( H ) | Actors & Actresses | Stores | DVD | Video
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Similar Items:
  1. Grand Theft Auto (Tricked Out Edition)
  2. Dirty Mary Crazy Larry (Supercharger Edition)
  3. The Gumball Rally
  4. Corvette Summer
  5. White Lightning

ASIN: 630526130X
Release Date: 1999-02-23

Amazon.com

Way back in 1976, actor-director Ron Howard made a bargain with shlockmeister producer-director Roger Corman. It went something like this: Corman agreed to produce Howard's feature directorial debut, the 1977 Grand Theft Auto, and Howard agreed to star in another of Corman's pieces of drive-in fodder, the quirky Eat My Dust! Written and directed by Charles B. Griffith (a favorite screenwriter of Corman's who penned the original Little Shop of Horrors, among many others), Eat My Dust! is as wacked-out as anything to come out of the American International Pictures factory, and it is still surprisingly fresh and funny. Howard plays Hoover Niebold, son of a small-town, no-nonsense sheriff (Warren J. Kemmerling) and a prime candidate for dreary obscurity with his nowhere job and dull love life. Hoover takes a risk and asks out a popular girl (Christopher Norris), but after she demands that he steal the car of a professional racer (Dave Madden), the young hero abandons his innocence for a wild ride. Griffith hammers on the chase action sequences, bolting a camera to the car's hood to instill maximum vertigo in viewers, and constantly finding new and witty ways to jazz up scenes of speeding autos terrorizing the roads. But the real hook is the film's distinctive mix of youthful energy and comic irony, the latter exploding in Griffith's gallery of rural half-wits and neurotic, middle-class stereotypes. A whole cloth Z vision of teen rebellion writ large, Eat My Dust! is a corker. --Tom Keogh

Customer Reviews:

3 out of 5 stars Fun 70s Car-Chase Flick and... the Luscious Christopher Norris!.......2006-07-22

This is merely another one of those many 70s car-chase films. It's fun & mindless and features some beautiful rural California locations. Plus, how can you go wrong with the likable Ron Howard?

The film was a box-office success for producer Roger Corman, which naturally led to the demand for a sequel. But Ron Howard didn't want money to perform in the sequel, he just wanted the opportunity to write and direct it (not to mention act in it). Thus came the hugely popular "Grand Theft Auto," Howard's first REAL stab at directing. The rest is history.

This flick is merely okay, nothing special; what makes it worth purchasing for any red-blooded male is the supremely gorgeous Christopher Norris (yeah, it's a woman not a man). She's got some incredible God-given curves, to say the least, and she shows them off well in her skimpy hot-pants!

Of course, if you're a "Brokeback Mountain" fan there's always Ron Howard. (LOL!!)

2 out of 5 stars Misses the boat.......2004-07-11

One thing you will always get when you watch a Roger Corman film, whether the man produced or directed it, is a healthy helping of cheese. It doesn't matter who stars in the film or what sort of genre film it is, you just know what you're about to see will exude that instantly recognizable low budget fragrance. "Eat My Dust!" probably ranks in the top ten of Corman classics, not because it is better than any of the other schlock productions carrying the Corman tag but because Ron Howard stars in it. In case you just arrived on the planet, Howard played Opie Taylor in the rural themed series "Andy Griffith" before moving on to an even more successful stint as Richie Cunningham on "Happy Days." Nowadays, he's a big shot director and producer in Hollywood. Ron Howard's film career may never have gotten off the ground if it weren't for Roger Corman casting the young man in "Eat My Dust!" Moreover, the actor used his success in this picture to pressure Corman into letting him direct his first film, the quasi-sequel "Grand Theft Auto" a year or two after this picture. The rest, as they say, is history. Regrettably, although I've had some enjoyable experiences with a few other Corman films-"Humanoids From the Deep," as an example-I found "Eat My Dust!" an exercise in extreme boredom. The only reason to watch the film in the first place is to see Ron Howard in an early role, and even then it is barely enough of a reason.

Howard plays Hoover Niebold, a rip roaring young man just aching to stir up trouble in his hometown. Unfortunately, Hoover has several problems in his life. He's the son of Sheriff Harry Niebold (William J. Kemmerling), which is a bad thing to be when you're looking to date town cutie Darlene (Christopher Norris-yes, a girl). Harry Niebold is always riding Hoover about speeding around town or not working at his job delivering toilet paper to local businesses. Things come to a head when Hoover turns up at the local stock car track only to endure a withering rebuke from his father. Annoyed, Niebold the Younger spots Darlene sitting with her parents. He once again attempts to set up a date with the pretty gal, but she brushes him off with a statement to the effect that Hoover doesn't have a nice set of wheels with which to ferry her around town. Well, Howard's character spies a very nice car just a few feet away on the track, a car that just won the race. For some reason never adequately explained in the script, Hoover hijacks the car from under the nose of its incredulous driver (Dave Madden of "The Partridge Family" fame) and roars off with Darlene and a few friends.

Hoover and company never go anywhere except through the streets of this small town, endlessly pursued by his father and a passel of inept deputies. The kids destroy property, wreck cars, and generally terrorize the town over the next few hours. In one series of scenes, Niebold and his friends level a small farm while trying to escape from a deputy sheriff. So many townspeople fall prey to this group of hellions that the police station fills up with screaming citizens demanding action. Harry Niebold doesn't have a clue about what to do with his out of control boy, so he generally sits around the station pushing his hat up on his head, sighing, yelling at people, and watching tow trucks haul in the shattered hulks of his deputies' cruisers. After an interminable amount of time goes by, Niebold the Elder and a few of the stock car drivers finally formulate a plan of attack. What follows is about what you would expect from a crash 'em dash 'em derby movie: lots of over the top chase scenes, dumb good old boy dialogue, and the requisite feel good conclusion. A subplot concerning Hoover's unrequited love for Darlene has not only been done better a billion times before, but ultimately goes nowhere here.

The opening credit sequence of the film, where we see a car tearing up a country road from the point of view of the driver of the automobile, and Ron Howard's performance constitute the only two worthwhile things in this movie. Well, Christopher Norris's character, who looks a lot like a young Nancy Allen, strutting around in short shorts helps a bit too. But a movie cannot subsist on two or three small points if it wishes to succeed. The main problem in "Eat My Dust!" is the script: a tired, decrepit old dishrag of a thing dripping with so many clichés that it bored me to the point of exhaustion. The editing was sloppy, too, as was some of the acting. Too, for a movie that relied on car chases and crashes, "Eat My Dust!" is almost chaste in crunching metal and squealing tires. I guess I expected too much. At least we get to see several familiar faces: Clint Howard turns up in a small role, as does Ron Howard's father Rance. Paul Bartel and Corbin Bernsen also turn up in bit parts. It's unfortunate in the extreme the film fails to make adequate use of its talent.

Extras on the DVD consist of a short Roger Corman interview conducted by Leonard Maltin and a bunch of trailers. A movie full of unfunny gags, barely competent car chases, and pedestrian production values, "Eat My Dust!" is a film that only Ron Howard or Roger Corman completists need bother with. Looking back on the experience now, I am sure I spent more time looking at my watch than I did at the screen. 'Tis a pity, I say.

5 out of 5 stars A boy and his car........2003-07-17

One fun thing to do with movies under the Roger Corman banner is to try to notice all the film school-y things in them. *Eat My Dust!* turns out to be an American B-movie hommage to Godard's *Breathless*, which itself was a French B-movie hommage to American B-movies. In this movie we're given the Godard-brand of existential, rebellious hero who's main aim is the pursuit of kicks. Granted, Ron Howard ain't no Jean-Paul Belmondo, but he'll do in a pinch. We're also given the exact-same type of Grade-A American b---h/goddess that Jean Seberg perfected in Godard's movie: but here, she has the added virtues of hot yellow short-shorts accompanied by thigh-high white boots. She can be counted on to take a powder when things start to become a drag. But director Charles B. Griffith adds a number of elements missing from *Breathless*, such as the insistence on creating an interesting cast of supporting characters (goofballs and wackos every one), as well as consummately executed scenes of slapstick action that's reminiscent of silent-film chase comedies. Although Griffith never really accomplished anything else as a director, he's brilliant here, starting with the hypnotic opening credits: the camera is atop a car's hood, giving us an unseen driver's POV as the car eats up the country miles in revved-up fast-motion. There are also some well-executed smash-em-ups: police cruisers sailing through the air; muscle cars barreling down a 500-foot hill with a 45-degree grade. The ending strikes a surprisingly bittersweet note. It turns out that Opie's afternoon of playing hide-and-seek from the cops will serve as an apprenticeship: awaiting him is the lonely, dangerous, but exciting life of the professional racer. But regardless of all that, the bitchin Camaro rolls on with the final credits, and that's the important thing. Altogether, *Eat My Dust* is yet another dim-witted masterpiece from the Corman Factory.

4 out of 5 stars Another good car chase movie........2002-07-24

Ron Howard stealing a racing style 1967 Camaro and running away from the cops led by his own dad. Very funny and original, cool car. Hot chicks + fast cars + good casting = good buy.

1 out of 5 stars Eat my dust, then vomit it up.......2001-11-16

The only thing holding up this movie is the legs of the costar Christopher Norris(yes, she's a girl),which is why I gave it 1 star. A half star for each leg. I recommend it to anyone in search of a (...) car chase film that uses fast motion technology and third grade dialogue. Sorry, this one's not worth it at half the price. I shudder at the thought of watching the other Ron Howard movie (GTA)I bought when fulfilling my dream of owning every car chase movie ever produced. Don't do it, stay away.
Eat My Dust
Average customer rating: 2 out of 5 stars
  • This and that and some of the other
Eat My Dust
Starring: Eric Tsang , Michael Tsang , Mark Ng , Cynthia Lam , and Ma Wu
Director: Phillip So
Manufacturer: Tai Seng
ProductGroup: DVD
Binding: DVD

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ASIN: B0000296QW
Release Date: 2001-10-16

Customer Reviews:

2 out of 5 stars This and that and some of the other .......2006-08-14

93 jie tou ba wang ("Eat My Dust" in the US) begins as if it's going to be a serious, gritty revenge flick--a mob-connected father is at home with his wife, brother and son to celebrate his son's sixth birthday, when suddenly they're attacked and some family members are gunned down.

But shortly after, it changes gears drastically as we realize that we're firmly mired in headband and leggings-styled 1980s pop culture (it would be the 1980s in the U.S. at least--either 93 jie tou ba wang was filmed earlier than the publication date indicates, or it took this long for these cultural influences to entrench themselves in Hong Kong), and 93 jie tou ba wang proceeds as if it's going to be a goofy, light-hearted martial arts film spoof.

The shift is a bit jarring, and it isn't helped by the fact that the story is confused by the change, too. And that isn't helped by the fact that the dubbing doesn't seem to be the greatest. Unfortunately, as of this writing, 93 jie tou ba wang is only available on DVD in the US in a dubbed version over a pretty bad print that makes it appear even more dated.

The plot and the genres finally sort themselves out a bit, but one of the foremost flaws of 93 jie tou ba wang is that it tries to be too many things. Director Philip So alternates serious mob stuff, goofy comedy, semi-serious martial arts and action scenes, spoofy martial arts scenes, and romantic comedy elements, but tends not to integrate them well and tends to not stick with any long enough to really draw you into the film. Overall, he does martial arts and action okay. The romantic comedy stuff starts to be charming. The comedy and the spoofs are funny as often as not. The serious stuff starts to get gritty. It's just that you start settling into a mood, then So changes it.

It doesn't help that throughout the film, there continue to be elements of the plot that are confusing, although again, that might be more the fault of the dubbing.

It's not that 93 jie tou ba wang is a bad film. I enjoyed it overall. My wife seemed to enjoy it even more than I did. When So gets into a groove in a particular style, you can see the potential for a really great film, even if a couple of the action scenes become a trifle too ridiculous when he wants them to be serious.

In some ways, 93 jie tou ba wang plays like an underachieving Jackie Chan film. But it's just too disjointed to recommend strongly. It would be much better to watch a Chan film you haven't seen, but if you're a serious connoisseur of those types of movies and you've seen most of them, this isn't a bad choice for a lazy Sunday afternoon.
Eat My Dust
Average customer rating: 3 out of 5 stars
  • Fun 70s Car-Chase Flick and... the Luscious Christopher Norris!
  • Misses the boat
  • A boy and his car.
  • Another good car chase movie.
  • Eat my dust, then vomit it up
Eat My Dust
Starring: Ron Howard , Christopher Norris , Warren J. Kemmerling , Dave Madden , and Robert Broyles
Director: Charles B. Griffith
Manufacturer: New Horizons Home Video
ProductGroup: DVD
Binding: DVD

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Bartel, PaulBartel, Paul | ( B ) | Actors & Actresses | Stores | DVD | Video
Bernsen, CorbinBernsen, Corbin | ( B ) | Actors & Actresses | Stores | DVD | Video
Brodie, DonBrodie, Don | ( B ) | Actors & Actresses | Stores | DVD | Video
Davis, BradDavis, Brad | ( D ) | Actors & Actresses | Stores | DVD | Video
Howard, ClintHoward, Clint | ( H ) | Actors & Actresses | Stores | DVD | Video
Howard, RanceHoward, Rance | ( H ) | Actors & Actresses | Stores | DVD | Video
Howard, RonHoward, Ron | ( H ) | Actors & Actresses | Stores | DVD | Video
( G )( G ) | Directors | Stores | DVD | Video | Gabai, Richard | Gallagher, John A | Gallo, Fred | Gallo, George | Gallu, Samuel | Gannaway, Albert C | Gans, Christophe | Ganzer, Alvin | Garcia, Nicole | Gariazzo, Mario | Garnett, Tay | Garris, Mick | Gatlif, Tony | Gayton, Joe | Genina, Augusto | Gerber, Fred | Gerbson, Steve | Germi, Pietro | Gerolmo, Chris | Geronimi, Clyde | Gessner, Nicolas | Giacobetti, Francis | Giannaris, Constantine | Gibbons, Rodney | Gibney, Alex | Gibson, Alan | Gibson, Angus | Gibson, Brian | Gibson, Mel | Gieras, Gregory | Gilbert, Brian | Gillard, Stuart | Gillespie, Jim | Gilliam, Terry | Gilling, John | Ginty, Robert | Girard, Bernard | Girard, Dominique Othenin | Girard, Michael Paul | Girault, Jean | Girdler, William | Girod, Francis | Glaser, Paul Michael | Glatter, Lesli Linka | Glenville, Peter | Glickenhaus, James | Glimcher, Arne | Glover, Kevin | Godard, Jean Luc | Goddard, Jim | Gogh, Theo Van | Golan, Menahem | Gold, Jack | Goldblatt, Mark | Golden, Dan | Golden, Murray | Goldman, Gary | Goldstein, Allan A | Goldstein, Scott | Goldstone, James | Gomer, Steve | Gomez, Nick | González Iñárritu, Alejandro | Goodman, Barak | Goodwins, Leslie | Gordon, Bert I | Gordon, Bryan | Gordon, Keith | Gordon, Michael | Gordon, Rachel | Gordon, Robert | Gordon, Stuart | Gornick, Michael | Gorrie, John | Gorris, Marleen | Gosha, Hideo | Gosnell, Raja | Gottlieb, Carl | Gottlieb, Lisa | Gottlieb, Michael | Gould, Heywood | Goulding, Edmund | Gowers, Bruce | Graham, William A | Grant, Brian | Grauman, Walter | Graver, Gary | Gray, F Gary | Gray, John | Green, Alfred E | Green, Bruce Seth | Green, David | Green, Guy | Green, Terry | Greenaway, Peter | Greene, David | Greenspan, Bud | Greenwald, Maggie | Greenwald, Robert | Greyson, John | Grieco, Sergio | Gries, Tom | Grieve, Andrew | Griffith, Edward H | Griffiths, Mark | Grinde, Nick | Grint, Alan | Grissell, Wallace | Grodecki, Wiktor | Groening, Matt | Grosbard, Ulu | Grossman, Adam | Grosvenor, Charles | Guenette, Robert | Guest, Christopher | Guest, Val | Guggenheim, Charles | Guillermin, John | Gyllenhaal, Stephen
( E )( E ) | Titles | Features | DVD | Video
Similar Items:
  1. Grand Theft Auto (Tricked Out Edition)
  2. Dirty Mary Crazy Larry (Supercharger Edition)
  3. The Gumball Rally
  4. Corvette Summer
  5. White Lightning

ASIN: B00003L9CW
Release Date: 1999-02-23

Amazon.com

Way back in 1976, actor-director Ron Howard made a bargain with shlockmeister producer-director Roger Corman. It went something like this: Corman agreed to produce Howard's feature directorial debut, the 1977 Grand Theft Auto, and Howard agreed to star in another of Corman's pieces of drive-in fodder, the quirky Eat My Dust! Written and directed by Charles B. Griffith (a favorite screenwriter of Corman's who penned the original Little Shop of Horrors, among many others), Eat My Dust! is as wacked-out as anything to come out of the American International Pictures factory, and it is still surprisingly fresh and funny. Howard plays Hoover Niebold, son of a small-town, no-nonsense sheriff (Warren J. Kemmerling) and a prime candidate for dreary obscurity with his nowhere job and dull love life. Hoover takes a risk and asks out a popular girl (Christopher Norris), but after she demands that he steal the car of a professional racer (Dave Madden), the young hero abandons his innocence for a wild ride. Griffith hammers on the chase action sequences, bolting a camera to the car's hood to instill maximum vertigo in viewers, and constantly finding new and witty ways to jazz up scenes of speeding autos terrorizing the roads. But the real hook is the film's distinctive mix of youthful energy and comic irony, the latter exploding in Griffith's gallery of rural half-wits and neurotic, middle-class stereotypes. A whole cloth Z vision of teen rebellion writ large, Eat My Dust! is a corker. --Tom Keogh

Customer Reviews:

3 out of 5 stars Fun 70s Car-Chase Flick and... the Luscious Christopher Norris!.......2006-07-22

This is merely another one of those many 70s car-chase films. It's fun & mindless and features some beautiful rural California locations. Plus, how can you go wrong with the likable Ron Howard?

The film was a box-office success for producer Roger Corman, which naturally led to the demand for a sequel. But Ron Howard didn't want money to perform in the sequel, he just wanted the opportunity to write and direct it (not to mention act in it). Thus came the hugely popular "Grand Theft Auto," Howard's first REAL stab at directing. The rest is history.

This flick is merely okay, nothing special; what makes it worth purchasing for any red-blooded male is the supremely gorgeous Christopher Norris (yeah, it's a woman not a man). She's got some incredible God-given curves, to say the least, and she shows them off well in her skimpy hot-pants!

Of course, if you're a "Brokeback Mountain" fan there's always Ron Howard. (LOL!!)

2 out of 5 stars Misses the boat.......2004-07-11

One thing you will always get when you watch a Roger Corman film, whether the man produced or directed it, is a healthy helping of cheese. It doesn't matter who stars in the film or what sort of genre film it is, you just know what you're about to see will exude that instantly recognizable low budget fragrance. "Eat My Dust!" probably ranks in the top ten of Corman classics, not because it is better than any of the other schlock productions carrying the Corman tag but because Ron Howard stars in it. In case you just arrived on the planet, Howard played Opie Taylor in the rural themed series "Andy Griffith" before moving on to an even more successful stint as Richie Cunningham on "Happy Days." Nowadays, he's a big shot director and producer in Hollywood. Ron Howard's film career may never have gotten off the ground if it weren't for Roger Corman casting the young man in "Eat My Dust!" Moreover, the actor used his success in this picture to pressure Corman into letting him direct his first film, the quasi-sequel "Grand Theft Auto" a year or two after this picture. The rest, as they say, is history. Regrettably, although I've had some enjoyable experiences with a few other Corman films-"Humanoids From the Deep," as an example-I found "Eat My Dust!" an exercise in extreme boredom. The only reason to watch the film in the first place is to see Ron Howard in an early role, and even then it is barely enough of a reason.

Howard plays Hoover Niebold, a rip roaring young man just aching to stir up trouble in his hometown. Unfortunately, Hoover has several problems in his life. He's the son of Sheriff Harry Niebold (William J. Kemmerling), which is a bad thing to be when you're looking to date town cutie Darlene (Christopher Norris-yes, a girl). Harry Niebold is always riding Hoover about speeding around town or not working at his job delivering toilet paper to local businesses. Things come to a head when Hoover turns up at the local stock car track only to endure a withering rebuke from his father. Annoyed, Niebold the Younger spots Darlene sitting with her parents. He once again attempts to set up a date with the pretty gal, but she brushes him off with a statement to the effect that Hoover doesn't have a nice set of wheels with which to ferry her around town. Well, Howard's character spies a very nice car just a few feet away on the track, a car that just won the race. For some reason never adequately explained in the script, Hoover hijacks the car from under the nose of its incredulous driver (Dave Madden of "The Partridge Family" fame) and roars off with Darlene and a few friends.

Hoover and company never go anywhere except through the streets of this small town, endlessly pursued by his father and a passel of inept deputies. The kids destroy property, wreck cars, and generally terrorize the town over the next few hours. In one series of scenes, Niebold and his friends level a small farm while trying to escape from a deputy sheriff. So many townspeople fall prey to this group of hellions that the police station fills up with screaming citizens demanding action. Harry Niebold doesn't have a clue about what to do with his out of control boy, so he generally sits around the station pushing his hat up on his head, sighing, yelling at people, and watching tow trucks haul in the shattered hulks of his deputies' cruisers. After an interminable amount of time goes by, Niebold the Elder and a few of the stock car drivers finally formulate a plan of attack. What follows is about what you would expect from a crash 'em dash 'em derby movie: lots of over the top chase scenes, dumb good old boy dialogue, and the requisite feel good conclusion. A subplot concerning Hoover's unrequited love for Darlene has not only been done better a billion times before, but ultimately goes nowhere here.

The opening credit sequence of the film, where we see a car tearing up a country road from the point of view of the driver of the automobile, and Ron Howard's performance constitute the only two worthwhile things in this movie. Well, Christopher Norris's character, who looks a lot like a young Nancy Allen, strutting around in short shorts helps a bit too. But a movie cannot subsist on two or three small points if it wishes to succeed. The main problem in "Eat My Dust!" is the script: a tired, decrepit old dishrag of a thing dripping with so many clichés that it bored me to the point of exhaustion. The editing was sloppy, too, as was some of the acting. Too, for a movie that relied on car chases and crashes, "Eat My Dust!" is almost chaste in crunching metal and squealing tires. I guess I expected too much. At least we get to see several familiar faces: Clint Howard turns up in a small role, as does Ron Howard's father Rance. Paul Bartel and Corbin Bernsen also turn up in bit parts. It's unfortunate in the extreme the film fails to make adequate use of its talent.

Extras on the DVD consist of a short Roger Corman interview conducted by Leonard Maltin and a bunch of trailers. A movie full of unfunny gags, barely competent car chases, and pedestrian production values, "Eat My Dust!" is a film that only Ron Howard or Roger Corman completists need bother with. Looking back on the experience now, I am sure I spent more time looking at my watch than I did at the screen. 'Tis a pity, I say.

5 out of 5 stars A boy and his car........2003-07-17

One fun thing to do with movies under the Roger Corman banner is to try to notice all the film school-y things in them. *Eat My Dust!* turns out to be an American B-movie hommage to Godard's *Breathless*, which itself was a French B-movie hommage to American B-movies. In this movie we're given the Godard-brand of existential, rebellious hero who's main aim is the pursuit of kicks. Granted, Ron Howard ain't no Jean-Paul Belmondo, but he'll do in a pinch. We're also given the exact-same type of Grade-A American b---h/goddess that Jean Seberg perfected in Godard's movie: but here, she has the added virtues of hot yellow short-shorts accompanied by thigh-high white boots. She can be counted on to take a powder when things start to become a drag. But director Charles B. Griffith adds a number of elements missing from *Breathless*, such as the insistence on creating an interesting cast of supporting characters (goofballs and wackos every one), as well as consummately executed scenes of slapstick action that's reminiscent of silent-film chase comedies. Although Griffith never really accomplished anything else as a director, he's brilliant here, starting with the hypnotic opening credits: the camera is atop a car's hood, giving us an unseen driver's POV as the car eats up the country miles in revved-up fast-motion. There are also some well-executed smash-em-ups: police cruisers sailing through the air; muscle cars barreling down a 500-foot hill with a 45-degree grade. The ending strikes a surprisingly bittersweet note. It turns out that Opie's afternoon of playing hide-and-seek from the cops will serve as an apprenticeship: awaiting him is the lonely, dangerous, but exciting life of the professional racer. But regardless of all that, the bitchin Camaro rolls on with the final credits, and that's the important thing. Altogether, *Eat My Dust* is yet another dim-witted masterpiece from the Corman Factory.

4 out of 5 stars Another good car chase movie........2002-07-24

Ron Howard stealing a racing style 1967 Camaro and running away from the cops led by his own dad. Very funny and original, cool car. Hot chicks + fast cars + good casting = good buy.

1 out of 5 stars Eat my dust, then vomit it up.......2001-11-16

The only thing holding up this movie is the legs of the costar Christopher Norris(yes, she's a girl),which is why I gave it 1 star. A half star for each leg. I recommend it to anyone in search of a (...) car chase film that uses fast motion technology and third grade dialogue. Sorry, this one's not worth it at half the price. I shudder at the thought of watching the other Ron Howard movie (GTA)I bought when fulfilling my dream of owning every car chase movie ever produced. Don't do it, stay away.
Werner - Eat My Dust!!! [Region 2]
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    Werner - Eat My Dust!!! [Region 2]

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