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Street of No Return

  • 1989
  • 1h 33m
IMDb RATING
5.6/10
640
YOUR RATING
Street of No Return (1989)
ActionCrimeDramaThriller

A rock star-turned-bum, his vocal chords severed at the height of his career for the love of a woman, reclaims his forgotten past after viewing a music video and seeks revenge against the mo... Read allA rock star-turned-bum, his vocal chords severed at the height of his career for the love of a woman, reclaims his forgotten past after viewing a music video and seeks revenge against the mobster who maimed him.A rock star-turned-bum, his vocal chords severed at the height of his career for the love of a woman, reclaims his forgotten past after viewing a music video and seeks revenge against the mobster who maimed him.

  • Director
    • Samuel Fuller
  • Writers
    • Jacques Bral
    • Samuel Fuller
    • David Goodis
  • Stars
    • Keith Carradine
    • Valentina Vargas
    • Bill Duke
  • See production info at IMDbPro
  • IMDb RATING
    5.6/10
    640
    YOUR RATING
    • Director
      • Samuel Fuller
    • Writers
      • Jacques Bral
      • Samuel Fuller
      • David Goodis
    • Stars
      • Keith Carradine
      • Valentina Vargas
      • Bill Duke
    • 11User reviews
    • 12Critic reviews
  • See production info at IMDbPro
  • See production info at IMDbPro
  • Photos27

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    Top cast25

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    Keith Carradine
    Keith Carradine
    • Michael
    Valentina Vargas
    Valentina Vargas
    • Celia
    Bill Duke
    Bill Duke
    • Lieutenant Borel
    Andréa Ferréol
    Andréa Ferréol
    • Rhoda
    Bernard Fresson
    Bernard Fresson
    • Morin
    Marc de Jonge
    • Eddie
    Rebecca Potok
    Rebecca Potok
    • Bertha
    Jacques Martial
    Jacques Martial
    • Gerard
    Sérgio Godinho
    • Pernoy
    António Rosário
    • Meathead
    Dominique Hulin
    • Dablin
    Gordon Heath
    • Black Bum
    Joe Abdo
    • White Bum
    Trevor A. Stephens
    • Lambert
    • (as Trevor Stephens)
    Filipe Ferrer
    • Gauvreau
    Jeremy Boultbee
    • Doctor
    Guilherme Filipe
    Guilherme Filipe
    • Patrol Officer
    Pedro Rosa Nunes
    • Patrol Officer
    • (as Pedro Nunes)
    • Director
      • Samuel Fuller
    • Writers
      • Jacques Bral
      • Samuel Fuller
      • David Goodis
    • All cast & crew
    • Production, box office & more at IMDbPro

    User reviews11

    5.6640
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    Featured reviews

    6AlanSquier

    About Carradine's acting in this...

    These reviews have lots of bad things to say about Carradine in this, but for me, he really made the film.

    He is called bland here. One person says he acts like he doesn't know what he's doing in this.

    I believe this is the point. This is a guy who was a rock star and then hit the skids and is a bum. And he doesn't really realize why.

    And then he becomes embroiled as a witness to a race riot, is suspected of a killing, and is generally tossed about, and he reacts to all of this as a person who doesn't quite understand, and yet is driven by a desire to get revenge on those who are ill-using him.

    This is the last film by a legendary director who never rose above B movies, but injected a quirkiness of his own. This isn't his best, but it is mesmerizing. It certainly is a violent film, but it isn't mindless. See it when you are in the mood for ridiculous plotting exquisitely directed.
    2planktonrules

    Wow...this movie is terrible...it's so loud and....loud!

    I have seen almost all of director Samuel Fuller's films and I know that to many he is a god. However, I have noticed that later in his career, some of his films were just too sloppy or had crazy premises that make them far from classics. While one of the other reviews is rather harsh for this film, I do agree that later in his career, Fuller seems to have lost his golden touch. I recognize none of his early genius in this bizarre and annoying film. This is certainly no "Steel Helmet" or "Pickup on South Street"! The film has a strange look to it--much of this was due to it being filmed in Lisbon. Why Lisbon?! And, for that matter, why have a lot of supporting actors that seem to really struggle with speaking English?! This doesn't look like a work of genius--just desperation to go to such efforts to get the film made. My assumption is that with advanced age and reputation for being cantankerous, this was the best opportunity he could get to direct. It's sad...and I wish he'd just retired after making "The Big Red One". Films like "White Dog" and "Street of No Return" just weren't quality products or up to his earlier standards.

    The film tells the story of an idiot musical star. Keith Carradine plays this idiot. He's on top of the world but insists on canceling his concerts and throwing away his life on a woman he just met--and who insists she is "not worth it". And, frankly, other than the hot sex, it's inexplicable why he would so actively pursue this lady--she ISN'T worth it. Ultimately, the lady's very controlling boyfriend and Carradine's agent(?!?!) work together to "teach him a lesson"--severing his vocal cords and leaving him for dead.

    Later, after a lengthy flashback scene, the film returns to the present day where Carradine is a homeless guy. He wakes up next to a dead cop and the police think Carradine did it. So, he's off to jail. The cops aren't subtle and spend their time screaming and hitting people. Not surprisingly, Carradine doesn't wish to stay and he rather easily escapes. There's more to it than that, but frankly at this point I was ready to call it a day.

    The problem is that although the basic idea isn't horrible, the characters make very little sense, the camera angles and camera work look sloppy, the music is far from great and the film comes off as loud, garish and annoying. No one is subtle or interesting--just loud and obnoxious. And, I think that Fuller thought that to be modern and relevant, having everyone curse and scream would do the trick...it didn't. The loudness and overacting might have worked years earlier in such great Fuller films as "Shock Corridor"...but here, it's just loud and overacted. Oddly, however, despite most of the supporting actors screaming and overdoing it, the leading man is, at times, a bit of a zombie. Wow...this is bad...really, really bad.
    5a_baron

    Street Of No Return

    A popular actor/musician who like many genuine rock stars can't keep it inside his trousers, crosses the wrong person and ends up with his throat slit, an injury intended to punish and ruin his career rather than kill. After refusing to name his attacker, he gets up from his hospital bed, and heads for skid row where after an indeterminate time he is framed more or less by accident for the murder of a police officer.

    Escaping from custody in a unique fashion he somehow stumbles upon his assailant, who just happens to be involved in a plot to take over the city if not the world, and by a serendipitously circuitous route, justice is served. There is quite a bit more to it than that, none of it any more believable, but it shouldn't take the viewer long to realise this film was never intended to be taken seriously.
    8django-1

    strange, intense yet otherworldly swan song for Samuel Fuller

    Director Samuel Fuller's films SHOCK CORRIDOR and THE NAKED KISS are among my all-time favorites. His attempts to achieve a kind of gutter-level truth through expressionistic exaggeration make his films completely unique. This film takes the classic noir novel STREET OF NO RETURN by Davis Goodis and turns it into a strange cinematic vision that is intense and brutal, yet otherworldly and cerebral. First of all, the film exists in no particular time--like RUMBLEFISH, it blurs elements from different eras so that it exists in some kind of alternate reality. Also, while the film supposedly deals with American issues, it looks so foreign (it was shot in Lisbon, Portugal, a city that has a unique look, but not a familiar look, as Paris or London or Rome or Berlin would have) that the whole thing seems to play out on an allegorical level. Even the music by Keith Carradine is odd--Carradine (known for his 70s hit "I'm Easy") is rooted in a kind of 70s folk-pop in the James Taylor vein, but his music is given an 80s Euro dance feel, and he looks like glam-era Kim Fowley (in the earlier times in the story) or trashed-out hippie-punk Kim Fowley (in the later times in the story). And while the film deals head on with racial issues, the Black actors in the smaller roles look nothing like African-Americans, which again takes the film away from any realism. Bill Duke is excellent as the harried police inspector, Keith Carradine is impressive as the protagonist (quite different from the book, but not attempting to be like the book, but like the screenplay), and once one gets into the "feel" of the film, it carries the viewer along for a wild ride. This is a memorable last film for the great Samuel Fuller. It has all of his good qualities and visually it's pure Fuller. The strange look and European feel to the film remind us that the man could not get a film deal in his own country and, like Orson Welles, was forced to put together overseas projects wherever he could. The Fantoma DVD presentation of the film is superb as are the extras (commentary by Carradine, documentary about the making of the film, etc.). The women in the film--Valentina Vargas as the woman who Carradine desires, and Andrea Ferreol as the woman who has nurtured him and who loves him but who he sees as a maternal figure (the line about "you've always been like a mother to me" is painful to hear!)-- are both incredibly sexy in a raw, animal-like way that we don't often see in films nowadays. If you've ever enjoyed a Samuel Fuller film, you should seek out this DVD. If you want to try something different, buy or rent this rather than going to see some empty Hollywood product at the multi-plex.
    8allyjack

    Wacky at every stage,but it works!

    The movie is wacky at almost every stage, and yet it undeniably works - whether through sheer naivete and flagging relevance or through simple genius, Fuller creates a totally unique and mesmerizing world of vivid colour, strange emptiness and weird evocation. It's clearly meant to be set in the US yet there's not a single interior or exterior which looks like it - Carradine plays an extremely anachronistic Europop star figure, yet the music actually has an underlying longing that's quite effective; the primal device of the black and white race riots is a distillation of Fuller's eternal theme - driven by big business, taking place in isolation on a street of no return, drained of all context or passion: the very first shot of a hammer blow to the head is incredibly jolting. All the noir elements are here, and the memory of better days hangs heavily over the plot - at the end you're amazed by how well structured it is, but it's the blinkered purity that produces the most mesmerizing results. Really memorable and weird.

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    Storyline

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    Did you know

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    • Trivia
      Sam Fuller's daughter Samantha Fuller appears as the teen asking for Keith Caradine's autograph at the train station.
    • Connections
      Featured in A Fuller Life (2013)
    • Soundtracks
      Street of No Return
      Sung by Keith Carradine

      Lyrics by Samuel Fuller

      Music by Keith Carradine

      Arranged by Karl-Heinz Schäfer

      Copyright 1989 by Francis Dreyfus Music & Thunder Films International S.A.

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    FAQ13

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    Details

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    • Release date
      • August 9, 1989 (France)
    • Countries of origin
      • France
      • Portugal
    • Language
      • English
    • Also known as
      • Samuel Fuller's Street of No Return
    • Filming locations
      • Lisbon, Portugal
    • Production companies
      • Thunder Films International
      • France 3 Cinéma
      • Animatógrafo
    • See more company credits at IMDbPro

    Tech specs

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    • Runtime
      1 hour 33 minutes
    • Aspect ratio
      • 1.85 : 1

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