Jake Speed

{{Use American English|date=January 2025}}

{{Infobox film

| name = Jake Speed

| image = Jake_speed.jpg

| caption = Theatrical release poster

| director = Andrew Lane

| writer = Wayne Crawford
Andrew Lane

| producer = Wayne Crawford
Andrew Lane
William Fay

| starring = {{plainlist|

}}

| cinematography = Bryan Loftus

| editing = Michael Ripps
Fred Stafford

| music = Mark Snow

| studio = New World Pictures
Force Ten Productions
Balcor Film Investors

| distributor = New World Pictures{{AFI film|57381}}

| released = {{Film date|1986|5|30}}

| runtime = 100 minutes

| country = United States

| language = English

| budget = $5 million

| gross = $1,943,751{{Mojo title|jakespeed}}

}}

Jake Speed is a 1986 American action adventure comedy film directed and produced by Andrew Lane, with Wayne Crawford, and William Fay. It was written by Lane and Crawford, and starred Crawford in the title role, alongside Dennis Christopher, Karen Kopins and John Hurt.

In the film, a pulp fiction-styled adventurer is tasked with rescuing a kidnapped girl. He has to face a white slavery ring during its host country's civil war.

Plot

In Paris, a girl named Maureen Winston (Becca C. Ashley) is abducted by two evil-looking men. While her family prays for her safe return, Maureen's father heaps guilt on her sister Margaret (Karen Kopins), since she convinced her to go see the world. However, Margaret's grandfather (Leon Ames) has an idea: call for Jake Speed (Wayne Crawford) to go and rescue her. One problem exists: Jake Speed is a character in a series of men's adventure paperback novels in the vein of Mack Bolan and Remo Williams (Doc Savage is also name-checked, but he is said to have been out of the game for years).

However, Jake Speed does exist, as Margaret finds out, when he leaves a note for her to meet him and his sidekick, Desmond Floyd (Dennis Christopher), in a tough Paris bar. The novels, as Margaret finds out, are based on Jake and Des's real-life adventures, and they work for nothing, seeing action and excitement (and another novel) as their reward.

Jake reveals that Maureen was kidnapped by white slavers, and is being held in an African country. Jake, Des, and Margaret fly to the nation, which is in the middle of a civil war, to rescue her. Many twists and turns later, Jake's archenemy, the evil, perverted, murderous Englishman Sid (John Hurt), is revealed to be behind the ring, and soon, Margaret becomes a part of it. Jake and Des must now rescue both Maureen and Margaret, stop Sid, and help the girls get out in one piece, while dealing with warring factions, pits of lions, and machine gun-firing helicopters.

Cast

Production

Filming took place in Sherman Oaks, California; Paris, France; and in Zimbabwe. The film was produced by New World Pictures in association with Balcor Film Investors and Force Ten Productions. It was Force Ten's first production since 1978's Paradise Alley.{{cite magazine|magazine=Variety|date=November 13, 1985|page=36|title=Force Ten Prods. Resurfaces In Prod.; Rolls 'Speed' In Zimbabwe}}

Soundtrack

A soundtrack of composer Mark Snow's music was released on LP record only by Varèse Sarabande in 1986. It was reissued on compact disc by Buysoundtrax in 2009 in a limited edition pressing of 1000 copies.

A track listing is as follows:[http://www.allmusic.com/album/jake-speed-original-motion-picture-soundtrack-mw0001949802 Jack Speed Soundtrack Listing at AllMusic.com]

{{colbegin}}

{{ordered list

| Main Title

| Friendly Skies

| Big Finish

| Explosive Situation - Café Girls

| Singles' Bar

| Play-A-Lick

| Dangerous Streets

| Lion Around

| Maggie Leaves

| Sid's Demise

| Tender Time

| H.A.R.V. - Sid's Resurrection

| Voice Over

| End Title

}}

{{colend}}

Novelization

A novelization, written under the pseudonym Reno Melon, Jake and Des' pen name, was published on June 1, 1986, by Gold Eagle/Harlequin ({{ISBN|0-373-62102-7}}).[http://www.forcesofgeek.com/2012/12/more-than-myth-less-than-legend-jake.html More Than A Myth. Less Than A Legend JAKE SPEED, Revisited at ForcesOfGeek.com]

Critical response

Alex Stewart reviewed Jake Speed for White Dwarf #83, and stated that "Until John Hurt turns up, having fun being a sleazy villain, the cast hang about, wondering what to say to each other. The result is surely the dullest and least speedy caper movie ever."{{cite journal | last =Stewart | first =Alex | title =2020 Vision | journal =White Dwarf | issue =83 | pages =16 | publisher =Games Workshop | date = November 1986 }}

The film holds a 48% rating on Rotten Tomatoes.{{cite web| title = JAKE SPEED (1986) | work= Rotten Tomatoes | url = https://www.rottentomatoes.com/m/jake_speed | access-date=October 26, 2016}}

References

{{reflist}}