Stand Alone

1985

Action / Drama

Plot summary


Uploaded by: FREEMAN

Director

Top cast

Pam Grier Photo
Pam Grier as Cathryn Bolan
Charles Durning Photo
Charles Durning as Louis Thibadeau
James Keach Photo
James Keach as Detective Isgrow
720p.BLU 1080p.BLU
856.68 MB
1280*714
English 2.0
NR
23.976 fps
1 hr 33 min
P/S ...
1.55 GB
1920*1072
English 2.0
NR
23.976 fps
1 hr 33 min
P/S 4 / 1

Movie Reviews

Reviewed by dworldeater7 / 10

Good 80's vigilante action

There were no shortage of vigilante.movies following the success of Death Wish. However, by the mid 80's a lot of these movies were less believable or cartoonish. Take a look at Death Wish 3 to see what I am talking about. I thought Stand Alone was pretty good and I am a little surprised that I am just discovering this movie now. I would say this is comparable with a British vigilante film that came much later ( Harry Brown),but much less bleak than that film. Charles Durning is very believable as a loveable old grandpa that is pretty tough and decorated WW2 veteran. He comes across as an everyman, but is totally credible when he is threatened and proceeds to take out the trash. The supporting cast of Pam Grier and James Keatch don't hurt either. I don't know the actor's name, but the Latino guy who frequently plays a heavy in Walter Hill films is a great villain as the leader of The Skull Tattoo gang that has it out for Charles Durning. Even though this is an 80's movie the cheese is kept to a minimum and is taken fairly seriously. I just discovered this movie, and would definitely recommend it, Stand Alone is a solid action drama and a lot better than a bunch of vigilante action flicks that have gotten more attention.

Reviewed by mark.waltz4 / 10

Just say no to drug cartels in your neighborhood.

It's a quite San Fernando neighborhood, all of a sudden victimized by the "Cocaine cowboys", a cartel like organization of ruthless murdering thugs who terrorize the neighborhood where World War II hero Charles Durning has lived for years. He has witnessed a horrifying assassination in his fellow veteran pal Bert Remsen's greasy spoon (a man trying to steal donuts) and now he utilizes his war memories to take down these vile humans who kill through powder and flying bullets.

One of the great character actors of the 1970's through the early 21st Century, Charles Durning was the epitome of the scene stealing grandfatherly like older white gentleman, so to be given a lead at this stage of his career must have been a shock. He doesn't sidestep anything here, and yet, the script he's giving is so unpleasant and difficult to watch at times that in spite of some of the truths that it takes right off the pages of the Los Angeles Times, you feel like you're only getting a part of the story.

Durning lives with his widowed daughter-in-law and beloved grandson, plays war games with him, and now finds him involved in war games that takes him right back to the combat he faced fighting the Japanese. The stereotypical Hispanic thugs he comes up against here are representative of only a small percentage of the Mexican population in Los Angeles, but that's pretty much all you see. All of these gang members have a purposely placed gold tooth and prominent tattoo, speak in a type of Spanglish lingo that makes them instant monsters with no redemption, and are photographed in multiple numbers that make you feel like you are around a dozen Willie Lopez types from "Ghost".

Durning gives a sincere performance, expressing no racism on his own and even having a good black female friend in public defender attorney Pam Grier who treats him like a father and sets out to be his protector. The characterizations are either 100% noble or the contrast of completely evil and animalistic, and that would be acceptable if the individual situations that crop up during the film don't become frequently eye rolling.

Durning, running through a barrage of enormous plastic containers, hides among them as if it was some giant maze, and the visual appeal of that scene makes it both frightening and fascinating. But for one extremely overweight older man to go through the things that he goes through and try to make the audience believe it after while becomes a bit too much. The beloved character actress Lu Leonard plays Durning's often maddeningly sweet and concerned neighbor, and while her presence is always welcome, the dialogue between her and Durning never seems real. She's a sweeter version of Gladys Kravitz, and instead of crying for "Abner" seems to be declaring, "Uh oh, there goes the neighborhood."

Another strange scene has Durning in danger suddenly running into the side door of a strange woman's car passenger seat, forcing the frantic woman to drive him until he can get out safely. When he shows up at a pool hall and confronts the man he recognizes as the killer, he establishes the fact that he has the courage to deal with all this but once again, it does not ring true and indicates that just because something is on the page doesn't make it true, basically repeating something that a Japanese soldier had once said to him in combat.

He then turns the house into a fortress, puts on combat make-up, and just waits. And of course he has his old arsenal of war weapons, another sign that ideas overtook reality in creating a story that could have been really tight but ends up becoming a combination of laughable situations that may have been taken from this and used in the "Home Alone" movies. It was at this point that I realized what I was watching was completely contrived, filled with stock villains who may get what's coming to them (including a crooked cop),but you can't help but find eventually laughable in spite of the fact that the situation is frightening and maddening. After a while, I wondered if Nancy Reagan perhaps had a hand in this film being made as part of her anti-drug campaign.

Reviewed by claypipe10 / 10

Great Movie

Throughly intense. Just goes to show why you should never judge a book by its cover. Charles Durning portrayal of an aging veteran is both surprising and fantastic. He's not the usual Gibson or Jackson type star Hollywood would use to enhance this character. The really scary factor in this movie is that it could actually happen anywhere. there's no super movie special effects, just straight out home brewed justice. This movie not only illustrates social and cultural stress of changing urban demographics, it delves deep into the psyche of post traumatic stress that many war veterans live with on a daily basis. Definitely a must see, you may never look at your war veteran neighbor the same again. Now, if this would only be distributed on DVD!

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