Jump to content

No Way Back (1976 film)

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
No Way Back
Directed byFred Williamson
Written byFred Williamson
StarringFred Williamson
Charles Woolf
Tracy Reed
Virginia Gregg
Stack Pierce
Don Cornelius
CinematographyRobert Caramico
Edited byJames E. Nownes
Production
company
Po' Boy Productions
Distributed byAtlas Films
Release date
  • May 1, 1976 (1976-05-01)
CountryUnited States
LanguageEnglish

No Way Back is a 1976 blaxploitation film written and directed by Fred Williamson, who also stars as Jesse Crowder, a private detective who once used to belong to a police force, but that now finds himself taking odd jobs for a little extra money.

Synopsis

[edit]

Jesse Crowder is hired by the wife and brother of a fugitive named Woolf, who is on the run because he had just robbed a bank. Woolf uses this money to embezzle it, where from Crowder decides to take the case and follows the fugitive from Los Angeles to San Francisco, California. Woolf is on the run with his girlfriend Candy. Crowder pursues his targets by following small clues, while causing a whole mess of trouble with a gangster named Bernie. Bernie is Candy's pimp and also the leader of a gang. When Bernie learns that Crowder is looking for one of his employees, he makes sure that Crowder is taken care of. He sends numerous thugs in Crowder's direction, but Crowder manages to successfully capture Mrs. Pickens’ husband after fighting off a couple of Bernie's thugs, but has yet to capture the girlfriend. Crowder's previous cop experience provided a helpful basis from which he was able to eventually pick up on her trail after having gotten himself into more trouble with Candy's pimp and his gang. A final showdown takes place in the desert in a hail of gunfire.

Cast

[edit]

Crew

[edit]
  • Fred Williamson - director, producer, screenwriter
  • Jeff Williamson - producer
  • James E. Nownes - editor
  • Oliver Moss - sound/sound designer
  • Robert Caramico - cinematographer

Analysis

[edit]

Jesse Crowder plays by his own rules and will do anything he can within his power to complete his mission; all that he needs to ensure that he does this is some cold, hard cash. Besides a thirst for money, Crowder also has a thirst for women. He is a ladies’ man as some would say, and is also a stereotypically strong African-American man, a strong black man, and makes sure that everyone around him knows this. This aspect of the movie may represent a sort of ironic situation in that Crowder boasts about his strength and physical prowess with the women, which are animal-like characteristics, yet also demands to be seen as more than just what the white man has made him out to be.[2] Crowder often encounters many women with whom he has sexual relations shortly after meeting them. His slick lines and tough-guy attitude sweep the ladies right off their feet so that at the end of all of these sexual encounters, the women are often seen begging for more sex. This stereotype was a common blaxploitation characteristic to use in African-American films.

Distribution

[edit]

Atlas Films distributed the film; it was primarily targeted at African Americans in suburban areas across the United States, primarily in western and eastern suburban areas.

Historical significance

[edit]

This film is part of a larger genre known as blaxploitation, which emerged in the early 1970s in the time when many black exploitation films were being made specifically to target black audiences. No Way Back emerged as one of these in 1976 and was set on the West Coast, which typically as many other blaxploitation films like it took place in the ghetto. This was a common characteristic of blaxploitation films, which accentuated crime, drug deals, and pimps. Another important aspect of this particular movie is the pun with the name Jesse Crowder which plays on Jim Crow Laws, an important and controversial aspect of earlier African-American life. Only a little over a decade before the film was made, segregating black and whites in public institutions and other places in society had been legal.[3]

Soundtrack

[edit]

This film consisted of three soundtracks from the album of the same name by The Dells:
West Virginia Symphony
When Does the Lovin' Start
I'll Make You My Girl
Life Is the Time
Ain't No Black and White in Music
No Way Back (from No Way Back)
Too Late for Love (from No Way Back)
You Are the Greatest
Adventure (from No Way Back)
I'll Try Again
Slow Motion
The album is not as popular as other blaxploitation scores, but it does have a “nice, hard funk theme with a heavy bass line and persistent riff starting the second side, then a straightforward soulful love theme, and finally a great funky instrumental to finish the selection.”[4]

References

[edit]
  1. ^ "No Way Back Synopsis". www.fandango.com. Archived from the original on 2009-01-05.
  2. ^ Alexander, George. ‘’Why We Make Movies: Black Filmmakers Talk About the Magic of Cinema’’. New York: Harlem Moon, 2003. Print.
  3. ^ Rausch, Andrew. ‘’Turning Points in Film History’’. New York: Kensington Publishing Corp., 2004. Print.
  4. ^ Blaxploitation.com - Soundtrack LPs, No Way Back Dells, The Mercury SRM-1-1084, 1976
[edit]