Crash!

An Occult Object Takes Possession of a Driverless Car and Causes One Spectacular Crash After Another Until Fifty Cars Are Pounded Into a Mass of Twisted Metal

5.1
19761h 29m

After a professor is crippled in a car accident, he blames his wife for the ordeal and attempts to have her killed using the same means. Now hospitalized with amnesia, she appears to be protected by a tiny voodoo trinket that she still clutches in her hand, which possesses her car and other objects, causing mayhem throughout the city.

Production

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Trailers & Videos

Thumbnail for video: CRASH (1977) original movie trailer

CRASH (1977) original movie trailer

Cast

Photo of José Ferrer

José Ferrer

Marc Denne

Photo of Sue Lyon

Sue Lyon

Kim Denne

Photo of John Ericson

John Ericson

Dr. Gregg Martin

Photo of Leslie Parrish

Leslie Parrish

Kathy Logan

Photo of John Carradine

John Carradine

Dr. Welsey Edwards

Photo of Jerome Guardino

Jerome Guardino

Lt. Pegler

Photo of Richard Band

Richard Band

Contractor

Photo of Paul Dubov

Paul Dubov

Dr. Cross

Photo of Reggie Nalder

Reggie Nalder

Man at Swap Meet

Photo of Charles Band

Charles Band

Motorist (uncredited)

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Reviews

W

Wuchak

4/10

**_The Dukes of Hazzard meets The Exorcist with José Ferrer and Sue Lyon_**

A young woman (Lyon) innocently purchases a mysterious idol-trinket that remarkably helps her in dealing with her bitter crippled husband (Ferrer), specifically in the form of a possessed black Camaro. John Ericson plays the concerned doctor and Leslie Parrish her nurse. John Carradine has a negligible role.

“Crash!” (1976) is the second movie by ‘B’ filmmaker Charles Band (and arguably his first). It’s basically a less competent (and more obscure) version of “The Car” and technically beat that one to release. Both would inspire the superior “Christine” and all were likely influenced by “Killdozer.”

While I’m giving this mid-70’s oddity a relatively low grade due to non-sensical storytelling, questionable filmmaking, lousy acting (particularly Ericson) and totally unconvincing vehicle explosions, it has its highlights for those interested. For instance, the red-eyed ‘possession’ scenes are well done and very creepy. So, yeah, it’s a bad movie, but it has its points of interest and is strangely compelling despite its glaring flaws.

Lyon is best known as the alluring teen in “Lolita” and “The Night of the Iguana.” Here, she was 30 years-old during shooting and too thin IMHO. As for Parrish, you might remember her from her notable part in the Star Trek episode “Who Mourns of Adonais” from a decade prior.

While my title blurb describes this as “The Dukes of Hazzard meets The Exorcist,” the Dukes of Hazzard wouldn’t even debut for another 2.5 years when this was initially released. So, motor-mayhem flicks from the mid-70’s, like “Eat My Dust,” would be more apt.

The movie runs 1 hour, 28 minutes, and was shot in Fillmore, California (substituting for San Cecilia), which is roughly 45 miles northwest of Los Angeles.

GRADE: C-/C

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