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Payday (1972)

Payday (1972)
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A musician finds his life and his career jumping off the rails in this moody, intelligent drama. Maury Dann (Rip Torn) is a singer and songwriter struggling to hold onto his footing as one of the top names in country & western music. This being 1972, long before the Nashville sound had gone "mainstream," Dann has a new Cadillac and a small entourage to show for his efforts, but most of his shows are one-nighters at beer-soaked honky tonks in the Deep South. Onstage Maury Dann comes off as a soft-hearted good ol' boy, but off the stand, Dann is a mean-spirited hell raiser with a nearly unquenchable appetite for booze, pills, and women. Over the course of a seemingly typical day and a half, Dann steals a fan's girlfriend; ditches his longtime mistress, Mayleen (Anna Capri); picks up a naïve groupie named Rosamond (Elayne Heilveil) and gives her a crash course in life on the road; fires his guitar player (and best friend) and hires a starry-eyed teenager as his replacement; tries to bribe a disc jockey with booze and free records; has a harrowing run-in with his speed-addicted mother (Cara Dunn); discovers he's missed his son's birthday by four months; and, in cahoots with his manager, Clarence (Michael C. Gwynne), fast-talks his loyal driver, cook, and gofer, Chicago (Cliff Emmich), into taking a possible murder rap. While Payday earned excellent reviews (particularly for Rip Torn's superb performance as Maury Dann) and a handful of awards (Daryl Duke's direction won him a citation from the National Association of Film Critics, while Don Carpenter's screenplay received a prize from the Writer's Guild of America) the film's downbeat themes made it a tough sell. However, Payday gained a cult following, and more than one "outlaw" country star of the 1970s has been said to claim the film was based on his own true story. ~ Mark Deming, Rovi

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Director(s):
Daryl Duke
Theatrical MPAA Rating:
R
Format(s):
DVD
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Synopsis of Payday

A musician finds his life and his career jumping off the rails in this moody, intelligent drama. Maury Dann (Rip Torn) is a singer and songwriter struggling to hold onto his footing as one of the top names in country & western music. This being 1972, long before the Nashville sound had gone "mainstream," Dann has a new Cadillac and a small entourage to show for his efforts, but most of his shows are one-nighters at beer-soaked honky tonks in the Deep South. Onstage Maury Dann comes off as a soft-hearted good ol' boy, but off the stand, Dann is a mean-spirited hell raiser with a nearly unquenchable appetite for booze, pills, and women. Over the course of a seemingly typical day and a half, Dann steals a fan's girlfriend; ditches his longtime mistress, Mayleen (Anna Capri); picks up a naïve groupie named Rosamond (Elayne Heilveil) and gives her a crash course in life on the road; fires his guitar player (and best friend) and hires a starry-eyed teenager as his replacement; tries to bribe a disc jockey with booze and free records; has a harrowing run-in with his speed-addicted mother (Cara Dunn); discovers he's missed his son's birthday by four months; and, in cahoots with his manager, Clarence (Michael C. Gwynne), fast-talks his loyal driver, cook, and gofer, Chicago (Cliff Emmich), into taking a possible murder rap. While Payday earned excellent reviews (particularly for Rip Torn's superb performance as Maury Dann) and a handful of awards (Daryl Duke's direction won him a citation from the National Association of Film Critics, while Don Carpenter's screenplay received a prize from the Writer's Guild of America) the film's downbeat themes made it a tough sell. However, Payday gained a cult following, and more than one "outlaw" country star of the 1970s has been said to claim the film was based on his own true story. ~ Mark Deming, Rovi

Theatrical Feature Running Time:
103 mins

Complete Cast of Payday


Director(s):
Daryl Duke
Writer(s):
Stephen W. CarpenterDon Carpenter
Producer(s):
Martin Fink
Theatrical MPAA Rating:
R(Not For Children, Substance Abuse, Nudity, Violence, Adult Situations, Adult Language)
Warning:  This product is intended for mature audiences only. It may contain violence, sexual content, drug abuse and/or strong language. You must be 17 or older to purchase it. By ordering this item you are certifying that you are at least 17 years of age.

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    Donald P.

    Of all the movies about country western singers I have seen this is by far the best. The recent Crazy heart was good and Tender Mercies was also well done but Rip Torn really nails it with an academy award performance. I loved the way this movie was filmed. the holtel scenes in particular stand out. its rare to see such intimacy on film nowadays. this is a raw and gritty film. the character RP plays is not redeemable and he goes out as hard as he lives his life, yes its sad and depressing yet fascinating to watch.

    Yes   |   No

     
    Dennis K.

    Until this movie, I'd only seen Rip Torn in supporting roles; nemesis to Steve McQueen's and Paul Newman's characters, and the perfect sidekick on the Larry Sanders Show. Was disappointed with this movie. RP is the master at propping up another actor, but on his own he looks a little wobbly. Life imitates art perhaps. The dialogue was kind of choppy, like each sentence was separately delivered then edited in. It looked like a collision of the '70s typically nihilist themes. Sure had the look of the times though. Felt like I was right back there.

    Yes   |   No

     
    Robert P.

    This is a depressing look at what could very well be the day-to-day life of any hard core honky-tonk country singer. Rip Torn plays the mean-spirited, down-on-his-luck country singer who is surrounded by people who love him for God only knows what reason (the money, maybe?). This movie is a well-acted, often too real look behind the scenes of an entertainer. Despite its inherent gloominess, this is an entertaining movie. I recommend giving it a watch...but remember...it was made in 1972, so expect a 70's script and soundtrack.

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