Movie Chase Scene Ends In Slot Machine Area
Chase the Cheese Slot Review & Experience. When you are looking for an unusual slot game with a traditional theme (in our case mice and cheese), the Chase the Cheese gaming slot will be a very good choice. This game has 4 reels and 9 paylines and is the very popular Betsoft video slot machine. Go to the slot machine and use it; if you see a symbol in its respective position, press 'hold' on that slot. The correct symbol order is gathered from the 'Strange doodle' clue discovered at the crime scene (Cherry, Bell, WIN). Once they are in their positions the lid will open and reveal Ottie's secret stash. Now you'll have to chase after Ottie.
Sandoval reports that the desert sequences for the movie were filmed during a three-day location shoot - March 3 - 5 1968 - in Palm Springs, California and that, in addition to the Monkees themselves, there was a '110-member film crew' (although this number must surely have included the extra actors required for the various scenes - including the entire Italian, Indian and Arab armies, the factory boss and his heavies, Victor Mature, etc - as well as explosives experts, helicopter-pilots, horse-handlers, tank drivers, stunt men, etc).
A comically gushing puff piece written during the making of the movie ('What a Crazy Film', Monkees Monthly, Page 23) gives the same estimate of crewmembers, while Davy Jones mentions that the location was previously used for the chase scene in It's A Mad, Mad, Mad, Mad World (1963).
Sandoval also notes that most of the solo-Micky scenarios were executed on Day 2 of the shoot and as such he was the only Monkee required 'on-set'.
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Amusing to note that the script calls for Micky to reprise his attack on the Coke machine after a quick rest. In the event, this wasn't used, the edited sequence eventually comprising of a quite complex series of jump-cuts from several angles (including a nice near-strobe flashing effect of the 'Empty' sign as Micky pummels the coin-return slot in anger).
The Monkees were no strangers to product placement, their TV shows having been sponsored by Kellogs and Yardley of London (and later Kool-Aid). One may perhaps assume that Micky's violent attack on a stubborn Coke machine - while an advertising jingle plays sweetly over the soundtrack - might be a send up of such. Yet no mentioned is made at script stage of the jingle and it appears to have been included almost as an afterthought.
'Things Go Better With Coke'. had been a massive, long-running campaign (from 1965 to 1969, their biggest prior to the now-better-remembered 'It's The Real Thing') which had enlisted pop performers of the day, including the likes of The Moody Blues and The Bee Gees (not to mention Monkees song-contributors Boyce & Hart and Neil Diamond) to contribute short youth-friendly songs, all featuring the campaign's by-line somewhere in the lyrics (as per The Who's The Who Sell Out (1967) which includes their own version on the expanded edition of the CD). A rocked-up, surfin' version of the actual composition used in Head was performed by Jan and Dean as part of the same campaign.
It isn't clear whether the female-sung version of the jingle used in Head was specially arranged for the film or was simply a generic recording provided by Coca Cola themselves (some have suggested that Coca Cola money partly financed the production, although this hasn't been confirmed). However, despite its apparent 11th hour placement in this scene, it's likely that just such a jingle was intended for a sequence later in the script where Davy confronts the same Coke machine - a scene which ends with something akin to a much more traditional 'pack shot' (see 'Changes' - Page 81, Shot 260).
During an interview with the NME, published on April 13 1968, Mike Nesmith described the Coke machine scene in rather more elaborate detail than it appears in the film (or indeed this version of the script), suggesting that before he discovers the machine is empty, Micky has problems with a bent coin. It's possible that something akin to this was in place by the time of the filming as it seems an odd thing to pull out of mid-air. On the other hand, during the same interview Nesmith also intimated that it was Davy rather than Peter who'd be body-slammed by Ray Nitschke during the War sequence and that the Black Sheik (see below) would be astride a camel rather than a horse. It has been suggested that the idea for the latter scene was actually contributed by Nesmith himself.
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Shot 132 alternates between two different angles of Micky - with one seemingly representing the POV of his voiceover. The exchange goes on for a bit longer than is scripted and culminates (with a sudden jump-cut to a now-standing Micky) with a ridiculously yelled 'Shutupshutupshutupyou!' before the voiceover decides to take this advice.
The subsequent Quiet isn't it...' voiceover is moved from Shot 132 to Shot 134, occurring as the camera rises above the scene (following a dramatic fanfare from Ken Thorne). Micky doesn't answer. Both lines feature the 'huge reverb'.
At some point during the writing of 'Changes', Nicholson and Rafelson evidently changed their mind as to who or what should be providing the voiceover for the final couple of lines. Although on this page it's clearly namechecked as a continuation of Micky's own self-narrative, in Head the lines aren't delivered by Micky but by a much deeper-voiced actor.
Moreover, the descriptions accompanying a 'reprise' of the scene on Page 87 (in a sequence sadly cut from Head which depicts Mike Nesmith's own dealings with the Coke machine), the voiceover is highlighted as 'God'.
Movie Chase Scene Ends In Slot Machine Areas
What should perhaps be noted however is that Page 87 isn't marked as 'Revised', suggesting that 'God' rather than Micky's voiceover may have been part of an earlier draft of Page 35 as well. It's also plausible that the earlier draft didn't feature Micky's argument with his voiceover at all and simply depicted his defeat in the face of the Coke machine followed by God's voice taunting him. Note the 'omitted' Shot 133, which quite possibly introduced 'God' to the action before he got cuckolded by Micky's voiceover.
If so then the addition of this extra dialogue is responsible for the need to add an extra page - Page 35A, below - before we return to the earlier draft on Page 36.
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The helicopter-filmed pull-back of the scene is particularly impressive here, Shot 134 executed perfectly. This may be a good time to note that two helicopters were evidently used during the Palm Springs shoot - as can be seen later in Head where one is utilised to film the other (which is carrying the black box).
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As well as an alternate spelling of 'Psst!', there's no mention in the script of the word being subtitled...
The scene will be back-referenced twice in 'Changes' - although both of these will end up being cut from the finished film. On both occasions, 'Psst.' is spelt as it is in Head.
There's a slight possibility that the scene references a famous Clairol product - Pssst spray-on shampoo (ads for which had been running during showings of The Monkees in 1968).
Several other offcuts from the sequence are also featured in the trailer, including a few bits of the Black Sheik emerging over the dune and coming to rest beside Micky.
Part of the beginning of Shot 137 - showing the tank emerging over the sand dune - was snipped, visually reversed and used for the 'reprise' of the desert scene towards the end of the movie (see 'Changes' - Page 93, Shot 292).
Incidentally, Micky's reaction to the arrival of the tank coincides with the first reel-change in cinematic prints of Head. Evidently the reel-change markers (ie the small circles which appear in the top right-hand corner of the screen as a cue for the projectionist) are also present on the original negative - which accounts for Criterion's decision to zoom in during those shots for the Blu-ray edition...
We'll probably add a standalone differences-between-the-various-editions page at some stage. This is just to note that even Criterion can take certain liberties with the source material when they feel it necessary...
The surrender scenario was built upon by the time of the shoot - with the Italian Commander's benign chattery explanation of the situation in his mother tongue falling to make much impression. Eventually he hits upon a solution, places his gun in Micky's hand, raises his hands and says, happily, 'Surr-ender!' (before cautiously pushing the barrel of the gun away from him - 'Oh ah... boom boom!').
Whereas the Criterion subtitles simply describe the commander's excitable witterings as '[Continues In Italian]', the English subtitles on the Rhino DVD edition actually make a decent stab at transcribing it. So, if you've ever wondered, here's that transcription and a basic Google Translation:
COMMANDER American? | |
MICKY What? | |
COMMANDER Ma sei Americano? | COMMANDER But you're American? |
MICKY American. | |
COMMANDER Oh, finalmente! Esco. Aspetta un minuto, eh? Aspetta. Che piacere! Accidenti! (leaps from tank, approaches Micky) Americano, eh? (claps, embraces him) Che piacere che ti ho trovato! Senti un po', noi arrendiamo, perché sotto queste circostanze... Noi ci arrendiamo. Arrendere. Io arrendo. (places gun in Micky's hand, raises arms aloft) Surrender? | COMMANDER Oh, finally! Esco. Wait a minute, eh? Wait. What a pleasure! Damn! (leaps from tank, approaches Micky) American, eh? (claps, embraces him) What a pleasure that I found you! Look here, 'we give up, because, under these circumstances ... We give up. Surrender. I give up. (places gun in Micky's hand, raises arms aloft) Surrender? |
All this occurs before the crew reveal themselves. Contrary to the script they're never seen emerging from the tank but simply walk into shot from beside it.
There are probably no more than twelve or so extras representing the crew and the 'entire limping and bedraggled Italian infantry' but a neat bit of creative editing between multiple takes from different angles makes it look like hundreds. A delightful patriotic march from Ken Thorne - which sounds like he was channeling some kind of John Wayne movie score - accompanies their collective surrender.
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Note that Shots 140 and 142 seem to call for an interior view of Micky controlling the tank. If such shots were ever attempted - and these would have probably been planned for a studio date anyway, with a purpose-bult tank 'interior' built at Columbia studios - then they didn't make it to the edit, which instead opts for a simpler exterior view of Micky operating the tank - with the cameraman perched precariously atop the gun turret - as production photos of the session reveal!
The Coca Cola machine isn't the only thing being blown up for Shot 144. The explosion comprises of two 'angles' of the detonation - a close-up and a wide shot in quick succession. However, closer examination reveals these to be the exact same shot: the close-up is actually a hard-matte of a small area of the wide shot. The composition of 'new shots' by zooming in on smaller sections of the action occurs frequently throughout Head. In terms of the desert sequences, most of these are detectable by the presence of an odd circular shading around the edge of the picture - more visible in 'full frame' editions, but not entirely absent from the letterboxed version).
A genuine alternate angle of the explosion was filmed however, and can be seen when the Coke machine scenes are revisited towards the end of the film (See 'Changes' - Page 93 Shot 296). The latter comprises of three shots: the close-up hard-matte as before; an alternate angle of the detonation (with four dummies of the Arabs placed in dangerously close proximity); and what appears to be a shot of a far-less life-threatening smoke-bomb exploding (while the supposed debris from the machine is dropped from above and the actual Arabs run into view bemoaning the loss of their soft drink dispenser).
Movie Chase Scene Ends In Slot Machine Area 51
The best chase scenes are the ones that leave you on the edge of your seat without dragging you too far out of reality in the process. Believable stunts, outstanding driving and, of course, fast cars are all key to building a memorable chase on celluloid.
Check out five of the best chase scenes ever committed to film and see if you agree with our choices.
5. Vanishing Point
Filmed in 1971, it’s fair to say that Vanishing Point is actually one long car chase starring a Dodge Challenger R/T and the main character Kowalski, all the way from Denver to San Francisco. You’ll be hooked by its existentialist plot and the exceptional wheelman skills of stunt coordinator Carey Loftin.
4. Gone In 60 Seconds (1974)
Second only to Vanishing Point in the sheer length of its automotive mayhem, the original Gone In 60 Seconds offers one of the best car chase scenes at close to 40 minutes of screen time. The entire end of the film focuses on a Ford Mustang escaping the long arm of the law, and roughly 93 cars are wrecked in the process. A must for fans of malaise-era metal.
3. To Live And Die In L.A.
William Friedkin’s ultra-stylish ode to the dark side of a treasury agent hunting down counterfeiters in sunny Los Angeles, California. The car chase scenes in this one leave the audience holding their collective breath, as the main character weaves the wrong way through highway traffic while escaping an assignment gone bad. Notable for its callous disregard for the lives of bystanders and the consequences of letting obsession overpower common sense.
2. Ronin
Ronin features not just one, but two phenomenal chases, with director John Frankenheimer contributing several cars from his personal collection to the film. Whether it’s the thrill of seeing a Mercedes-Benz 450 SEL 6.9 work together with an Audi S8 to take down enemy spies, or the mind-blowing sprint through narrow French streets in pursuit of a BMW M5, Ronin’s outstanding cinematography, unique stunts and stellar cast make up for the lukewarm plot.
1. Bullit
Is it a cliché to put Bullit at the top of every list of the best car chase scenes ever filmed? Nope. It’s just that good. Known for its pioneering realism, this detective story’s sequence between Steve McQueen’s Ford Mustang and the black Dodge Charger being driven by stunt legend Bill Hickman is the still the most hard charging and exciting car chase scene ever filmed. It’s also impossible not to fall in love with the backdrop of San Francisco as McQueen takes you on a high speed tour of the Bay area’s unmistakable hills and drops.
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Benjamin Hunting View All
Having been bitten by the car bug at a young age, I spent my formative years surrounded by Studebakers at car shows across Quebec and the northeastern United States. Over ten years of racing, restoring, and obsessing over automobiles lead me to balance science writing and automotive journalism full time. I currently contribute as an editor to several online and print automotive publications, and I also write and consult for the pharmaceutical and medical device industry.