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Mar 12, 2024 · Released on March 2, 1984, Repo Man stars a young Emilio Estevez as Otto, a punk rocker from Los Angeles who loses his supermarket job and winds up repossessing cars after he’s taken under the...
- Jake Kleinman
Oct 4, 2023 · Discover fascinating facts about the cult classic film Repo Man in this comprehensive list of 34 intriguing tidbits. From the production to its enduring legacy, delve into the secrets behind this beloved movie.
- Repo Man Was Almost A Short Film. Or A Comic Book.
- The First Person Alex Cox Approached to Play Bud Was Frank Booth.
- If The Agents Had Their Way, Bud Would Have Been Played by Mick Jagger.
- Agents Almost Kept Emilio Estevez Out of The Film, too.
- Otto Gave Estevez Greater Insight Into A Familial Relationship.
- One of The Film’S Most Iconic Elements Was The Result of An accident.
- The Repo Code Was Kind of A Real thing.
- The So-Crazy-It-Couldn’T-Be-True John Wayne Story Was A Real Story.
- Muhammad Ali Could Have Been KO’ed by The Glowing Chevy Malibu.
- Jimmy Buffett Said “Yes” to A Cameo.
The 92-minute punk classic began as a 17-page short titled Leather Rubbernecks written by Dick Rude, who plays Duke in the film. Rude reached out to Alex Cox to ask for help in finding money to finance the short, but when that didn’t happen, aspects of the short were incorporated into what eventually became Repo Man. But even as a feature, it was a...
From the beginning, Cox wanted Harry Dean Stanton for one of the leads in Repo Man. (He had a “great remnant of the Old West/cadaver look,” Cox said.) But by the early 1980s, Stanton had been kicking around Hollywood for decades, appearing mostly in supporting roles and bit parts. So they turned to Dennis Hopper. “[He] was better known than Harry a...
When Cox went to Stanton’s agent to get him for Repo Man, he had what he described as a “super eye-opening” experience. “The agent said, ‘You don’t want to work with Harry Dean. He’s past it. You want to work with Mick Jagger,’” Cox recalled. But the filmmaker stuck to his guns, and gave Stanton his first starring role in a feature (Wim Wenders' Pa...
Cox and his producers ran into management interference when trying to cast Estevez as well. His agent and manager also didn’t want him to do Repo Man because they wanted him to avoid “small films,” so they refused to show him the script. But through a friend, Cox and company got the script to Estevez. His reaction? “I was falling on my ass laughing...
“I didn't really know anything about the punk movement,” Estevez recalled to American Film in 1985. But he had a general idea because his brother, Ramon, wasinto the scene. “So I started listening to the music and going to the clubs and I began to understand what the punk movement is all about, and understanding where my brother was coming from at ...
When the filmmakers began making Repo Man, they went looking for corporate sponsors to help keep the production viable. Nobody bit, except for the grocery store chain Ralphs and the Car-Freshner Corporation (the company that makes those little scented Christmas trees that hang from rear-view mirrors). The Car-Freshner people donated a bunch of unsc...
The idea to make a movie about repo men came when Cox drove around with an actual member of the profession, a guy named Mark Lewis. “This would be an interesting subject for a film,” Cox thought, and he took note of how Lewis talked and what he said. A lot of that ended up in the Bud’s dialogue, especially the Repo Code, which was also influenced b...
The key word here is "story." You know, the one where Miller, the strange repo lot attendant, recalls going to John Wayne’s house to install two-way mirrors in his pad and when the Duke opens the door he’s in a dress? Miller telling that story is one of the most memorable moments in Repo Man. And it came from real life! Cox heard a story very simil...
While shooting the film, Cox and his producers caught wind that “The Greatest” was working out at the old Gold’s Gym in L.A. So Cox and casting director Victoria Thomas stopped by to offer him a small role: during the climactic scene with the glowing Malibu in the repo yard, a helicopter descends with a bishop and a rabbi who try to use religion to...
There was one famous face that made it into Repo Man: Jimmy Buffett’s. The original Parrothead was pals with producer Michael Nesmith, and he presumably had enough time between eating cheeseburgers in paradise to shoot a blink-and-you’ll-miss-it scene near the end of the film as a CIA agent in aviators photographing the dead body of Fox Harris (J. ...
- 2 min
Mar 18, 2023 · The ending of "Repo Man" sees Otto finally getting his hands on the radioactive car, despite the best efforts of other repo men, the government, and revolutionaries to stop him.
- Witney Seibold
May 14, 2024 · Otto’s initiation into the seedy world of automobile repossession merges two sets of social outcasts in punks and repo men, both of which survive on the margins. Yet, the life of a repo man isn’t one that Otto exactly chooses, either.
Apr 16, 2013 · Later, the repo man Miller explains to Otto that the world is overlaid with “a lattice of coincidence.” The first philosophy harks back to a lost chivalry that may never have existed in the first place. The second defines the physical laws that govern the universe.
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Oct 25, 2020 · Repo Man (1984) is everything the cult movie was in the early ‘80s. Reflective of the times themselves, perfectly soundtracked and made with nary a concession towards its target demographic. In fact, it positively spat in the face of the word “demographic.”