Paperback Hero (1973) Poster

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6/10
A Short Review
animal_8_55 October 2002
"Your head is full of little dingle balls..." This comment (a quote from the film) is probably the most apt description of Rick Dillon, the notorious star player of the Delisle senior hockey team and womanizing key figure in the 1973 film "Paperback Hero".

Set in the desolate agricultural town of Delisle, Saskatchewan, the plot surrounds Dillon's fall from grace as a reigning sports god. Once living in a world where his actions had no consequences, he suddenly finds his vaulted throne caught in a whirlpool. The troubled standing of the team, his own declining popularity, as well as being wanted by the law after one of his numerous romantic conquests goes sour.

The only people who stand by the self-appointed "Marshal" Dillon (played by Keir Dullea) are his teammate "Pov" (John Beck) and good-hearted barmaid, Loretta (played by Elizabeth Ashley). They see the childlike innocence of Rick's "boy dreams", while seemingly oblivious to the dangers the fantasy begins to take.

The classic tragic figure, Rick's demise is cleverly symbolized by the desolate prairie setting, interspersed with scenes of vast wheat fields and abandoned farm implements. The pathos is further entrenched by Gordon Lightfoot's hit tune "If You Could Read My Mind", the performing of which is one of the highlights of the screenplay.

This film was one in a number of pioneering efforts to establish the Canadian film industry that we know today. While crude and clumsy at times, the film is pretty successful in its mandate of putting Canadian identity into the cinema. Little touches like "brown stubby" beer bottles, Foster Hewitt calling play-by-play on Saturday night hockey games and dilapidated old smoke-filled arenas make it clear this is mid-seventies Canada. The plot, while far from classic, is still pretty watchable. I would recommend it to Canadians, or anyone wanting to know more about Canadian popular culture. If you are looking for the Canadian equivalent of "Citizen Kane", well ... you'd be best to keep searching. I give "Paperback Hero" TWO STARS out of FIVE.
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5/10
A Suitable Case For Treatment.
rmax30482319 February 2011
Warning: Spoilers
Commendable location shooting with a fine sense of place. The place is a small prairie town in Saskatchewan, the time is the tail end of winter when the mid-afternoons can warm up in the low sun but the nocturnal winds are as icy as the hockey rink. The little city survives on wheat and cattle.

There isn't much for the protagonist, Keir Dullea, to do, when he's not working in the local notions shop, so he has put a good deal of effort into creating a particular persona. He's a cocky young fellow who is the erratic star of the hockey team and fancies himself "the Marshall" and sometimes struts around town wearing a Gary Cooper cowboy hat and toting a six shooter, taunting some of the other guys, and only half jokingly. There's little doubt that this is going to get him into trouble.

He and his friend, John Beck, pull all sorts of stunts. They paint an adversary's car, for instance. Beck and Dullea wind up in jail but Dullea is bailed out by Elizabeth Ashley. Dullea has been schtupping all the ladies he can get his hands on because he exudes a kind of rustic charm and is fun to be around, but he has a lot of rough edges too.

When one of his girl friends leaves on a bus for Saskatoon, he overtakes the bus in his convertible, pulls it off the road, and kidnaps the girl at the point of a gun. She objects when he takes her to a windblown, abandoned farm house, but, as I say, he's an ingratiating customer. Here's the exchange between the two of them, just before she leaps into his car and takes off in a cloud of dust.

Dullea: "Well, I guess all you whores have hearts of gold." Girl: (Throws herself at his feet.) "What do you want me to do?" That happens to me all the time but I can't see how Dullea has earned that kind of earnest petition. I mean, he's whacked this girl around before and he's just kidnapped her. Furthermore, his stunts were harmless at first but they've grown more disruptive and outrageous as the story progresses.

The only person who seems to love him without qualification, his screwy behavior notwithstanding, is Ashley. She's a deserted wife, no longer a child, and she wants to be married and settled down with children. Dullea wants nothing more than to be remembered in this whistle stop of a town. He and Ashley take a shower together in which we get to see a good deal of exactly what Ashley is offering him. She's perceptive. She knows herself and she knows Dullea. And she has a splendid figure. And how does Dullea respond as she crawls all over him on the shower floor, soaping him and rinsing his body parts? He compares her to ANOTHER of his girl friends, telling her that, although Ashley is good in the sack, his other amour was better. Just what women love to hear.

It's a little like "Hud", only Dullea is not a selfish bastard. He's just crazy. He doesn't particularly want to hurt anyone except, at times, the local sheriff, whose chief defect is his sanity, and then only when they meet in the center of the street and draw pistols on one another, as in some Grade B Western.

It's a slice of life on the Canadian prairie, but what a slice and what a life. One of the most important issues is whether the hockey team will survive. I've always disliked ice hockey, mostly because I can't skate myself. So in my unbiased opinion, it's a highly overrated skill. On top of that, the growing popularity of sports like hockey and basketball are symptoms of pathology in our national character. Nobody cares about baseball any more because the viewers have to wait too long for the pitcher to wind up and throw, and maybe nothing happens for -- gulp -- for several minutes in a row. Basketball and hockey are all action all the time. An enraptured five-year-old can gawk at it because something is always in motion. We've lost our patience with having patience. We want it -- and we want it now! End of lecture. Will someone help me down from this soap box? What -- nobody?
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6/10
Prime Example of 1970's Canadian Cinema
snicewanger5 May 2014
I have to admit I first acquired this film so I could see Liz Ashley's nude shower scene and she did look great, but the rest of the film was not nearly as bad as I was afraid it was going to be. Despite his 2001 immortality as Star Child Dave Bowman,I have never been a big Keir Dullea fan. I always remember Noel Coward's observation after seeing Bunny Lake is Missing, "Keir Dullea gone tomorrow". The movie does have a certain charm and Dullea plays his child/man who refuses to grow up role with some vigor

It's a bit dated now but if you're into the 1970's or primitive Canadian cinema, or you are hot for Elizabeth Ashley as I was, you might wish to seek this out. As far as I know it hasn't been released on DVD. I still have my VHS copy, however. Although the color is starting to fade
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7/10
Dreary life in a small Canadian town and hockey.
bchabel22 August 2000
The movie isn't very good at any level. But it does have a nifty shower scene with Dullea and Ashley. To show how far Canadian movies have come, try seeing this and The Sweet Hereafter back to back. That is if you can get through this one.
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1/10
Desperately desperately bad.
newsssisskokid14 May 2023
Unbelievable stilted dialogue. Nasty misogynist ogre for leading character...not redeemable even if the character is intended to be out of step with the times. You cannot possibly award a star for the acting in the leads. My goodness, from an iconic role in 2001 to dreadfully voiced and dreadfully directed. The editing is amateurish. Yup, as good as it got in Canadian cinema in the 70s....no wait, there was Going Down the Road...try that. You 'll never get back the 90 minutes of your life wasted on this turkey. So what if Gordon Lightfoot sings a bit. I would have rather watched Gordon LIghtfoot tuning his guitar for 90 minutes.
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9/10
A Canadian Classic
boofu4 November 2006
A little known Canadian movie about a small town hockey star that lives life thinking the world revolves around him. The nude shower scene,very risqué for it's time, is still one of the most poignant, real,raw, and honest scenes ever put to screen. Critics who felt that the movie didn't accurately depict the reality of life have never experienced life as portrayed in this movie. In fact even today there are many people who still act just like the character of Rick Dylan, a quick look into the issues that continue to occur with athletes at some US Colleges proves that. If this had been a movie made south of the border it would probably be a classic!
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9/10
Underappreciated Canadian film that should not be taken simply at face value
credmond21 November 2003
There are a few really good reasons why people should make an effort to see this film.

First of all, it is a rare feature film unapologetically set in Saskatchewan that is above all entertaining. More importantly though, it is a good comment on Canadian culture being influenced by American culture in a fatal way.

I found Keir Dullea's character, Rick, charming as the wanna be sheriff of a small Saskatchewan town in the 70s, equipped with a holster, cowboy hat and chaps, and a sheriffs star on the side of his bright red car. More importantly, the town never mocked him, and when they did he would always stood up for himself and beat the crap out of people making fun of him .

In fact, as this dreamer he becomes the only interesting thing in the town which has you rooting for him throughout the film. If you're not reading between the lines of what this film is about though, it's still enjoyable to watch. And in its defence, it was made before the Tax Shelter era, so you can't write it off as a product of those days. It actually took heart to make this film, and it shows on screen.
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8/10
A Snide Commentary on Canadian Identity
grand_schuttz22 January 2010
I discovered this film several years ago and much of it has stuck with me. The director, Peter Pearson, sets out to do a back-door comparison of the Canadian and American West by examining a small-town hockey hotshot and his delusions of grandeur. Keir Dullea of 2001: A Space Odyssey fame plays the protagonist, whose swagger is both out of touch with the reality of contemporary living, but is also based on the fictions of the "Wild West"--hence the film's title. If life isn't going to be more exciting, he's not opposed to forcing it a little bit so he can play out his fantasy of being an American bad boy in a sleepy Canadian farming town.

This film beautifully illustrated the hazards of adopting an identity that was never our own.
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10/10
An iconic Canadian film
Writerinres14 September 2006
Paperback Hero is this year's (2006) selection for the Toronto International Film Festival's Canadian Open Vault program, which is an annual special presentation of a recently restored iconic Canadian film. It's an honest, emotional, and lovingly presented portrayal of a small-town big-shot, Rick Dillon (Keir Dullea), whose loves and life are in a mess.

Beautifully written (Barry Pearson and Les Rose), directed (Peter Pearson -- no relation to the writer), and shot (Don Wilder), the film shows off Saskatchewan in sometimes stark, sometimes glowing splendor.

It's a treat to see Dullea, Elizabeth Ashley, John Beck, and Dayle Haddon as they looked in 1973, all of them portraying very convincingly the characters whose lives are circumscribed by the confines of a small prairie town.

Gordon Lightfoot's "If You Could Read My Mind", kicks up the emotional lift another notch. The original title of the film was to be "Last of the Big Guns", but after Lightfoot agreed to provide the music, the title changed to Paperback Hero, highlighted by the words from the song:

"If I could read your mind love

What a tale your thoughts could tell

Just like a paperback novel

The kind that drugstores sell

When you reach the part where the heartaches come

The hero would be me

But heroes often fail

And you wont read that book again

Because the ending's just too hard to take..."
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9/10
Funny, I really like the movie...
mikepaul-37 March 2005
I managed to get a VHS copy a few years back, and burned it to DVD-R for posterity.

Perhaps I'm oversimplifying by describing it as a "Canadian 'Breathless'", but I still find that the shortest good description I can come up with.

A lot less use of the Gordon Lightfoot music than I recall from years of watching it on Canadian TV, but that may just be fading memory rather than VHS music licensing problems.

I also liked 'Slipstream' http://us.imdb.com/title/tt0072181/combined more than another reviewer, but some people look at movies as dreams they'd like to be in and some look at them like they were traffic accidents, so there's always going to be disagreements...
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