Roadgames
Roadgames is a 1981 Australian thriller film directed by Richard Franklin and starring Stacy Keach and Jamie Lee Curtis. The film follows a truck driver travelling across Australia who, with the help of a hitchhiker, seeks to track down a serial killer who is butchering women and dumping their dismembered bodies along desolate highways.
Plot
In rural Australia, expatriate American truck driver Patrick Quid pulls into a motel for the night. There, a man in a green van checks in with a female hitchhiker, whom Quid had passed by because of trucking company policy. In their motel room, the hitchhiker strums a guitar while the man unpacks a new guitar string and forms it into a noose. He winds the string around his gloved hands and uses it to garrote the woman.Quid wakes the next morning in his truck. His pet dingo sniffs at the garbage outside the motel, and Quid notices the van driver watching from the room's window as the garbage truck picks up the bags. Quid loads the refrigerated trailer with pork carcases, and sets off for Perth on the Eyre Highway. On the road he passes a nagging wife and her family and a cautious man hauling a sailboat. He repeatedly passes a female hitchhiker, Pamela Rushworth, who he does not pick up.
The wife, Frita, creates a roadblock by streaming toilet paper across the highway. Quid stops and she climbs into his cab and orders Quid to catch up with her husband, who left her at the side of the road. They play 20 Questions to pass the time. Frita mentions a woman's murder and his nonchalant answers disturb her. She suspects he might be the serial killer from the news.
Quid stops the truck after seeing the green van parked along the road. Its driver has trash bags and an esky; he appears to be burying the bags. When the van driver notices Quid watching him through binoculars, he abandons his work and drives away. Later, at a roadhouse, the van driver assaults Quid's dingo. Quid gives chase, but is hindered by the slow-driving boat owner, who refuses to let him pass. Eventually, Quid smashes the boat that swings to block as he passes, but the van is too far off to catch.
Quid picks up the repeatedly encountered female hitchhiker, Pamela Rushworth, the daughter of an American diplomat. Quid urges Pamela to let her father know that she is alright. At a service station, they notice the van parked near the restroom. Seeing that someone is in the toilet stall, Quid thinks he has the killer cornered and leaves Pamela to investigate the van. While reaching for the esky inside the van, Pamela realizes that the driver is sleeping on the floor. In the restroom, a biker emerges from the stall. Quid rushes outside to see that the van is gone.
When Quid catches up to the van, he believes Pamela is chatting happily in the passenger seat. Later that night, Quid notices the van parked off the side of the road and pulls over to investigate. He hears people giggling in the bushes nearby and mistakenly assumes that Pamela and the van driver are having sex. He breaks into the van and finds that the esky only contains food.
Quid arrives at the outskirts of Perth and, while reporting to the weigh station, spots the van. He follows it through the streets of Perth, trailed by the police. Eventually the van reaches a dead end and Quid's truck becomes stuck in the narrow alleys. The van driver approaches Quid's truck and attempts to strangle him with a garrotte, but Quid disarms him. When Quid starts to strangle the van driver with the garrotte, the police arrive and assume that Quid is the killer. Upon freeing a gagged and bound Pamela from the van, the police realise Quid is innocent, and catch Pamela's captor while he is trying to escape through the crowd. Pamela scolds Quid for abandoning her to appease the dangerous van driver who caught her searching his van.
After delivering the meat shipment, Quid relates to Pamela that after he had found his trailer door open and discovered the load weight some kilos over, he had presumed that the van driver had killed her and disposed of her inside his trailer. At the meat facility, a woman cleaning out the trailer is brushed by a guitar string hanging from the ceiling. When she tugs at it, a human head falls into her soap bucket.
Cast
- Stacy Keach as Pat Quid
- Jamie Lee Curtis as Hitch
- Marion Edward as Frita
- Grant Page as Smith or Jones
- Alan Hopgood as Lester
- "Killer" as the dingo "Boswell"
Production
Development
While making the film Patrick, Richard Franklin gave Everett De Roche a copy of Rear Window as an example of how he wanted the script typed. De Roche loved the content of the script and expressed his desire to write a film with a similar plot but set on a moving vehicle. He developed the idea with Franklin in Fiji, where the latter was co-producing The Blue Lagoon. De Roche wrote the first draft of Roadgames over a period of 8 days in a hotel, with Franklin visiting periodically during breaks in the production of Blue Lagoon.De Roche had written an episode of the TV series Truckies called "Road Games". Its truckie characters became concerned about a strange man following two small children on a bus. It aired on 4 September 1978 and was directed by Michael Ludbrook.
Filming
Shot on location in the Nullarbor Plain and in Melbourne, the budget of $1.75 million was the highest ever for an Australian film at that time. Avco Embassy paid $500,000 for all rights outside Australia, and the balance came from the Greater Union, the Australian Film Commission, the Victorian Film Corporation, and the Western Australian Film Council.Casting
Franklin wanted to cast Sean Connery in the lead, but was unable to afford his salary, and the role went to Stacy Keach instead.Australian actress Lisa Peers was cast to play opposite him, but the US distributors insisted on an American co-star, so Franklin cast Jamie Lee Curtis. The film ran into trouble with Actors Equity when the Melbourne branch of the union approved the importation of Curtis, but the Sydney branch opposed it. "We found ourselves as the ping-pong ball in a game of politics between Melbourne and Sydney, and it nearly resulted in the film closing down," said Franklin. Franklin later acknowledged wishing he had increased the size of Curtis' part to take more advantage of her.