The Wild Angels (1966) Poster

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7/10
The First and Maybe the Best
aimless-462 March 2006
"Wild Angels" was the first of the American International biker pictures, which were a drive-in staple of the late 60's and early 70's. Coming almost a generation after "The Wild Ones" these films were enjoyed by anyone who enjoyed a beer-assisted drive-in fantasy about being an outlaw biker for a few hours (they usually played as double features). It was a big game of lets pretend.

And like "Wild In the Streets" much of the appeal was the fear and disgust these things elicited from parents; as they were the only ones who actually took any of the stuff seriously. Many a Peter Fonda poster from "Wild Angels" went up on bedroom walls as parents pondered where they had gone wrong.

The gang in "Wild Angels" did not wear Hells Angels colors, they were "Angels-San Pedro" although some Hells Angels from the Long Beach chapter actually appeared in the film. AI's biker films had very colorful titles and often mentioned Hell or Angels in the title: "Devils Angels", "The Born Losers", "The Savage Seven", "The Mini-Skirt Mob", "Angels from Hell", "Hells Angels 69", "Hells Belles", and "The Hard Ride".

"Wild Angels" was ground-breaking stuff when it was released and featured more Nazi stuff than the later films because once the surfers adopted the Iron Cross it was no longer cool. It broke the outrage meter with its finale as the funeral for The Loser (Bruce Dern) turned into a gang-bang of his widow (Diane Ladd), the destruction of the chapel, the assault of the minister, the abuse of the corpse, and a rumble with the outraged townspeople. And throw in some drug use.

Roger Corman's direction is his most active ever, and the editing by Monte Hellman keeps the pace moving along. You don't notice until it is over that very little actually happened. Fonda is super cool and Nancy Sinatra is unintentionally hilarious. Michael J. Pollard and Gayle Hunnicutt are instantly recognizable in supporting roles. Mike Curb's score is high-lighted by Davie Allan and the Arrows' hit "Blues' Theme."

Then again, what do I know? I'm only a child.
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7/10
Corman really let's loose with no holes barred look at biker gang
rosscinema4 August 2004
Warning: Spoilers
This is arguably the quintessential exploitation film that doesn't rely on a mainstream story to fulfill the audiences and instead gives a sordid and narcissistic look at a wild gang of bikers. Story is about the leader of the Venice Hell's Angels named Heavenly Blues (Peter Fonda) who tells his biker pal Loser (Bruce Dern) that they might have found his stolen chopper in a nearby town called Mecca. They and the other members go there and confront the Mexican gang that are responsible and a big brawl erupts that brings the cops but everyone runs off except Loser who steals a cops motorcycle. During a chase on the highway Loser gets shot in the back and is caught by the police who put him in a hospital in critical condition.

*****SPOILER ALERT*****

The Hell's Angels read about Loser in the paper and Blues decides to get him out with the help of his girlfriend Mike (Nancy Sinatra) and after they sneak him out they take him back to his girl Gaysh (Diane Ladd). Everyone watches Loser bleed to death and since the police are looking for them they decide to have a funeral in a small town where they won't be found but at the funeral the Hell's Angels assault the preacher and start a wild drunken orgy.

This was one of the last times that Roger Corman directed a film for a long time and it was because of the way that the distributor wanted to promote his film so after this he started his own company. This is so much more than an exploitation flick and Corman pulls no punches with this story as every character seems to lack any type of integrity. Fonda's character is the leader but he's such a brooder that most of the time he seems annoyed by everyone and that includes his girlfriend. The gang here is portrayed ruthlessly and during the funeral while Ladd is weeping over the body of Dern a few members grab her and rape her behind the coffin! Then when they're done they wave over some others so that they can have a chance. This gang has emblems such as iron crosses and swastikas adorned on them and they yell about just being left alone to do what they want and not be hassled by "The Man". Corman allows the film to end without any message as the characters are involved in another brawl and he doesn't want to showcase these bikers as lost youth or some such nonsense but instead chooses to make a film that will exploit them and also scare audiences. One of the interesting things about these films from the 1960's is to see what certain cities looked like back then such as Palm Springs and Venice with the canals before the condos were built. Other known actors have small roles such as Michael J. Pollard, Norman Alden, Frank Maxwell, and of course Dick Miller. In his own way Corman changed the way films were to be made and not just in an exploitation manner but with showing characters as anti-social and rebellious and omitting the usual message that they supposedly learn from. This probably sounds like a horrid film with nothing to say but I think it's fascinating to watch for the same reasons and in it's own disruptive way it captures a specific time in our country that was taking place.
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5/10
'B' movie about thugs on cycles
helpless_dancer9 April 1999
I first saw this show in '66 when I was a cycle rider myself. I liked it so much that I went to see it twice. Even liked the music. After watching it again over 30 years later, I have to ask myself just what it was that I found so appealing about the film. It was corny, overacted, sometimes badly acted, and it had a juvenile storyline. I guess what I liked about it back then was all the motorcycles. Good to see that Peter Fonda has improved with age.
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6/10
A surprising viewpoint
kuciak8 June 2010
Warning: Spoilers
At the beginning of the film, we are told that Hells Angels had participated in the making of the film. This is a surprise, as the film seems to be a denouncement of this kind of lifestyle. This was a surprise to me, as I was thinking that we would be rooting for the motorcycle people against "the man". Perhaps however, 1966, when the film was made, would be different from 1968.

The first time we should realize that we should not be for Heavenly Blues (Peter Fonda) and his gang is when they attack some Mexican youths in a garage. Roger Coorman emphasizes the size differences between the two groups, the all white gang being much bigger than the Mexicans, with Heavenly Blues using racially derogatory comments towards the Mexicans. Later, one of his gang members will try to rape an African American nurse, with Heaveny Blues intervening not out of honorable reasons, but just to get the hell out of the hospital and not get caught.

The police in the film are portrayed rather decently. In the hospital, the officer guarding the Loser (Played by Bruce Dern) is portrayed as a caring person, polite to the African American nurse, and concerned about the so called Sister of the Loser (Played by Nancy Sinatra). The police are never shown as being brutal authority figures, but just as people trying to keep things in a peaceful way.

Bruce Derns name in the film (The loser) is apt for the whole group. They are in fact portrayed as losers. They're only goal In life is to ride free, and get stoned. They are shown to be able to be exploited by unscrupulous people, such as the Funeral arranger. When at the end the police are on the way, Nancy Sinatra tells Fonda's character, lets get away, He responds for the first time with any real sense of his own life, "there is no where to go". They all leave, but he continues to dig the grave for "The loser", he could be actually digging his own grave.

It is during the church scene, where the audience will find these characters repugnant. You don't have to be religious to do so. At the end of the film, you are going to be rooting for the townspeople, watching the ridiculous funeral procession, to attack the motor cycle gang. Coorman bookends the film interesting here. At the beginning, we saw a young boy on a tricycle. At the end of the film, as I recall, it is a young boy who throws an object at the motor cycle gang in the cemetery.

I happened to watch the film by chance, on one of those on demand free cable stations. I can't say I was totally entertained by the film. It seems somewhat dated now. But it did surprise me, and I would have to suggest that their was a message in the film, and a rather strong one.
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Roger Corman's trash classic that started the biker movie cycle of the 1960s/70s.
Infofreak3 May 2003
Legendary b-grade producer/director Roger Corman had a hand in many bad movies, and some very good ones. He also made several in between, trashy but fun. 'The Wild Angels' is probably the best known of these. While Brando and 'The Wild One' caused a lot of waves in the 1950s, this is the movie which single handedly kicked off the highly lucrative biker movie cycle of the 1960s/70s ('The Cycle Savages', 'The Rebel Rousers', 'Hells Angels On Wheels', 'The Savage Seven', 'The Glory Stompers', 'Angel Unchained', and countless others). It also was an important step on the road to counter culture classic 'Easy Rider'. In fact more than one person has made the connection that 'The Wild Angels' plus Corman's psychedelic propaganda movie 'The Trip' equals 'Easy Rider'. Peter Fonda ('Easy Rider', 'Dirty Mary, Crazy Larry') plays biker leader Heavenly Blues and in doing so Fonda creates the on screen persona he would pretty much stick with for the next ten years or so. His performance is laid back and cool, or wooden and dull, depending on your perspective, but it certainly suits the character and the movie. The only time he really gets passionate is in his legendary speech in the church scene ("We wanna be free to ride our machines without being hassled by The Man! And we wanna get loaded!"), later inspiration for Mudhoney and Primal Scream. Bruce Dern ('Bloody Mama', 'Silent Running') plays Fonda's doomed sidekick Loser. Now Dern is one of the most underrated actors of this era and is always compelling to watch. He and Fonda make a great team, and I always associate them together in my mind, but surprisingly they only made two movies together, this one and 'The Trip' the following year. Dern's old lady is played by his then wife Diane Ladd ('Wild At Heart'). Fonda's is none other than Nancy Sinatra! Michael J. Pollard, soon to appear in 'Bonnie And Clyde', plays Pigmy, one of Fonda and Derb's biker buddies, and being a Corman movie the legendary Dick Miller ('A Bucket Of Blood', 'The Terror') has a memorable bit part. Also keep an eye out for the beautiful Gayle Hunnicutt, later to co-star in 'The Legend Of Hell House'. Corman produced and directed this movie, Charles B. Griffith ('Death Race 2000') scripted, Monte Hellman ('Two-Lane Blacktop') was the editor, and Peter Bogdanovich ('The Last Picture Show') is credited as Corman's assistant, but apparently did a little bit of everything. On top of this there is a fantastic fuzz guitar theme performed by the ultra-cool Davie Allan. 'The Wild Angels' is trash, but well made and very entertaining trash, and is absolutely essential viewing for all cult movie fans or 1960s buffs. I wouldn't call it Corman's BEST movie (I'd choose one of his Poe movies, or 'Bloody Mama', or maybe even 'The Trip'), but it's one of his most FUN. Highly recommended!
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7/10
a drive-in movie classic that has nihilistic fun
Quinoa198412 July 2006
Roger Corman, though having his rightful clout as one of the pioneers of drive in movies and exploitation pictures, doesn't have a great film with The Wild Angels, but then it's not meant to be. As I watched the film, I thought of an adjective for the film that I hadn't used for one in a while- it's reckless. Like the bikers themselves that Corman and his writers are 'following', the film never really comes together and the parts are definitely greater than the whole. Too many scenes end up kind of flailing around with not much to do except act as filler in-between Corman's rule-of-law of their being an action/fight scene &/or scene of sex every 15 minutes. But on the other hand, as a purely drive-in movie, where people watching aren't necessarily meant to keep track of the whole picture ALL the time (likely 'making out' Corman must've thought), it doesn't break under time that much. And, sometimes, Corman is actually pretty creative and intuitive as a filmmaker.

His cast is Peter Fonda (quite similar to Easy Rider which means maybe too esoteric and contemplative to be the wild leader of the angels), Nancy Sinatra (not that great, though she can fake a crying scene pretty well), and Bruce Dern (in a role that actually does ask for some real 'acting' as opposed to biker posing). There are also other real Angels riding about in the background, and basically the story revolves around the wounding- and later unnecessary death- of Loser (Dern), who is also given a proper Biker funeral. In between there are plenty of fight scenes, some exciting moments of the men on their bikes, a few sexy, bra-clad women, and the 'squares' being almost everyone else not an Angel. Sometimes the scenes are pretty basic, lots of generic (even for the period) rock and roll tunes put to the Angels riding around, and partying, though once in a while Corman actually makes it interesting. A scene that is finally quiet, for example, when Dern is getting operated on, is one of my favorites in the film. But for the most part, it's just the simple tale of youth who just "want to be free, to ride without getting hassled by the man...and we want to get loaded!"

In short, it's kind of like the fast-food equivalent of a biker-movie. It's got many ingredients, it fills you up, but it definitely isn't really 'good' for you despite serving up what's promised (it doesn't have that healthy portion of being cohesive in structure and with at least a little nuance). Though for Corman this could possibly be one of his better entries. (Strong) B+
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4/10
"A rape of decency! A parody of pleasure!"
moonspinner5510 December 2005
Roger Corman's modestly-budgeted "wheeler" for American International Pictures opens brilliantly, with the evocative cinematography from Richard Moore promising more than what Corman, screenwriter Charles Griffith, or the cast can eventually deliver. Plot has Southern California biker gang enjoying rumbles, cycle jousts, hassling the Mexicans, and outrunning the local heat; but when Bruce Dern steals a police-bike and gets shot, gang "president" Peter Fonda hatches a plan to break him out of the hospital and thus keep him out of prison. The film looks terrific from start to finish, but the line-readings are sometimes so painful and awkward, one wishes Corman could cut back on the dialogue and just allow the visuals to tell the story. Sort of the older brother to "Easy Rider", "Angels" was eclipsed in popularity and relevance just a few years later. Supporting cast includes Diane Ladd, Gayle Hunnicutt, Michael J. Pollard, and Nancy Sinatra, whose hospital crying scene is a hoot. *1/2 from ****
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6/10
The Wild Ones
mime.de22 October 2004
The begin is awesome: The little child and then in front of the camera the wheel of Peter Fonda's cycle. Uuaah, it was great for me when I saw this picture first in the age of sixteen or seventeen. This moment I wished to be a biker for the next twenty years. Later Corman's way of film-making didn't work so brilliant for this young shy boy in Bayreuth, Germany. Lot of the rest of this movie is cheesy trivial, and so I remembered today this wonderful scene of terror and an actor in his best form. I don't speak from Peter Fonda (he is only solid like Nancy Sinatra too), the guy is Bruce Dern, one of the most underrated actors of US-cinema. My rating is six of out ten stars, because this picture was with Dern and also created the new genre of motorcycle-films. Marlon Brando as the leading actor in "The Wild One" didn't have the influence for cinema, nor for the fifties or for the sixties like this - sorry - in the sum very, very average picture.
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4/10
"We don't want nobody tellin' us what to do."
classicsoncall15 January 2021
Warning: Spoilers
When all is said and done, this is really a rather pointless film. Not much happens except for Heavenly Blues' (Peter Fonda) biker gang going on a tear from the opening scenes to the final denouement. This would include a dust up with a bunch of Mexican garage mechanics, a wild canyon party, the near total destruction of a community church, and a brawl against villagers who come out to witness a funeral procession. That funeral, by the way, is for Bruce Dern's character, Joe 'Loser' Kerns, who's hospitalized after being chased and shot by cops in a motorcycle chase. You can pretty much surmise the IQ quotient of Heavenly's San Pedro Angels wasn't very high, as they kidnap Joey from his hospital bed with an IV hooked up to his arm. Considering he was just about on the way out without interference, this was bound to put him under for good.

If it's even possible, the second half of the film is even more disgusting than the first, as Joey's corpse is given the "Weekend at Bernie's" treatment, removed from his coffin and propped up to oversee the wild melee that breaks out at the church service. Joey's gal Gaysh (Diane Ladd), understandably upset over his death, is actually grabbed by a couple of biker thugs and a simulated rape occurs off screen in what has to be one of the most degrading sequences you're likely to experience in a picture. I can't imagine what was going through anyone's mind associated with this picture, but as I write this sentence, it's pretty evident that not much of anything was going through anyone's mind. As if adding insult to injury, Bruce Dern's character had the same name as a high school classmate of mine who became a good friend, although his last name was spelled 'Kearns'. He passed away quite a number of years ago, probably without knowing that a namesake appeared in a grotesque biker flick.
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7/10
Chills and Thrills!
gavin694217 March 2014
In Venice, California, the leader of Hell's Angels Heavenly Blues tells his friend Joe "Loser" Kearns (Bruce Dern) that he had located his stolen motorcycle in Mecca. While trying to retrieve the bike, Loser is shot on the back by a police patrol end goes to the hospital.

This film's pedigree is amazing: Dern, Peter Fonda, Diane Ladd, Nancy Sinatra, Roger Corman, Arkoff-Nicholson, Peter Bogdanovich... even if it was a terrible film, it would be a must-see for all those interested in film history.

An, of course, it is darn entertaining. I would love to see a special edition of this with commentary and the whole nine yards. Maybe one exists, but not the one I saw.
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2/10
A film with a $360,000 budget that grossed $14,000,000---Roger Corman must have laughed himself silly!
planktonrules11 February 2011
Warning: Spoilers
This film is a wonderful example of how writer/director/producer Roger Corman had a knack out of making cheap films that made lots of money. Oddly, of all his MANY credits, apparently only one of his films lost money--and, even more oddly, it was one of his best films! Here with "Wild Angels" you have essentially a crap film with some actors who later became famous--and it made a fortune. Corman must have laughed himself silly with this one!!

Bruce Dern, Peter Fonda and Nancy Sinatra was all members of the Angels--a sort of biker 'club'. For 1966, they were a pretty scary and tough bunch--though compared to some of the biker films that followed (such as "Satan's Sadists"), they are a relatively mellow group. Sure, they have gang fights, rapes, drug use and altercations with the cops, but otherwise they are all relatively clean-cut thugs with swastikas bedecking practically everything! Early in the film, the gang is having a friendly rumble with a Hispanic gang. After a bit of eye-gouging and the like, the cops show and try to catch the fun-loving guys. One of them (Dern) is eventually caught--and in the process he's very badly hurt. The gang of braniacs decide to break in to the hospital and rescuing them. In the process, the critically injured Dern dies--I guess unplugging him from all the equipment was a bad idea after all! This leads to a lovely funeral sendoff at which time the gang runs amok--destroying a church. In a case of HEAVY padding, this sequence seems to go on and on and on--mostly to stretch the film to full-length and to shock the viewers. It literally makes up almost half the film with the various sacrilegious activities that occur there (including a rape--which, fortunately, is implied and not shown in any detail) and at the grave site. I think the padding is so bad that I frankly found most of this pretty boring!

All in all, it's a film in search of a plot--which, sadly, it seems to lack. A gang fights, a leader dies, they fight some more...end of story....and Corman laughing all the way to the bank since a lot of kids went to see this bilge with one-dimensional characters. Now I am not anti-biker film--I just want to see a good one, which this is not.
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8/10
''The Most Terrifying Film Of Our Time!''.
phillindholm23 June 2012
That's what it seemed like ''way back in 1966. Producer Roger Corman set out to make a film based on the notorious California-Based ''Hell's Angels'' motorcycle gang, having seen a cover story about them in Life Magazine.Legendary ''B'' movie studio, American International Pictures was just as anxious to jump on the ''Biker Bandwagon'' (they eventually produced or distributed eleven more films on this subject) and gave the OK to Corman. Though George Chakiris (''West Side Story'' Oscar Winner) was originally cast in the lead role, it was Peter Fonda who ended up playing the part. Playing his ''Old Lady'' was Nancy Sinatra, who was then riding high with her hit single ''These Boots Are Made For Walkin'.Bruce Dern played ''The Loser'' the part originally intended for Fonda, and Dern's then wife Diane Ladd portrayed his on-screen spouse. There were a few familiar faces among the supporting actors as well, including Gayle Hunnicutt, in an early appearance, and Assistant Director Peter Bogdonavich, who is glimpsed in the climactic brawl,as is Corman himself. The story itself is really just a loosely connected series of incidents which allow the viewer to follow the ''Angel's'' exploits as if they were viewing a Documentary about the gang. Since ''The Wild One''aside, this was the film that started the whole ''Cycle'' cycle, it's not surprising that it has a very experimental feel to it.The location photography is excellent, and belies the brief three week shooting schedule, while the musical score written by future AIP Biker music stalwart (and future Lieutenant Governor) Mike Curb, is dynamic and fits the visuals like a glove. The same goes for the group (''Davie Allan And The Arrows'') who perform it. In fact ''Blues Theme'' was a hit single for the group, and the Soundtrack Album proved so popular that a second volume was released. Both records, in fact, started the ''Motorcycle Soundtrack'' craze, most of which were released on Curb's ''Tower/Sidewalk'' labels, a Capitol Records affiliate during the 60's. The actors themselves are not given much opportunity to spread their wings and fly, so to speak, but, under the circumstances, they do all right. Dern is especially convincing as ''The Loser'' and Ladd evokes the sympathy her character calls for. Fonda is a bit weak as ''Heavenly Blues'' the leader, but Sinatra makes a pretty tough ''Momma'' and though her natural beauty is downplayed, she is still very easy on the eyes.Upon it's release, the low-budget film proved enormously popular (AIP'S biggest hit so far) and convinced them to launch a whole series of ''Protest'' films. (A wise decision on their part, because they kept the studio in the profit margin for years to come). The Biker genre would have it's share of hits and misses, and, thanks to a few Poverty-Row, independent productions like ''The Hellcats'' ''The Rebel Rousers'' and ''The Cycle Savages'' (starring Dern) all of which made this one seem fairly lavish by comparison, it had petered out by the early seventies. Nevertheless, ''The Wild Angels'' and a few successors like ''Devil's Angels'' and ''Born Losers'' (both released in 1967) remain among the most popular''B'' films of their era.
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6/10
lots of familiar faces
robjob225 June 2005
The Wild Ones is a fun movie to watch if you love Harleys and familiar Hollywood faces before they were real famous. It's also a movie where as a Harley lover you can see the predecessor of the famous Captain America bike and the blueprint for Peter Fonda's character in "Easy Rider" which is of course a much better movie. Bruce Dern, Diane Ladd who are the parents of Laura Dern, Nancy Sinatra and Peter Fonda. I wonder why Dennis Hopper wasn't in this one? It's not a great movie but as a biker I enjoyed watching it while also doing other stuff..LOL, not a great plot but fun to watch. However if it wasn't for the familiar faces and the history I wouldn't have given it a 6.
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1/10
An empty movie
Bad movies are made all the time. Some are made by amateurs, while others are made by the highest of production companies. Along with that, some films even have a solid cast and still messed it up somehow. It should make viewers wonder to themselves what the heck possessed these actors to take part in such strange concoctions. In this mid 1960s film, Roger Corman, the man best known for The Little Shop of Horrors (1960) is in the director's chair. Starring in the film is a young Peter Fonda and Nancy Sinatra. Together, these two actors head a biker gang known as "The Wild Angels" (based on an actual biker group "Hell's Angels").

It's after the rolling intro credits where the narrative is lost. Credited as the so-called writer to this movie is Charles B. Griffith, a man who has produced several other works with Corman. Why didn't Corman see how bad the screenplay was? There is literally no part of the plot that is engaging enough for any audience. The only thing that is presented is the behavior of this gang, which doesn't help. The behavior of the gang is reckless, brash and even stupid. In one scene, a bunch of bonehead bikers hop on their bikes to chase a rabbit. A rabbit.

The mentality of this gang is to be "free" and ride their machines without having to answer to "the man". You know, the basic 60s perspective of most rebels. Roger Corman may have been trying to get this message across, but it is done in such a way that is so late in the running time, that by the time the topic is brought up, the audience will already be asleep. It's almost like he was just trying to capitalize on the craze at the time. Let's also not forget the symbol of "The Wild Angels" - the Swastika? Yeah, just how exactly is portraying this in any film other it being about Nazis or Charles Manson sound like a good idea? Point being, it isn't. No one should be proud to represent that symbol. How is that Peter Fonda, Nancy Sinatra and others found it to be a wise career choice?

The dialog isn't anything special either. The characters have no meat to them. Plus, there are little to any characterizations among the leads that are presented to the viewers. Peter Fonda's character says "Shut Up" way too often. Nancy Sinatra's character keeps asking if Fonda's character still loves her (and he can't make up his mind). Nothing is explained to why the characters act the way they do on a personal level. The sole activities that matter to this group of neanderthals is riding their bikes, getting high, getting laid and having meaningless brawls. None of it is appealing, all the way up to the very last minute of the film. Michael J. Pollard best known for his role in Tango & Cash (1989) as Owen even has a role and can't help lift the entertainment level. Forget background music, nowhere close to being on target with the tone of the film. No wonder the real "Hell's Angels" filed a lawsuit!

A story barely exists here. The characters are as transparent as glass, the music is irrelevant and the events that take place are meaningless.
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Very impressive movie when I was 16.
swojtak11 August 2004
I was 16 years old when I saw this movie and I had just gotten a 90cc Honda motorcycle. What really impressed me was the music in the opening scene where Blue rode his chopper out of Venice, California. I live in LA and was familiar with the area and since I had a bike, I knew the feeling of riding a motorcycle. Each time I ride, I can still hear the music in my head and ever since then I have had a love of pan head, Harley-Davidson choppers. The music played most often and associated with bikes is, "Born to be Wild" from Easy rider. To me, the music is the theme from the Wild Angels. However, even when I saw the movie at that time, I thought the acting was silly. Still, when I think of the movie, I can feel the freedom of the open road, the sound of the exhaust pipes, and the wind in my face. Even at age 53 I still want to go where I want to go and to do what I want to do. This is what America is all about.
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6/10
We wanna be free to ride our machines without being hassled by The Man!
lastliberal13 March 2010
Hard to believe that this film went up against The Battle of Algiers at the Venice Film Festival in 1966. Roger Corman is responsible for starting the biker flicks phenomenon with this film.

Peter Fonda is the essence of coo as he performs a role that he made even more popular in Easy Riders three years later.

He is accompanied by Nancy Sinatra as Monkey, Michael J. Pollard as Pigmy, and Bruce Dern as Loser; along with three time Oscar nominee, and Golden Globe and BAFTA winner, Diane Ladd in her first credited movie role.

Radical scene in the church where Fonda debated the preacher (played by Frank Maxwell, Det. Lt. McAllen in one of my favorite films, Mr. Majestyk).

Exciting action, but missing the gratuitous bits featured in other biker films. PG at best.
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7/10
Don't take it so seriously
toondaddy13 November 2008
This is a good, old biker trash drive -in flick that you can enjoy if you just sit down with a 12 pack and look thru the BS. The old school Motorcycles are nice, and the Southern California scenery is really cool. Bruce Dern does a pretty good job, but Peter Fonda is really cheesy. I felt the same way about Marlin Brando and Lee Marvin in the Wild Ones. As a Biker myself, I can relate because the ideas haven't changed much. As Fonda states in this movie, we "just want to be free to do what we want and we want to get loaded". Don't take it too seriously, just sit down and get loaded and enjoy the movie. its fun to watch.
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1/10
Dated Mess
claudio_carvalho27 July 2013
In Venice, California, the leader of Hell's Angels Heavenly Blues (Peter Fonda) tells his friend Joe 'Loser' Kearns (Bruce Dern) that he had located his stolen motorcycle in Mecca. While trying to retrieve the bike, Loser is shot on the back by a police patrol end goes to the hospital. After the surgery, Blues and the Hell's Angels take Loser from the hospital and he dies. The troublemakers prepare his funeral at Sequoia Groves with a wild party.

"The Wild Angels" is among the worst movies I have ever seen. This trash directed by Roger Corman is a dated mess with terrible performances, unlikable characters completely lost and a pointless screenplay. The bikers request the service of the preacher to destroy the church? Blues interrupts the preacher's speech to say shallow words but when the Hell's Angels are ready to bury Loser, he says no words to his best friend. The story has the only objective of shocking the audience with rapes, sacrilege and stupid and senseless violence. My vote is one (awful).

Title (Brazil): "Os Anjos Selvagens" ("The Wild Angels")
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7/10
good Corman biker flick
PaulyC8 January 2008
The Wild Angels came out just a few years before Easy Rider was released. As much as I admire Easy Rider, I must say, this is a more entertaining watch. Yes, I know people may think I'm crazy for saying that. I liked seeing Peter Fonda as a confused bad-ass in this film. He has a quality to him that made him work as the leader of the gang. Fonda plays a biker named "Heavenly Blues" who has second thoughts about his life-style after a plan of his gets his best friend fatally shot. Bruce Dern does a lot with his small role and even Nancy Sinatra is decent. I thought Diane Ladd was great too. What Corman does that other known B-movie moguls don't bother with, is to cast good actors and that makes a huge difference. I also find Corman to be a decent director and it shows here. This is a decent pre-Easy Rider film.
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1/10
Stupid 60's biker flick(spoilers abound)
jcaraway318 June 2010
Warning: Spoilers
I have recently had awful luck with picking out good movies to watch. Movies like The Wolfman remake, The Thing With Two Heads, and Reptilicus are just three of my unfortunate viewing choices, and they really make me wonder why I even continue to collect DVDs. Sadly, this movie, "The Wild Angels" is just the most recent in the string of trash I have unwittingly subjected myself to. It is simplistic and stupid, and can be summarized in one short paragraph. Ready? Here we go! (SPOILERS!!!) Peter Fonda and a gang of idiotic bikers are riding around Mexico or somewhere, and along the way, one of them gets shot. He is taken to the hospital. Peter and his pals take him away from the hospital and he later dies. At his funeral, Peter and friends trash the church and have a party. Later at the burial, a small boy throws a rock at one of the bikers. Everyone gets mad and attacks the crowd of townspeople. The police come and all of Peter's chums run away, and Peter is left alone to bury his friend. The end. Was that short enough? Anyway, the characters were all obnoxious punks that I couldn't possibly root for. Fonda looks atrocious in his biker punk get up, and the whole film is less interesting than watching an old lady knit for 86 minutes. This is the worst film I've seen in quite some time, and that's saying a lot from me, considering the stuff I watch.
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6/10
Mindless Chaos
Uriah4324 August 2015
"Heavenly Blues" (Peter Fonda) is the leader of a motorcycle gang known simply as "the Angels" and has as his girlfriend the beautiful "Mike" (Nancy Sinatra). One day he makes the fateful decision to help his best friend "Loser Kearns" (Bruce Dern) get his stolen motorcycle back and that's when things begin to take a turn for the worse. Now as far as this picture is concerned it is somewhat typical of most "biker films" made during this period with the addition of the notable actors just mentioned. Admittedly, the movie loses focus toward the end with nothing to offer other than a large segment of mindless chaos--which all too often isn't that unusual for this kind of film. Having said that, let me just add that this movie isn't for everyone. Those who like biker films, or movies from this particular period of time, will probably enjoy it. Conversely, those who don't may want to steer clear. In any case, I rate it as slightly above average.
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1/10
The Fallen Angels take a detour to nowhere in particular.
copper19632 December 2006
Bad. Wretched. Depressing. Shame! And it's racist to boot. If Peter Fonda had any political ambitions, this film would torpedo them in a hurry. I found myself rooting for "The Man." Or just anyone to come along and kick their rear ends. Fonda has one good non-conformist speech during "Losers" funeral, which is then ruined by the subsequent trashing of the church--all because the minister had the nerve to invoke the name of god in his eulogy. Go figure. This poor display of social grace is reminiscent of the juvenile delinquents in Blackboard Jungle: when they trash the teacher's priceless blues collection. I had the same sick feeling after that. Just then I looked over at my girl friend and saw a scowl creased in her face. She was in total disbelief at the way these nihilistic nitwits treated the minister. So was I. And she likes The Born Losers and "Billy Jack." It's truly amazing that Fonda, Dern, Ladd and the others survived this debacle. I know Frank Sinatra must have been appalled that his daughter would appear in such cinematic rubbish. I had a devil of a time collecting my thoughts in writing this review. I needed a long shower afterward. Or a drink stiffer than "Loser."
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8/10
An interesting, pioneering picture with some fun moments, but lots of boring filler.
Tgrain3 April 2000
Roger Corman, the genius of low budget (no budget) exploitation filmmaking, decided to pioneer the 60's biker genre by making this picture about the Hell's angels. He spent time with writer Chuck Griffith hanging out with the Hell's angels, and hearing their stories. Then Corman hired the Angels, along with Peter Fonda (his first succesful movie), Bruce Dern, Nancy Sinatra (Daddy must have not liked this), and Diane Ladd, along with a few others who knew how to deliver their lines when asked for.

The result is a decently entertaining picture (which most Corman films tend to be), but overall full of filler material that gets boring after a while (such as party sequences that go on for a very long time) as a substitute for character and story development (another Corman trademark as well). As the saying goes, "Good, quick, and cheap - pick two". This film, however, wasn't inexpensive according to Corman standards - it cost almost 1 million to make (and it raked in over 3 million in its first week alone, with many bikers rolling in to drive-in cinemas to see it).

For 1966, the content (people clad in swastikas, partying and drinking their lights out in a protestant church, women scantily clad in their underwear, passing the occasional joint, and 2 inexplicit rape sequences) was obviously a shocker. Today a film like this would have been ten times more disguisting and explicit, and the church scene would be milked for it's offensive potential (and it wouldn't be able to earn the profit this one did, given today's consolidated theater market).

The film's visual style is exciting, with some interesting camera movement and handheld camerawork, lending a documentary feel (complete with soft focus shots). The soundtrack does not feature any exciting 60's music, only the usual film score by a jazzy rock band. The performances are not as bad as the dialogue itself - if the judges at the Venice Film Festival spoke English, it is unlikely this film would have made it in. Peter Fonda does not come off as a great Hell's Angel, and his performance is on the stiff side (probably afraid of how his dad might react). However, this film - and Corman's next film, "The Trip" - inspired Peter Fonda and Dennis Hopper to make Easy Rider (which Corman tried to help finance), a considerably better developed, more meaningful picture than this one - in all departments.
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7/10
Corman Fonda Dern Ladd and Sinatra
SnoopyStyle28 April 2020
Heavenly Blues (Peter Fonda) is the leader of the motorcycle gang Angels from San Pedro, California. He and his best friend Joe 'Loser' Kerns (Bruce Dern) lead the gang on a search for Loser's stolen bike. Mike 'Monkey' (Nancy Sinatra) is Blues' lady. Gaysh (Diane Ladd) is Loser's wife.

This Roger Corman flick dives into the counter culture war. It is the presumed inspiration for Peter Fonda to write Easy Rider. The Nazi paraphernalia may be off-putting but rather fitting. It has a simplicity to the plot, the characters, and the style of the movie. It's too bad that Sinatra is a better actor. It's interesting that the other three leads are so much better. I also don't like the bongo music which is more of a hippie thing. It would have been great if Corman had an epic song for the epic funeral party. Overall, this is a fascinating piece of biker movie genre.
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3/10
Fallen Angels
dbdumonteil1 August 2001
This is typically the kind of movie which retains a small cult-following and does not deserve it at all.First of all,it came ten years to late:see Lazlo Benedeck'"the wild ones" with Marlon Brando which seems very passé today too.And who could believe in a bunch of weirdoes commanded by Peter Fonda and Nancy Sinatra?Bruce Dern is ,so to speak,the stand-out:he manages to play the first half of the movie alive,and the second half dead(yes,he does play dead!).The final party wants to shock the spectator but nets only horse-laugh and disgust:you can't make fun of the nazi flag and get away with it,when you know the horrible things this sinister emblem represents.The rapes scenes are unpleasant to a fault(a pleonasm,anyway,can a rape be pleasant?).It seems that ,in the last minutes,the director suddenly realizes how mean is his film:he tries to redeem himself by getting a little "emotion "in the final.So Peter Fonda,in a grand gesture ,stays by the grave waiting heroically(and comically) for the police.But it is all to little to late.
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