Easy Rider: The Ride Back
Easy Rider: The Ride Back is a 2012 drama film and a prequel and a sequel to the 1969 film Easy Rider. Although none of the cast or production team of the original film were involved in its production, the producers did secure the legal rights to the name.[1] The film focuses on the history of Wyatt Williams' family and takes an unusually conservative point of view compared to the countercultural tone of the original. ProductionAt the 1993 American Film Market, Hardy and Company, a Los Angeles-based packaging, production and distribution organization led by Sheryl Hardy had acquired the rights to Easy Rider and announced plans for an $8-10 million dollar sequel then titled Easy Rider II[2] In May 2000, it was reported the sequel rights had been acquired by Glen Tobias from the original film's producer Bert Schneider along with an option for two further installments with Mikki Allen Willis set to write and direct a $30 million sequel for Martin Landau's company Miracle Entertainment.[3] By July of that year, it was reported that Miracle was fast tracking the project now titled Easy Rider A.D. with the potential for shooting in November.[4] In September 2002, it was reported that Easy Rider A.D. had been acquired by producer Lauren Lloyd and the premise of the character of Wyatt “Captain America” Earp in prison after being falsely accused of murdering George Hanson and a new character setting out on the road to prove his innocence.[5] In March 2003, it was reported that the Malibu Movie Company consisting of wife and husband Conroy and Harry Kanter (son of United WestLabs President Joe Kanter) and Cincinnati based criminal defense lawyer Phil Pitzer had acquired the sequel rights to Easy Rider after prior rights holder Lauren Lloyd's attempts to make a sequel were tied up by the foreclosure of the financier Glenn Tobias.[6] Conroy Kanter stated the intention with the sequel was to look at what freedom means in a contemporary setting.[6] Pitzer then spent the next six years developing a follow up and wrote two scripts Easy Rider: The Ride Back and Easy Rider: The Search Continues.[7] Dustin Rikert was hired to direct due to his reputation for being able to work quickly on shoestring budgets.[8] ReceptionCritical receptionLeonard Maltin has called the film a bomb and has described the film as a "staggeringly bad attempt to cash in on the iconic original" and that it is "poor on all accounts."[9] Nathan Rabin called the film "surreally misguided" with "a strong pro-military message" and said "what The Room might be like if Wiseau decided he wasn't just going to make a tribute to A Streetcar Named Desire, but rather a sequel to A Streetcar Named Desire that casts himself as Stanley Kowalski's cooler brother Johnny, and litters the screenplay with nods to previous adventures".[10] Paul Mavis of DVD Talk gave the film one and a half stars saying "it stinks from the head down."[11] References
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