Thursday, October 27, 2022

Ssstrriiike "3!"

In 1976 & 1977, there was probably no one else on the planet's surface as "big" as Farrah Fawcett-Majors. She'd been a working actress for close to a decade, but Charlie's Angels, along with a smash poster, shot her into the celebrity stratosphere. (It remains the best-selling poster of all time.) A small role in Logan's Run (1976) brought extra viewers to that movie, myself included. She abruptly left Angels, leading to a protracted legal battle, and proceeded to star in three feature films. Somebody Killed Her Husband (1978, a reworking of Charade, 1963), Sunburn (1979, a muddled mess) and Saturn 3 (1980, a highly troubled production.) Each one was met with derision and her big-screen career was spotty thereafter. It would be television (along with the stage) that redeemed her as an actress. But today we're taking a look at that third film, whose fallout sent her back to the dugout for a time.

Saturn 3 (1980) was the brainchild of esteemed production director John Barry (who designed the sets for both Star Wars, 1977, and Superman, 1978, among others.) He was set to direct with Stanley Donen producing. Sir Lew Grade of ITC Entertainment put up the money and it was he who interested Fawcett in the project in its earliest form. Before long, conflict had Barry out on his keister with Donen taking over the helm. And cost overruns on Grade's Raise the Titanic (1980) led to some budget trimming on this film.

Things begin austerely, with Saturn in view as a ship comes to pass across it.

Soon enough, the ship eclipses our view of the planet, in an rather blatant steal from the opening of Star Wars.

Arresting visuals set a stylish tone as workers prepare to launch a small rocket ship from their vessel to Triton, one of Saturn's three moons.

The craft departs, with an unseen inhabitant, for its destination. However, we know something is quite wrong since the pilot of the craft has just gorily murdered the intended astronaut and taken his place!

The tiny ship is flung from the larger craft and heads towards its destination. (For reasons unknown, it feels the need to go through one of Saturn's rings, being bumped by debris all the while...!)

Barely visible in the center at bottom are Triton's two inhabitants, who are awaiting the arrival of this visitor. 

The three go through a sort of disinfection procedure before entering the compound. There's such an odd scale issue here... The man in green is in front of the woman behind him, yet looks far smaller. I'll show you what I mean in a moment.

The visiting man in green is revealed to be Harvey Keitel.

The resident male is Kirk Douglas.

And the resident female is our top-billed star Farrah Fawcett.

See how much bigger and broader Keitel is than Fawcett?! Yet in the earlier scene, she looked as big or bigger than he. Weird... We're ominously informed that, thanks to an eclipse, there can be no contact with Earth for 21 days.

In the futuristic story, everyone has a tattooed scan marking on them, which allows others to know things about them, such as where they've been. For instance, Keitel can ascertain that Fawcett has never been to Earth.

Welcome to Douglas and Fawcett's pad.

Douglas and Fawcett are on Triton to develop experimental food for a starving, depleted Earth. (It's a fer piece from Saturn to Earth... check those expiration dates, people, if you get and canned goods marked "Made on Saturn 3!")

Keitel has come to speed up the process as, apparently, the powers that be on Earth are dissatisfied with the progress being made thus far. The outpost is not considered a desirable place despite all the creature comforts like velour and Fawcett. Douglas declares that "when the world gets an enema, this is where they stick the tube" or something close to that!

Like I said, Douglas has it pretty good. He's got to try to grow some food all while sharing a complex (and more!) with the three-decades-younger Fawcett!

Veteran leading man Douglas took second-billing to Ms. Fawcett for this part and one can only assume that part of it was the added benefit of being practically entwined like snakes and barely clothed during much of the filming.

Fawcett knows little about the now-depraved ways of Earth and Douglas has not-so-fond memories of the place himself.

He is dismayed by a blue dreamer, a hallucinogenic drug, which Keitel has offered to Fawcett. Keitel has also offered himself (!) to Fawcett in the most matter of fact way imaginable. Such things are common on Earth, but foreign to the naive Fawcett.

She doesn't take the pill (or Keitel), but places it in a glass repository.

Here is a blink-and-you'll-miss-it topless scene with Fawcett clearly breaking character as she bops over to a waiting Douglas.

Like I say, there are worse ways a 64 year-old can sustain a movie career.

A squeal breaks out (no, not from Fawcett) and we find that there is yet one more dweller on Triton, the little Cairn terrier Sally. She's locked herself in one of the compartments. Nymphet Fawcett, is apparently used to darting around the place starkers, but Douglas tosses her a filmy sheet to put on since Keitel is now on site!

While she's gone, he weighs the importance of the pill she showed him. In this scene, a crew member is sloppily shown crouching down at Douglas' side! See the patterned shirt in the mirror at center? It would have been harder to spot had the person nor made sudden, jerky moves to unsuccessfully get out of frame.

Fawcett gets the dog, but can't resist investigating a mysterious, large vial that Keitel has brought among his supplies. He's been adamant that no one touch it and is angered when she does so.

She's also appalled to find out that the only time Keitel has ever owned a dog was when he got ahold of one... to eat!

Later, Keitel observes (up close!) Fawcett and Douglas' late-night activities. In this version of the future, there's no widescreen hi-def. It's strictly Zenith test tube TV action.

He takes his pills and heads to sleep in his comparatively Spartan accommodations.

The next morning, we catch a glimpse of how Fawcett and Douglas stay fit at their remote outpost, with Fawcett sprawling across the carpet with her exer-wheel while Douglas jumps rope ferociously.

Keitel is all business (except for wanting to jump Farrah's bones) and he and Douglas really don't hit it off well at all.

He's busily unpacking all the components from his luggage, though neither we, nor his hosts, know what it all is. Note the ponytail he's sporting.

Note also how that initial shot of the space station dock is duplicated in the insignia on Keitel's uniform, an interesting design detail.

Keitel isn't the only one with access to cameras. He overhears Keitel making another go for Fawcett and also learns that Keitel considers him obsolete. (I can't forget to tell you, when Fawcett rebuffs him, Keitel says that on Earth, it is "penally unsocial" to do so! Meaning prison-worthy, but it's still amusing.)

The researchers, decked-out as always in their Anthony Mendleson designer duds, are finally about to be filled in on what Keitel is there to do.

He's got a big bucket of unspoiled fetus brains (!) that he's going to install into a robot. The robot will ultimately be intelligent and effective enough to replace one (not both?!) of the Triton researchers.

Fit and healthy as they are, I think we know which one is the most likely to be ousted... This jogging sequence ironically pays tribute to a touchstone moment in Fawcett's real life.

She and hubby Lee Majors were on magazine covers everywhere, jogging away. But as Saturn 3 was being made, their divorce was in process and her billing is minus the then-familiar "-Majors" on the end.

Douglas knows that the ultimate result of this visitor from Earth will be the removal of him from their project and he lets Fawcett in on that.

Perhaps needing a break after a stressful day at the lab, the two decide to split the one blue dreamer that Keitel gave her (with bourbon chasers, apparently?)

Before the drug takes effect, we get another good glimpse of their funky pad.

Douglas tells her that he thinks she ought to visit Earth, though she's been content thus far to avoid the place.

Ruh-Roh... Keitel has been putting all his pieces together and this is starting to look a little threatening.

Keitel brazenly bursts into his hosts' apartment to announce the completion of his robot Hector. He tells Fawcett to instruct it to do something. She asks Hector to hand Douglas a flask.

Well... it worked in rehearsal! The metal flask is crushed almost in two!

Dismayed by the lack of effectiveness of his creation, Keitel uses new methods. He performs direct contact between himself and the robot, which imprints his own knowledge (but also his thoughts and feelings!) into the machine. Here, he and Hector try out a sort of space-age hokey-pokey with their right hands in.

Get a load of the jewelry and hair baubles on Fawcett here during a simple game of chess. Back on Earth, people are starving, but she has all the latest clothing and accessories imaginable?! No wonder they sent Keitel to shut this shit down.

Keitel shows up again and wants Hector to challenge Douglas in a game of chess.

Douglas manages to win and Hector is not happy about it!

And Sally also isn't buying whatever Keitel is selling...

Fawcett is studying her rock collection (which has what to do with food production?)

Harvey just wants to get his rocks off...! And since Hector now shares his thoughts, he's begun to take notice of the pretty research scientist, too!

Later in their apartment, the cuddle-bunnies are discussing this whole robot thing. Douglas is concerned about the robot being able to control its thoughts. 

He instructs Fawcett to undrape while he focuses solely on a non-sexual concept, to see if he's able to control his own thoughts/actions.

She complies while he focuses solely on matters scientific. Do I have to tell you which method wins out in the end?

The next day, Fawcett experiences an excruciating accident in which a chip of rock enters her eye. Keitel tries to help her, but she's understandably reluctant.

She's even less enthused about it once Hector heads over...!

After that flask incident, she's not at all looking forward to this. And you thought glaucoma exams were annoying?!

Remarkably enough, Hector gets the lead out. But Keitel is still harping on how obsolete Douglas is, something Douglas overhears while dumping waste nearby.

Funny. Fawcett doesn't consider Douglas obsolete at all!

Things still aren't 100% great with the robot, though. Here, the 8-foot high klunker has Fawcett by the wrists, suspending her off the floor!

What's more, Hector no longer seems to like or trust Keitel and only lets go of his captive once she asks him to free her!

For a brief moment, Fawcett is grateful to Keitel for getting her out of this mess.

But soon enough she's distraught over the fact that he has instilled this thing with the will to inflict harm or even kill.

Douglas is horrified when Hector defiantly refuses to do even what Keitel tells him to do. Douglas is tempted to allow Keitel to perish, but ultimately comes to his aid.

Narrowly escaping with his life, Keitel wants to contact Earth when they can (in three days) to see how the robot can yet be fixed.

After this latest escapade, though, Douglas is pissed and orders Keitel to dismantle the big ol' hunk o' junk. Keitel doesn't want to, but finally acquiesces.

Fawcett (all nipples akimbo) is understandably worried about the stability of Keitel. Douglas is more worried about his mechanical creation. He nevertheless checks to be sure that Keitel is truly dismantling Hector.

It scarcely matters, though! Hector has somehow been able to enlist some of the less-sophisticated machines on Triton to help put Humpty-Dumpty back together again, without Keitel's input!

The researchers are preparing for yet another night of unbridled bliss when...

...all of a sudden Keitel storms in and announces that he is leaving the moon... and taking Fawcett with him!

With this, Douglas has truly had it and he bounds from the bed naked and tackles Keitel to the floor.

He comes perilously close to choking his enemy to death, saved only by the desperate clawing and pleas of Fawcett.

A shaken Douglas is led back to bed by his partner. Audiences were surely confronted by where exactly to look here: at Douglas' sexagenarian rump or at Farrah's horribly droopy baby doll drawers!

It probably seems as if I've covered the entire movie, but I assure you, I have not! There is still plenty more to come. The duo find themselves in a cat and mouse chase for their lives in the serpentine hallways of the facility.

It's ultimately man vs machine. 

Or perhaps Beauty and the Beast versus the Frankenstein monster?

However you deem it, this amalgam of 2001: A Space Odyssey (1968), Silent Running (1972) and Demon Seed (1977) tanked at the box office. (Any similarities to Alien, 1979, by the way, were unintentional as this project was actually in the works beforehand.) The movie was initially 15 minutes longer than the 88 minute release, but its unclear whether the changes had any impact, good or bad, on the movie-going public's interest.  A good print, free with limited commercials, can be seen here at Tubi.

One of the most publicized looks of Ms. Fawcett was used in foreign release posters (and in more than a few stills, too), but never appears in the film as released...!

When she and Douglas split that blue dreamer pill, she appears in this hooker-ish get-up more suited to Sybil Danning. It's a brief sequence, but Sir Lew Grade cut it (some say at Farrah's request.) Much of the trimmed footage found its way into the TV version of the movie (since they simultaneously had to cut much of the other semi-nudity), but this moment was still absent. Just like Fawcett's two prior movies, it was the pre-sale to TV for millions of dollars which saved them all from financial Armageddon. 

Barry had started in the art department of British films such as Murder at the Gallop (1963) before graduating to the role of production designer on Kelly's Heroes (1970) and A Clockwork Orange (1971.) It was while working on Stanley Donen's ill-fated Lucky Lady (1975) that the idea for Saturn 3 was first tossed around. By the time it was green lit, Barry had won an Oscar for his (inter) stellar work on Star Wars (1977) and had Superman (1978) under his belt, too. But it turned out that directing was another story and progress faltered. With conflict arising on set and the pressures of filming a troublesome robot (which one would think wouldn't be such a quagmire in the wake of C-3PO and R2-D2, fer cryin' out loud), he finally departed his baby altogether and found a home on George Lucas' The Empire Strikes Back (1980), directing second-unit scenes. Within two weeks, though, he was dead of infectious meningitis at age 43. He never lived to see the release of Saturn 3 and some have suggested that the stressors of attempting to film it led to a weakened immune system, which allowed the fatal disease to strike.


This wasn't the last feature film that Fawcett took part in, but she was never paid the same way again. (As an example, her salary here was $750,000 vs Keitel's, which was $70,000!)  Her next movie, a hit in fact, was the ensemble car chase flick The Cannonball Run (1981.) Beginning with 1981's Murder in Texas, a well-done TV-movie, her reputation began to shift. With The Burning Bed, Small Sacrifices, Poor Little Rich Girl: The Barbara Hutton Story and others, she became known for more than her hair and her smile. Extremities (1986) came about after she'd essayed the leading role on stage. By the early-2000s, she was only acting on occasion, but it still stunned the world when she was claimed by anal cancer in 2009 at only age 62. By then there had been much personal tumult with Ryan O'Neal and their troubled son Griffin. But her legacy as a beaming, sunny sex symbol-turned-serious-actress remains.

Douglas was a leading man from the very start in 1947's The Strange Love of Martha Ivers opposite Barbara Stanwyck. And is wasn't long before Oscar nominations came his way as with Champion (1949), with Broderick Crawford winning that time for All the King's Men. Later, he was nominated twice more for The Bad and the Beautiful (1952, the award going to Gary Cooper for High Noon) as well as Lust for Life (1957, losing to Yul Brynner for The King and I.) In 1996, he was given an Honorary Award for his 50-year career. He reportedly could not be swayed from appearing nude in Saturn 3, which is fairly evident even in these caps. But he liked his washable suede wardrobe enough to keep it. He clashed mightily with initial director Barry and was later portrayed in a roman à clef book by the screenwriter Martin Amis called Money. Always adept at aggressive, energetic characters, he kept busy and vital for many years. He'd done The Fury in 1978 and had The Final Countdown in 1980 and in 1986 re-teamed with frequent costar Burt Lancaster in Tough Guys. But a debilitating stroke in 1996 knocked him for a loop and thereafter affected his speaking voice. He nonetheless pressed on, albeit in a limited output, until 2008. He amazed many by living to 103 when he passed away from natural causes. 


Keitel also encountered trouble with this production (and he'd just been fired from Apocalypse Now the prior year!) His natural Brooklyn accent was ultimately deemed inappropriate or undesirable for his character, but he refused to change it when it came time for looping dialogue. So all of his lines were re-dubbed by British actor Roy Dotrice in a sort of mid-Atlantic dialect. (If one isn't aware of Keitel's own voice, it's a pretty seamless job, in truth.) He'd won acclaim for several streetwise roles in movies such as Mean Streets (1973), Taxi Driver, Mother, Jugs & Speed (both 1976) and Fingers (1978), but this experience constituted a setback. He did continue to work as the '80s went on and came to particular prominence as the 1990s dawned. Bugsy (1991) earned him an Oscar nomination (the award went to Jack Palance for City Slickers) and he proceeded to hits like Reservoir Dogs, Bad Lieutenant, Sister Act (all 1992), The Piano (1993) and Pulp Fiction (1994) among many others. (There was a cinematic point where he also had trouble keeping clothes on!) A valued character performer for decades now, he continues to act to this day at age 83.

The End!

12 comments:

  1. I hit the trifecta recently by intentionally seeing all three of Farrah's films mentioned, and I am sure it was because of reading something here. I was such a big fan and had the poster. I also used to tell neighbor kids I would marry her when I grew up. One girl pointed out the age difference but that wasn't what would have doomed our union...I digress!
    I love Kirks sleeveless jumpsuit, and I must say he looks good but not quite right next to someone that much younger. I like her hair smoothed down into a Donna Mills 'do, since by now her signature hairdo was dated (except in New Jersey where it remained red hot until 1995). I was so sad when she passed and the later stuff was all so unpleasent. But it's still a thrill to see her show up in "The Flying Nun" and "I Dream Of Jeannie" and know all that stardom lay ahead of her. This film was not great but I still love to watch her.

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  2. Oh He Of The Well Cleft Chin! I do love him in "Spartacus" a masterpiece and one of my all time favorite films. I remember vividly being shocked to see him naked in this, such a huge star at this time in his life. Hey, I'll take it where I can get it, hahahh. Farrah certainly shot her arrow high. That poster, that incredibly iconic poster. I'm surprised Harvey didn't get naked in this, I guess his era of having a nude scene in many of his films was yet to come. At one point Keitel says to Fawcett, regarding Douglas; "Can't you feel the decay?"....OUCH. Audiences, critics and even Keitel hated the film, but hey, you get to see Fawcett in the cutest little bedroom baby doll outfit (In futuristic space!!) and Spartacus's bare bum.

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  3. A film I never heard of and, thanks to your analysis, feel no need to see. And what a bizarre trio of actors!
    Douglas is one of those guys who, for whatever reason, never did it for me, even in his prime. Keitel has his moments of bad boy hotness, but usually gives me the creeps. Farrah was so likable, but for some reason her attractions never really translated to the big screen.
    Nipples Akimbo is my new drag name, replacing Jenna Tulwartz.

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  4. Oh, Farrah, how I loved you so! GingerGuy, I did not want to marry Farrah, but I did want to play tennis with her! I even had her unauthorized biography that had artist renditions of how to get The Farrah.

    This is a terrible movie, but mildly entertaining for the nudity. I still have not been able to see "Sunburn" or "Somebody Killed Her Husband". I suppose I'll have to end up buying them.

    She really came into her own as an actress, and I remember how disappointed I was for her when Joanne Woodward beat her for Best Actress in "The Burning Bed".

    And I was appalled that I found out of her death through some idiot in the audio (TEAMS like) meeting blabbed as the meeting ended that she had died.

    Her documentary on her life with Cancer, "Farrah's Story" is excellent but depressing.

    Rest in Peace, Angel!

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  5. Hey Poseidon,
    I watched "Saturn 3" just once and I must say your recap was much more entertaining!

    Interesting that the two male leads were both peacocks about their bods and yet both seemed closer to villainous thugs than traditionally handsome leading men. Douglas is of the too-much school of persona for me, like Lancaster and Heston. And Harvey looks like Joe Dallesandro's not quite as cute brother here!

    And I too have always thought Farrah's talents were more suited to the small screen.

    It'a very telling about Kirk's ego that he thought nude scenes with a leading lady three decades younger than he was a great idea!

    Cheers, Rick

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  6. I have been waiting to see this opus since 1980.I keep saying maybe next year! I managed to get through Somebody Killed Her Husband, but just barely. Great take on this film. I should mention that it was All The King's Men that won Crawford his Oscar. I almost typed her, as if there should be only one Crawford!

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  7. I've never seen this - and I'm a big sci-fi fan. I think I couldn't get past the Douglas/Fawcett age difference. Also I think it's jarring to see Douglas in anything that isn't 1940's or 50's, especially in something so futuristic. When I think of Kirk Douglas I think The Bad and the Beautiful.

    When I first saw that photo of them together showing their weird scan tattoos, I at first thought it odd that they didn't put makeup over his age spots.

    Another really fun post, Poseidon, and I might watch it just for set design - that pad looks terrific in these shots.

    Thanks again!

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  8. 1980 was not a good year for Kirk's hair. Apparently with all the amenities of their pad, he wasn't using conditioner. KD was always interesting in whatever he did, but he was the saltpeter of actors for me. And knowing what we do now of men abusing women, his pairing with Farah is creepy. I bet FF couldn't blink without being required to put out. Yet I admit I kind of do want to see this film as bad as it looks, but for the sets.

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  9. Gingerguy, you're the perfect age for recalling how WHITE-HOT FF was as a celebrity in her day. Oddly, I had her second (?) poster, the slightly less popular one that was taken the same time as her Playboy cover. White getup over a blue backdrop. Walgreen's must have been out of the more famous one. LOLOL Hilarious about her hairdo living on in NJ. Cincinnati, too, child....!

    Ptolemy1, how I neglected to mention "Spartacus" amid his other movies is beyond me. He was great in it. About a decade before this, he shucked down for a quick bath-in-a-barrel scene in "There Was a Crooked Man." And, yes, I recall cringing a bit when Harvey said that about the "decay!"

    Dan, I'm sorry I failed to entice you further. Glad you liked the "drag name" though! :-)

    Forever1267, I've never seen "Somebody Killed Her Husband" either! I found it interesting that FF made so few movies and yet re-teamed with Jeff Bridges from that flop for the little-known "See You in the Morning" about a dozen years later.

    Rick, I'm glad you liked this! It's so odd to see Harvey on screen with the refined Roy Dotrice's voice emanating! You'd think that the character's sound would have been determined long before casting, shooting and the (non-attended) dubbing! Weird.

    harlow, you are so right. I think I had "President's Men" stuck in my head from the prior post on conspiracy thrillers....! I fixed it. Thanks. And I also have trouble accepting more than one Crawford in the world. Ha ha! I link "Saturn 3" here, so this is your chance to hop on it. Take care.

    A, I swear I also thought Kirk had a "John Boy" mole or something they forgot to make up, too!! Then when everyone had one it sunk in. Ha ha! Sean Connery was tapped for this role first and I think he'd have been great (and he and Farrah... wow!), but something about the tax situation prevented it. He later did "Outland" (and, of course, already had "Zardoz" under his skimpy sci-fi belt!) I didn't mention it, but along the way there is some decent Elmer Bernstein music, too. But much of it was removed when the film kept getting hacked at!

    Shawny, I have heard the rumors about KD. And we're still not 100% certain that he wasn't the assailant of a young Natalie Wood, but it would be nice to know for sure as to not misplace blame. He certainly had bravado and ego. My parents read his auto-bio "The Ragman's Son" and both - separately! - told me how annoying it was how he kept bragging of his various sexual conquests. I never read it myself. I'm sort of on the fence with him. Sometimes like him, sometimes find him to be too much.

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  10. You've made me want to see this again; I remember rooting for Farrah to become an A-List movie star but Somebody Killed Her Husband was awful and I was the only one who actually liked Sunburn. I do remember Kirk and Farrah's nude scenes here...I was a little shocked and very titillated as a 14 year old when I saw this!
    -Chris

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  11. angelman66, good to see and hear from you! I don't know why, maybe I never saw a proper uncut, widescreen rendition of it, but I could never quite UNDERSTAND the plot of "Sunburn!" LOL Maybe I *am* actually more of a ditzy blond that Farrah's image might have projected for her. It never made much sense to me. (And as a practically life-long Eleanor Parker fan, I was PISSED that she is barely in it, despite the billing.) Thanks!!

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  12. How did I miss this? My 13 year old self didn’t miss seeing this movie in the theatres in early 1980 and gasped at the barely there topless scene followed by Kooky Kurt’s bare tooter! I had no idea the latter was coming but there was advance press that Farrah bared some flesh. I wanted this movie to be good. I loved FF and was hoping to see more of her on screen, big or small. She was incognito for well over a year after S3 premiered. Her last episode of Angel’s aired the same month, and by then it was the Shelley Hack season, and well… you know. But what a glorious reappearance in spring 1981 with Murder In Texas. No big hair. Not a lot of makeup and no flashy wardrobe. The death scene was (GASP) makeup less! Farrah could act. It just would have been nice that it wasn’t until 1984 that she appeared in anything after the dreadful Cannonball Run garbage.

    FF was a superstar and few have ever shown brighter. Even if she basically ditched the original layers and feathers, they were deeply entrenched in young girls salon requests well into the 1980’s and even 1990’s in many parts of the country. It’s really never gone away. Not even The Rachel comes close in terms of everlasting impact and endurance. I wish the Letterman and beyond years were less cringe, but that white hot flame of 1976 is hard to forget…

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