Trucks (film)
1997 television film by Chris Thomson From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
1997 television film by Chris Thomson From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Trucks is a 1997 horror television film directed by Chris Thomson, which follows the story of a group of tourists and locals attacked by autonomous trucks and other inexplicable phenomena in a rural town. It is based on Stephen King's short story "Trucks", which also served as the source material for Maximum Overdrive, the only film directed by King. Trucks aired on the USA Network on October 29, 1997.
Trucks | |
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Genre | Horror |
Based on | "Trucks" by Stephen King |
Written by | Brian Taggert |
Directed by | Chris Thomson |
Starring |
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Music by | Michael Richard Plowman |
Country of origin | |
Original language | English |
Production | |
Executive producers |
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Cinematography | Rob Draper |
Editor | Lara Mazur |
Running time | 95 minutes |
Production companies |
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Original release | |
Network | USA Network |
Release | October 29, 1997 |
Lunar is a small Nevada town kept alive by its military base (near Area 51), and urban folklore featuring aliens, which has provided local Hope with her hiking and tourism business. Ray, a gas station owner, lives with his teenage son Logan, and frequents a diner run by George, a police officer. One morning, Phil, a man who runs an auto salvage yard, is killed after a truck with no driver veers into his home. A transfer truck carrying frozen meats later starts swerving erratically. The driver notices this, exits the trailer and inspects it. The truck then locks the driver inside its trailer and drives off. Hope picks up a group of tourists that morning: Jack, Thad, and Abby. Hope and the tourists eventually come across Phil's truck, which is blocking the road. Then, the driverless frozen meat truck nearly hits them. Distraught, Hope calls Ray, having found Phil's nude corpse lying on the ground, lacerated. Ray takes the group in his own car back to Lunar. Meanwhile, tourists Brad and June arrive in Lunar and enter George's diner, unaware that they were nearly hit by an unmanned truck on their way in. Ray's car is hit and nearly destroyed while by a yellow truck. The group eventually reaches George's diner. Trucks with no driver are circling the lot between the diner, Hope's cabins and the gas station. News reports are also coming in, all timed between bouts of static, and the anchorwoman on the screen reveals that a large black cloud (also visible from the diner's windows) is a leak from a chemical factory accident near the military base.
Two HAZMAT workers are called in to investigate the black cloud. However, one HAZMAT suit in their truck inflates with air, picks up an ax and murders both workers. The truck then joins the others in Lunar. A postal worker drops off mail at a toy store when an RC Tonka dump truck breaks a window and chases after him. The toy eventually kills him.
George has a firearm on the diner's premises, but tells Hope that Ray detests guns due to a drive-by gang shooting in Detroit that killed his wife. As the group is split up between the cabins and the diner, Logan and Abby are trapped with Brad and June. Brad attempts to repair a seemingly dead truck near the cabins, but it animates and kills him. June is then rescued by Ray, who brings her back to the diner. Abby and Logan attempt to reach the diner, but become trapped in a drain pipe beneath the lot as a truck attempts to dump silt over them and asphyxiate them. Meanwhile, the rednecks beat Thad unconscious, only for one to be knocked out by Jack while the second redneck runs outside. Despite the distraction, Ray gets Logan and Abby out of the drainpipe, but cannot rescue the redneck, who is chased by the trucks and is forced to flee into the nearest building, where he proceeds to get drunk on the beer left there. He uses the beers to create Molotov cocktails, but accidentally kills himself in the process, blowing up one of the buildings. The trucks then leave Ray alone, sparing him. This prompts the humans to create a plan: Thad will use a motorcycle stored in the garage to sneak up to the base and seek help, while the group will sneak out at night and venture through the forest as Ray distracts the trucks. June wanders up a hillside and is killed by a truck. At night, Logan rescues the motorcycle and brings it indoors before a truck destroys the garage. An outdoor payphone rings, and Abby runs outside to answer it, causing Jack to shove her aside as a truck nearly hits her. However, Jack himself is crushed to death in the process. The trucks knock out the diner's water supply and electric generator; they spared Ray believing that, as the gas station owner, he is the only human who can refuel them. As Ray and Hope refuel the trucks, Thad and Abby sneak away on the motorcycle. Ray, Hope and Logan meet up in the forest. George does not make it, but sacrifices himself by shooting his firearm at the trucks, causing one to tip over and become stuck. The leader truck unhooks from the trailer, smashes into George and gets stuck in the diner after crashing into it. Ray finds a hunting rifle in a truck's body and shoots at the truck in the diner, causing the entire structure to explode. That morning, the burned-up diner truck returns to chase the three survivors, who climb aboard a helicopter and are saved. There, they find a traumatized Abby. Believing that Thad is piloting the copter, Ray moves forward to thank him, but finds the helicopter unmanned. The helicopter then starts tilting upwards further into the sky.
Principal photography concluded on August 22, 1997. Shooting took place in Gunton and Winnipeg, Manitoba.[2][3]
Trucks received very little critical attention outside of independent internet blogs. TV Guide rated Trucks 2/4 stars and wrote, "The film is all premise and no plot, a problem made worse by the clumsy addition of extraneous gory sequences."[4] Rob Dean of Daily Grindhouse commended the film's various actors, but gave an unfavourable review overall, stating, "Trucks doesn’t realize that it is a movie couched in real fears but would be better explored through a lot of vehicular action and exaggerated gruesomeness and insanity. It’s far too subdued, and not nearly loony enough. The constant attempt to ground the story in a “logical” explanation - mostly delivered by a TV set that shouldn’t work but does, and only gets the exposition channel - undercuts the fact that this could just be a goofy thing with some menace that people would overanalyze on the Internet 20 years later." Dean compared the film unfavourably to the cult horror film Rubber.[5]
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