WUSA (film)
5.6 /10 1 Votes
Director Stuart Rosenberg Music director Lalo Schifrin Duration Language English | 5.6/10 IMDb Genre Drama, Romance Screenplay Robert Stone Country United States | |||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
Release date 1970 (1970) Writer Robert Stone (screenplay), Robert Stone (novel) Cast Paul Newman (Rheinhardt), Joanne Woodward (Geraldine), Anthony Perkins (Rainey), Laurence Harvey (Farley), Bruce Cabot (King Wolyoe), Cloris Leachman (Philomene)Similar movies Paul Newman appears in WUSA and Cool Hand Luke Tagline Love it or leave it. |
WUSA is a 1970 American drama film, directed by Stuart Rosenberg. It was written by Robert Stone, based on his novel A Hall of Mirrors. The story involves a radio station in New Orleans with the eponymous call sign which is apparently involved in a right-wing conspiracy. It culminates with a riot and stampede at a patriotic pep-rally when an assassin on a catwalk opens fire.
Contents
The cast included Paul Newman, Joanne Woodward, Anthony Perkins, Laurence Harvey, Cloris Leachman and Wayne Rogers.
Plot
Rheinhardt, a cynical drifter, gets a job as an announcer for a Right Wing White supremacists radio station, WUSA in New Orleans. Rheinhardt is content to parrot WUSA's reactionary editorial stance on the air, even if he does not agree with it. Rheinhardt finds his cynical detachment challenged by a woman he meets in a bar, Geraldine, and by Rainey, a neighbor and troubled idealist who becomes aware of WUSA's sinister, hidden purpose. And when events start spinning out of control, even Rheinhardt finds he must take a stand.
Bingamon, the station's owner, is sponsoring a hate rally that draws a protest from black militants. Rainey attempts to assassinate Bingamon, but after he misses and accidentally wounds someone else, Rainey is attacked by the crowd and beaten to death. In the chaos, drugs end up in the possession of Geraldine, who is arrested by the police and later hangs herself in the jail cell. A disillusioned Reinhardt packs his bags and leaves town.
Reception
Anthony Perkins was nominated for best supporting actor of the year by the National Society of Film Critics.
Paul Newman called it "the most significant film I've ever made and the best."
Roger Greenspun of the New York Times said in his review: "If it were an ordinary bad movie (and it is a very bad movie), WUSA might, in spite of the distinguished names, and less distinguished presence, of its leading actors, be dismissed with no more than a nod to the tension between Rosenberg's ponderously emphatic direction, and Robert Stone's ponderously allusive screenplay. I suspect Stone wins out, for WUSA feels more like poor theater than poor moviemaking—so, that it continually suggests a failed version of The Balcony, even though it strives to fall short of The Manchurian Candidate. ... Despite its obsession with collecting evidence, and its handy school of pseudo-documentary, WUSA fights unreal battles with an unseen enemy. Lacking either the grace of art of the vitality of guerrilla theater, it can offer only the coarsest nourishment—and only to the elaborately self-deceived."
References
WUSA (film) WikipediaWUSA (film) IMDb WUSA (film) themoviedb.org