By Erin Free

FilmInk salutes the work of creatives who have never truly received the credit that they deserve. In this installment: actor and director Jack Starrett (pictured right in The A-Team), who helmed The Losers, Race With The Devil, Gravy Train, A Small Town In Texas and Hollywood Man.

Like so many directors who have featured in the Unsung Auteurs column, the late Jack Starrett is certainly loved and appreciated in certain – very cultish – circles, but to the general cinema crowd, he’s likely better known (if not by name) for his on-screen acting work, particularly as the parodic Gabby Johnson in Mel Brooks’ 1974 comedy classic Blazing Saddles, and as nasty Deputy Art Galt, the most brutal and sadistic of Brian Dennehy’s Rambo-baiting small-town constabulary in the 1982 action belter First Blood. Though a fine character actor with a long list of credits in film and television, Jack Starrett is, however, far more interesting for his output as a director of hard-hitting exploitation and action flicks.

Claude Ennis “Jack” Starrett Jr. was born in 1936 in Refugio, Texas, where he worked in the city’s oil fields before finally making his way to Hollywood. Tall, imposing and rigorously blue collar, Starrett was perfect tough guy material, and he scored his first screen role via actor, writer, director and Unsung Auteur Tom Laughlin, who cast him in his low budget 1965 youth drama The Young Sinner. Laughlin then became something of a fixture in exploitation biker films (often as cops), taking on roles in Richard Rush’s Hells Angels On Wheels (1967), Laughlin’s The Born Losers (1967), and Angels From Hell (1968).

Jack Starrett (right) in Hells Angels On Wheels.

A confident player in the world of low-budget, can-do exploitation filmmaking, Starrett slid easily into the director’s chair for 1969’s Run, Angel, Run, the first of several collaborations between Starrett and big, tough, muscled-up cult hero actor William Smith, who plays a biker who exposes his compadres and ends up a wanted man on the run. While also acting prolifically, Starrett forged forward as a director after his tough, fast-paced debut, helming the little-known 1969 thriller House Of Zodiac before taking the reins on what remains one of his key works.

High concept before the term was even coined, the topical 1970 exploitation biker film cult fave The Losers (aka Nam’s Angels) again stars the hard-as-nails William Smith, this time playing the leader of The Devil’s Advocates, a biker gang co-opted by the CIA to take the fight to the Viet Cong. Unleashed in the jungles of Vietnam and charged with rescuing a captured CIA agent, The Devil’s Advocates weaponise their motorcycles and highly inventive carnage follows. Cast with a ragged crew of exploitation faves (Adam Roarke, Paul Koslo, Bernie Hamilton), Starrett’s gift for action and mastery of hard-slamming stunts are perfectly showcased in this wild, freewheeling and slightly crazed mini-epic.

A vintage movie poster for The Losers.

While working both as an actor and a prolific director of both telemovies and episodic television, Starrett continued at pace on the big screen, delivering a host of fascinating films in disparate genres, but all bound by a rippling sense of energy and hectic pacing. Starrett did impressive work in westerns (1970’s Cry Blood, Apache), psychological thriller (1972’s The Strange Vengeance Of Rosalie, with a very disturbing Bonnie Bedelia) and blaxploitation (1972’s Slaughter with Jim Brown, 1973’s Cleopatra Jones), proving himself adept with varied casts and subject matter.

Jack Starrett’s real hot streak came in the mid-seventies, when he directed a series of wondrously unconventional action-based genre-defiers. 1974’s Gravy Train (aka The Dion Brothers) was co-written by Terrence Malick and starred the compelling duo of Stacy Keach and Frederic Forest as West Virginia brothers who quit their jobs as coal miners and turn to armed robbery. Though largely unknown, this curious black comedy has major supporters in filmmakers like Quentin Tarantino (a noted fan of Jack Starrett, and especially of his regular leading man, William Smith) and David Gordon Green, and represents Starrett at his most unconventional.

A vintage movie poster for Race With The Devil.

More well-known is Starrett’s 1975 cult fave Race With The Devil, a terrifying, white-knuckle and wholly unlikely meld of the action and horror genres, which pits holiday makers Warren Oates, Peter Fonda, Loretta Swit and Lara Parker against a backwoods community of secretive, murderous Satanists. Built on a grim, blanketing mood of paranoia and desperation, but driven by utterly extraordinary stunt-laden on-road action sequences, Race With The Devil is an absolute powerhouse of a film, exciting and paralysing audiences at the same time.

After the failed black comedy The New Spartans (which would have starred Oliver Reed), Starrett revved it hard again with 1976’s excellent A Small Town In Texas, which sees the great Bo Hopkins at his laidback but nasty best as a corrupt smalltown sheriff who leans on smalltime rebel and just released ex-con Timothy Bottoms to leave town so he can hold on to his ex-girlfriend Susan George. Filled with Texan flavour, great performances and a host of eye-popping action set-pieces, A Small Town In Texas is another superior low-budget actioner from Jack Starrett.

A vintage movie poster for A Small Town In Texas.

Starrett reunited with William Smith (who also co-writes and produces) for the unusual 1976 action-drama Hollywood Man, which sees Smith’s actor/producer mixed up with bikers and mobsters. Starrett then closed out the popular drive-in franchise with 1977’s Final Chapter: Walking Tall, with Bo Svenson as real-life sheriff Buford Pusser, first played by Joe Don Baker in the 1973 classic Walking Tall. Starrett then closed out his career with 1982’s Kiss My Grits, a little-known action comedy with Bruce Davison, Bruno Kirby and a returning Susan George.

Very sadly, Jack Starrett passed away at the age of just 52, succumbing to liver failure after a long illness. As well as his propulsive, gleefully in-your-face big screen directorial efforts, Starrett helmed episodes of everything from Starsky & Hutch and The Dukes Of Hazzard through to Hill Street Blues, as well as a number of superior telemovies, including 1977’s Thaddeus Rose And Eddie (written by Unsung Auteur William D. Wittliff and starring Johnny Cash and Bo Hopkins) and 1979’s Mr. Horn, with David Carradine as notorious western gunman Tom Horn. And all the while, Starrett continued to act, lending his imposing frame to shows like The A-Team, Hunter and Knight Rider.

Jack Starrett…ready to unload on Rambo in First Blood.

A hands-on, down-in-the-trenches director who could really make it happen, Jack Starrett was even instrumental in kick-starting the career of another exploitation legend in the late, great Larry Cohen. “One day I happened upon a group of people who were making a low-budget independent picture,” Larry Cohen told Film International in 2019. “There was a director named Jack Starrett who was a great big, gruff kind of a guy. He played the brutal sheriff in the original Rambo picture, First Blood. He was a heavy drinker but he was a goodhearted guy, a good actor who also directed a number of pictures such as Cleopatra Jones and Race With The Devil. He was making a horror picture in an old Hollywood house. I went over, spending the day watching him and his crew. Then all of a sudden it became evident that eight or ten crew people could actually make a picture. They were all really nice guys, too, helping each other out. There was a camaraderie about it. So I asked several of these guys whether they would be interested in helping me make a picture. They agreed. So I grabbed this crew after Jack was finished with them and started making my first film Bone on 16mm.”

Thank you, Jack Starrett…

If you liked this story, check out our features on other unsung auteurs Joseph Sargent, Jeffrey SchwarzGeorge SidneyPhilip DunneZak HilditchLuke SparkeCyrus NowrastehMorgan MatthewsTom LaughlinDiane KeatonEd HuntNancy SavocaRobert Vincent O’NeilMarvin J. ChomskySam FirstenbergJack Sholder, Richard GrayGiuseppe AndrewsGus TrikonisGreydon ClarkFrances DoelGordon DouglasBilly FineCraig R. BaxleyHarvey BernhardBert I. GordonJames FargoJeremy KaganRobby BensonRobert HiltzikJohn Carl BuechlerRick CarterPaul DehnBob KelljanKevin ConnorRalph NelsonWilliam A. GrahamJudith RascoeMichael PressmanPeter CarterLeo V. GordonDalene YoungGary NelsonFred WaltonJames FrawleyPete DocterMax Baer Jr.James ClavellRonald F. MaxwellFrank D. GilroyJohn HoughDick RichardsWilliam GirdlerRayland JensenRichard T. HeffronChristopher JonesEarl OwensbyJames BridgesJeff KanewRobert Butler, Leigh ChapmanJoe CampJohn Patrick ShanleyWilliam Peter BlattyPeter CliftonPeter R. HuntShaun GrantJames B. HarrisGerald WilsonPatricia BirchBuzz KulikKris KristoffersonRick RosenthalKirsten Smith & Karen McCullahJerrold FreemanWilliam DearAnthony HarveyDouglas HickoxKaren ArthurLarry PeerceTony GoldwynBrian G. HuttonShelley DuvallRobert TowneDavid GilerWilliam D. WittliffTom DeSimoneUlu GrosbardDenis SandersDaryl DukeJack McCoyJames William GuercioJames GoldstoneDaniel NettheimGoran StolevskiJared & Jerusha HessWilliam RichertMichael JenkinsRobert M. YoungRobert ThomGraeme CliffordFrank HowsonOliver HermanusJennings LangMatthew SavilleSophie HydeJohn CurranJesse PeretzAnthony HayesStuart BlumbergStewart CopelandHarriet Frank Jr & Irving RavetchAngelo PizzoJohn & Joyce CorringtonRobert DillonIrene KampAlbert MaltzNancy DowdBarry Michael CooperGladys HillWalon GreenEleanor BergsteinWilliam W. NortonHelen ChildressBill LancasterLucinda CoxonErnest TidymanShauna CrossTroy Kennedy MartinKelly MarcelAlan SharpLeslie DixonJeremy PodeswaFerd & Beverly SebastianAnthony PageJulie GavrasTed PostSarah JacobsonAnton CorbijnGillian Robespierre, Brandon CronenbergLaszlo Nemes, Ayelat MenahemiIvan TorsAmanda King & Fabio CavadiniCathy HenkelColin HigginsPaul McGuiganRose BoschDan GilroyTanya WexlerClio BarnardRobert AldrichMaya ForbesSteven KastrissiosTalya LavieMichael RoweRebecca CremonaStephen HopkinsTony BillSarah GavronMartin DavidsonFran Rubel Kuzui, Elliot SilversteinLiz GarbusVictor FlemingBarbara PeetersRobert BentonLynn SheltonTom GriesRanda HainesLeslie H. MartinsonNancy Kelly, Paul NewmanBrett HaleyLynne Ramsay, Vernon ZimmermanLisa CholodenkoRobert GreenwaldPhyllida LloydMilton KatselasKaryn KusamaSeijun SuzukiAlbert PyunCherie NowlanSteve BinderJack CardiffAnne Fletcher ,Bobcat GoldthwaitDonna DeitchFrank PiersonAnn TurnerJerry SchatzbergAntonia BirdJack SmightMarielle HellerJames GlickenhausEuzhan PalcyBill L. NortonLarysa KondrackiMel StuartNanette BursteinGeorge ArmitageMary LambertJames FoleyLewis John CarlinoDebra GranikTaylor SheridanLaurie CollyerJay RoachBarbara KoppleJohn D. HancockSara ColangeloMichael Lindsay-HoggJoyce ChopraMike NewellGina Prince-BythewoodJohn Lee HancockAllison AndersDaniel Petrie Sr.Katt SheaFrank PerryAmy Holden JonesStuart RosenbergPenelope SpheerisCharles B. PierceTamra DavisNorman TaurogJennifer LeePaul WendkosMarisa SilverJohn MackenzieIda LupinoJohn V. SotoMartha Coolidge, Peter HyamsTim Hunter, Stephanie RothmanBetty ThomasJohn FlynnLizzie BordenLionel JeffriesLexi AlexanderAlkinos TsilimidosStewart RaffillLamont JohnsonMaggie Greenwald and Tamara Jenkins.

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