Adios Amigo (1976 film)

Adios Amigo is a 1976[1] American Western comedy film written, produced and directed by Fred Williamson, who also stars in the lead role. The film co-stars Richard Pryor and James Brown.

Adios Amigo
The movie poster for the film Adios Amigo
Directed byFred Williamson
Written byFred Williamson
Produced byFred Williamson
StarringFred Williamson
Richard Pryor
James Brown
Robert Phillips
Mike Henry
CinematographyTony Palmieri
Edited byEva Ruggiero
Gene Ruggiero
Music byBlue Infernal Machine
Distributed byAtlas Films
Release date
  • February 11, 1976 (1976-02-11)
Running time
87 minutes
CountryUnited States
LanguageEnglish

Premise

edit

A frontier con man tries scams that never work, leaving his partner behind to explain.

Cast

edit

Production

edit

The idea for the project came from Pryor's initial frustration of being rejected from starring in Mel Brooks's Blazing Saddles after collaborating with him on the screenplay, and Williamson's dislike of the finished film, which he considered silly. The goal was to make a comedy that would still be realistic to its Western setting, and which would allow Pryor to work without restraint. The initial script was only 12 pages, with Williamson encouraging Pryor to ad-lib scenarios in a suggested scene. Principal photography took only nine days.

Reception

edit

Ultimately, both Williamson and Pryor were disappointed with the results. "I wanted to give him an idea, a concept, and then just turn the light on him and let him do whatever he wanted. You know what they say about comedians – that you can just open the refrigerator door and the light comes on, the jokes roll on out. Well, Richard's light didn't come on," said Williamson.[2] In an interview with Ebony shortly after the movie came out, Pryor said, "Tell them I apologize. Tell them I needed some money. Tell them I promise not to do it again."[3]

Despite the negative opinions of its stars, the film garnered a positive review from Gene Siskel. During a Sneak Previews "Dog of the Week" segment, often devoted to low-budget films cashing in on name star appearances, Siskel mentioned approaching Adios Amigo as a potential "dog" because it didn't sound like a good movie in previews, but found it to be a very funny and enjoyable film that resulted in him stating that he had no "dog" selection after all for that week's show.

References

edit
  1. ^ Monaco, James (1991). The Encyclopedia of Film. Perigee Books. ISBN 9780399516047.
  2. ^ Henry, David; Henry, Joe (January 2014). Furious Cool: Richard Pryor and the World That Made Him. Algonquin Books. ISBN 9781616204471.
  3. ^ "Ebony". Johnson Publishing Company. September 1976.
edit