The Farmer | |
Director: | David Berlatsky |
Producer: | Gary Conway Lang Elliott |
Starring: | Gary Conway Angel Tompkins Michael Dante George Memmoli |
Music: | Hugo Montenegro |
Cinematography: | Irv Goodnoff |
Editing: | Richard Weber |
Studio: | Fai Cinema Milway Productions |
Distributor: | Columbia Pictures |
Runtime: | 97 minutes |
Country: | United States |
Language: | English |
The Farmer is a 1977 American crime action film directed by David Berlatsky and starring Gary Conway, Angel Tompkins, Michael Dante, and George Memmoli. The film was released by Columbia Pictures on March 9, 1977. The revenge thriller is probably best remembered for its lack of a home media release, as the film never had a release on VHS, Beta, Laserdisc, DVD, or any other release outside of theaters for years until a limited edition Blu-ray was released by Scorpion Releasing in early 2022. The websites Letterboxd and The Grindhouse Database list this movie as belonging to the vetsploitation subgenre.[1] [2]
Decorated World War II veteran Kyle Martin returns home with a Silver Star to Georgia to start a farm, but realizes running a one-man farm isn't profitable, and the bank needs to foreclose, despite his being a veteran. At that point a gambler named Johnny has an auto crash close to the farm, in which Kyle spares his life. Johnny offers him $1,500, which actually isn't sufficient to spare the homestead.
At this time, Johnny past-posts mobster Passini on a horse race for $50,000. This angers Passini who along with his three colleagues, murders Johnny's bodyguard, and blinds Johnny's eyes with corrosive acid to "make a example out of him".
Johnny asks his mistress Betty to hire Kyle so he can kill Passini and his men individually for $50,000, which he needs to save his farm. Kyle is initially reluctant to do so. However, one of Passini's men by the name of Weasel rapes Betty at Kyle's farm. Weasel then kills the farmhand Gumshoe while trying to save Betty, then burns down the farm.
After arriving in time to save Betty from the burning farm and surveying through the burnt wreckage the next day, Kyle finally accepts Johnny's offer which sets the path for revenge.
The film was theatrically released on March 9, 1977, by Columbia Pictures.
In 2006, Code Red announced a release of the film on DVD, posting 10 screenshots on their blog,[3] but this never happened.[4]
Distributor Scorpion Releasing released the film on Blu-ray Disc in February 2022.[5]
List of American films of 1977