Stick

    Stick
    1985

    Synopsis

    After getting out of jail, car thief Ernest "Stick" Stickley witnesses the murder of his friend Rainy during a drug deal. To avoid getting killed by the same people, who work for mobster Chucky, Stick gets a job as a chauffeur for millionaire Barry Braham and lies low. As he gets used to his new routine, Stick woos Barry's financial consultant, Kyle McClaren, but must fight back when Chucky's men come after him.

    Your Movie Library

    Cast

    • Burt ReynoldsStick
    • Candice BergenKyle
    • George SegalBarry
    • Charles DurningChucky
    • José PérezRainy
    • Richard LawsonCornell
    • Castulo GuerraNestor
    • Dar RobinsonMoke
    • Alex RoccoFirestone
    • David ReynosoLuis

    Recommendations

    • 63

      The Associated Press

      A satisfactory, if fairly standard, action entertainment. [29 Apr 1985]
    • 50

      Miami Herald

      Each of those fine actors has put in a performance or two; each has made a mark. Each has made a mark here, too, if one counts dark blots on the resume. Reynolds is good; they're awful. Perhaps this is because Reynolds was directing them. He may be too nice a guy. There must be a reason. [26 Apr 1985, p.D1]
    • 40

      Chicago Reader

      Reynolds turns the emphasis from the action scenes to the depressed emotional state of his strangely disengaged protagonist, and the result is a film haunted by an unstated, largely undramatized sense of melancholy, very personal but almost completely inarticulate.
    • 40

      TV Guide Magazine

      The picture is dull and the pacing abrupt rather than quick. STICK might have been a good movie about 20 years ago, before people became sophisticated and demanded depth in characterization.
    • 38

      Chicago Tribune

      Stick is quite awful.
    • 30

      Washington Post

      Reynolds never figures out whether he's making a thriller or a spoof, which for years has been the problem with his performances, too. His acting swivels from gravelly, glowering tough-guyness to nudge-and-wink appeals to the audience -- Mr. T and Johnny Carson in one. And he's way too polished for the character Leonard wrote; when he enters the slick world of Miami finance, he blends right in.
    • 30

      The New York Times

      Through all this, Mr. Reynolds displays little understanding of the very good reasons why audiences usually like him. He is at his most ponderous here, with none of his trademark resiliency or sardonic humor.
    • 30

      Los Angeles Times

      Unfortunately, to fit what are seen to be the particular requirements of its director/co-star Burt Reynolds, Stick has been rendered jokey, flaccid and, the worst crime of all, deadly slow. All this in spite of the fact that Leonard was the original screenwriter. [26 Apr 1985, p.6]