Robert Towne would prefer his appearance as the stick-like leading actor Edward Wain in the prententious Roger Corman post-apocalyptic effort The Last Woman on Earth (1960) be forgotten — in addition to the film’s screenplay, which was Towne’s first. Despite this inauspicious beginning (and his follow-up starring appearance in Creature From the Haunted Sea 1961), Towne appreciated the early opportunity afforded him by Corman, and remained with the producer/director to pen the screenplay for Tomb of Ligeia (1965) (two more scripts for Corman, A Time for Killing and Captain Nemo and the Underwater City, were heavily revised by others). From there, Towne could only go up, and this he did as script consultant for Warren Beatty’s Bonnie and Clyde (1967) and as full screenwriter for Villa Rides (1967). After one more acting turn in Drive, He Said (1971), Towne made a good living as a screenwriter and troubleshooting script doctor. Towne’s output ranged from the salty profanities of The Last… read more
I just spent five hours in San Luis Obispo (where the film is mostly set) covering a college track meet, it made me wonder how many of the athletes had seen this film.
Robert Towne in the 1970s had written and script doctored a number of fine films (Heaven Can Wait, Chinatown, The Last Detail). He was very much in demand in Hollywood and worked with many of the best… read review