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Rafferty and the Gold Dust Twins

  • 1975
  • R
  • 1h 31m
IMDb RATING
6.4/10
640
YOUR RATING
Alan Arkin, Sally Kellerman, Charles Martin Smith, Mackenzie Phillips, and Alex Rocco in Rafferty and the Gold Dust Twins (1975)
Watch Official Trailer
Play trailer2:55
1 Video
22 Photos
ComedyDrama

Rafferty, living in squalor near Hollywood, doesn't put up a fight when kooks McKinley and Rita hitch a ride to New Orleans; Rafferty is charmed by the misfits. The three drive to Las Vegas ... Read allRafferty, living in squalor near Hollywood, doesn't put up a fight when kooks McKinley and Rita hitch a ride to New Orleans; Rafferty is charmed by the misfits. The three drive to Las Vegas and later Tucson, where their bond unravels.Rafferty, living in squalor near Hollywood, doesn't put up a fight when kooks McKinley and Rita hitch a ride to New Orleans; Rafferty is charmed by the misfits. The three drive to Las Vegas and later Tucson, where their bond unravels.

  • Director
    • Dick Richards
  • Writer
    • John Kaye
  • Stars
    • Alan Arkin
    • Sally Kellerman
    • Mackenzie Phillips
  • See production info at IMDbPro
  • IMDb RATING
    6.4/10
    640
    YOUR RATING
    • Director
      • Dick Richards
    • Writer
      • John Kaye
    • Stars
      • Alan Arkin
      • Sally Kellerman
      • Mackenzie Phillips
    • 17User reviews
    • 13Critic reviews
  • See production info at IMDbPro
  • Videos1

    Official Trailer
    Trailer 2:55
    Official Trailer

    Photos22

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    Top cast41

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    Alan Arkin
    Alan Arkin
    • Rafferty
    Sally Kellerman
    Sally Kellerman
    • McKinley 'Mac' Beachwood
    Mackenzie Phillips
    Mackenzie Phillips
    • Rita 'Frisbee' Sykes
    Alex Rocco
    Alex Rocco
    • Vinnie
    Charles Martin Smith
    Charles Martin Smith
    • Alan Boone
    • (as Charlie Martin Smith)
    Harry Dean Stanton
    Harry Dean Stanton
    • Billy Winston
    John McLiam
    John McLiam
    • John Beachwood
    Richard Hale
    Richard Hale
    • Reverend Culpepper - The Jesus Freak
    Louis Prima
    Louis Prima
    • Louis Prima
    Sam Butera
    Sam Butera
    • Sam Butera
    The Witnesses
    • The Witnesses
    Arch Johnson
    Arch Johnson
    • Smitty
    Barbara Colby
    Barbara Colby
    • Young Woman
    David Proval
    David Proval
    • The Incessant Talker
    George O'Hanlon Jr.
    George O'Hanlon Jr.
    • Roy - Gas Station Attendant
    Ed Peck
    Ed Peck
    • Mr. Big Time
    Cliff Emmich
    Cliff Emmich
    • Cliff Wilson - Used Car Dealer
    Lillian Randolph
    Lillian Randolph
    • Elderly Woman Driver
    • Director
      • Dick Richards
    • Writer
      • John Kaye
    • All cast & crew
    • Production, box office & more at IMDbPro

    User reviews17

    6.4640
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    Featured reviews

    7merklekranz

    Road trip of broken dreams ..........

    "Rafferty and the Gold Dust Twins" is a character study, loaded with great character actors. It is also unpredictable, with occasional bursts of outrageous humor. Alan Arkin plays a hard drinking, totally inept, and burned out driving instructor. Sally Kellerman, is a wannabe country singer, accompanied by Mackenzie Phillips, a fifteen year old hustler. These three hit the road for New Orleans, scamming and thieving along the way. The colorful characters they encounter include Alex Rocco as a Las Vegas nut job, Charles Martin Smith as a soldier who gets scammed, and Harry Dean Stanton as a one legged veteran who gets hustled at pool. Also, there is a rather unexpected ending to this road trip of broken dreams. - MERK
    7SnoopyStyle

    petty crime road trip

    Hollywood driving test instructor Rafferty (Alan Arkin) is a 20 years veteran former Marine and lives a sad lonely life. He's drinking in the park when he's approached by McKinley 'Mac' Beachwood (Sally Kellerman) and Rita 'Frisbee' Sykes (Mackenzie Phillips). Frisbee pulls a gun and forces him to drive them to New Orleans.

    It's a road trip of petty crimes and misadventures. The movie is interesting for the actors. Mackenzie Phillips is only about 15 and the movie was released before her big break on One Day at a Time. Alan Arkin and Sally Kellerman are both very good. It also has some good support actors. I do wonder if Mac and Frisbee should be lovers. The movie would function better with a love triangle and some more jealousy. Frisbee jumping out of the car is a good scene but it would be even better if her motive has some sexual tension. The trio turns more into an odd little crime family. It is interesting that so many older men turn into creepy sleaze around her. It points to some unresolved sexual abuse in her past considering her anger issue. She needs a heart-to-heart with Rafferty about that. The ending could be improved. The three of them should drive away into the sunset together and there is no way the nun would just let her go with some guy claiming to be her dad. At least, Rafferty should show a fake ID. This is a fascinating little grimy 70's road trip indie.
    7shepardjessica

    Off-beat Road Flick!

    This 1970's road movie is very special with likable folks and some weird supporting characters along the way. Alan Arkin was great in the 60's & 70's and this part fits him like a glove. MacKenzie Phillips as Frisbee brings her unique characteristics to her lonely young woman looking to connect. Sally Kellerman was so great in the 70's playing wackos or tight-asses in uniform; always a joy to watch.

    A definite 7 out of 10. Best performance = Alan Arkin. There are excellent minor characters played by Alex Rocco and especially Harry Dean Stanton (one of the treasures of American cinema is this man's presence). This film may be too laid-back for most high-charged Americans. Reminiscent of SLITHER (also Sally Kellerman). A hidden gem that was rarely seen at the time. Check it out!
    8TheFearmakers

    SLITHER on Ludes

    Combine the personalities of Sally Kellerman and Mackenzie Phillips, one a mellow dreamer, the other a gun-toting schemer, and you have Kellerman's entire character from the previous years' road movie, SLITHER, making her passive, affable performance seem like she's merely along for the ride, leaving all the edginess to her other/better half...

    And basically making Alan Arkin's Rafferty, a boozing ex-Marine/DMV instructor kidnapped by the pair, along for the ride's ride as RAFFTERY AND THE GOLD DUST TWINS goes from scene to scene/town to town gathering mossy strangers along the way...

    From victimized gas station attendants to Las Vegas con man Alex Rocco to irate Arizona rancher John McClliam to Texas barfly Harry Dean Stanton and young soldier Charles Martin Smith (sharing a terrific motel scene with AMERICAN GRAFFITI alumni Phillips), they all merely serve witness to the eclectic trio who find predictable camaraderie along the breezy trip...

    Although Arkin lacks initial reluctance: Seconds after Phillips sticks a gun to his head (and even fires it off OVER his head), saccharine elevator music lazily orchestrates a wide shot of the freeway like a TV-production, which this often resembles a grungy and freewheeling version of...

    Actually a good thing since RAFFERTY has nothing to lose or gain to either educate or annoy an audience, which refers to both the character and the movie -- one worth watching over and over for that reason alone: Lethargy on wheels can be infectious.
    8moonspinner55

    Something special about loners, losers and dreamers...

    Alan Arkin plays a California driving instructor who is so bored with his job that he falls asleep in his student's car; getting kidnapped by two nuts like Sally Kellerman and Mackenzie Phillips is really just what he needs. Kellerman has done solid work in films such as "MASH" and "Slither", but she is truly remarkable here as a little girl in a woman's body, convinced she has musical potential and that street urchin Phillips can help her realize her dream of becoming a professional singer (she believes the best in everybody). Phillips is tough and guarded, but lets her walls down in surprising ways (at one point, Arkin sneaks a little kick at her and she kicks back--she's enjoying a grown up's closeness for the first time). As Rafferty, Arkin is wonderfully flexible and warm; alienated and confused, he isn't even hopeful enough to get a decent car (the one he does drive seems glued together). The friendship that develops between these three people is funny and touching. It probably catches them by surprise, yet the characters don't acknowledge their new bond (by discussing it, they may burst the balloon). I didn't care for a padded sequence mid-movie that has Arkin's brakes going out (the three leads "walk to town", only they're in the middle of nowhere), but I did love many scenes: Kellerman singing in a Tucson roadhouse; her visit to her father, an embittered cowboy who wants nothing to do with his daughter; Arkin desperately trying to hang onto his friends; Phillips nearly selling herself to buy Arkin a cowboy hat (the only present she's ever bought for anybody). An underrated, warm-hearted movie, "Rafferty" is a lost gem awaiting rediscovery. ***1/2 from ****

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    Storyline

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    Did you know

    Edit
    • Trivia
      Sally Kellerman was reluctant to take on "another road movie" so soon after Slither (1973). The main thing that persuaded her, she writes, was that she would get to sing, one of Sally's passions. Kellerman also writes that director Dick Richards was uninterested in hearing Sally's thoughts about her character, but had no problem discussing character and motivation with Alan Arkin. Sally says she eventually started filtering her thoughts to Richards through Arkin, as if they were Arkin's ideas.
    • Goofs
      Charles Martin Smith's character says he's on a 15-day pass. In the Army, this would be considered a leave. Passes are almost always for two or three days. A pass is for short periods of time. Less than a week.
    • Connections
      Referenced in Dinah!: Episode #1.82 (1975)
    • Soundtracks
      It Wasn't God Who Made Honky Tonk Angels
      Written by J.D. Miller

      Performed by Sally Kellerman

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    FAQ13

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    Details

    Edit
    • Release date
      • September 1, 1975 (Sweden)
    • Country of origin
      • United States
    • Languages
      • English
      • Spanish
    • Also known as
      • Rafferty and the Highway Hustlers
    • Filming locations
      • Tucson, Arizona, USA
    • Production company
      • Gruskoff-Venture-Linson
    • See more company credits at IMDbPro

    Tech specs

    Edit
    • Runtime
      1 hour 31 minutes
    • Sound mix
      • Mono
    • Aspect ratio
      • 2.35 : 1

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    Alan Arkin, Sally Kellerman, Charles Martin Smith, Mackenzie Phillips, and Alex Rocco in Rafferty and the Gold Dust Twins (1975)
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