Adapting Jules Feiffer's Obie - winning play for the screen, director Alan Arkin (yes, that Alan Arkin) steers Elliott Gould through a metropolis
where random shootings are the norm and there's a heavy breather on the end of every phone line.
Not exact matches
Shooting in the city involves a lot of waiting for people to walk by,
random people asking
where my shoes are from, and generally not caring about what anyone thinks.
According to the Ford Macleod Gazette (located in Alberta,
where the movie is
shooting, so not just some
random story), they describe the plot thusly: «Set in the future, the movie details the toll climate change has taken on agriculture, with corn the last crop to be cultivated.
In the game, he can not be seen delivering the mail, but can be seen flying above the town
where he can be
shot down with a slingshot at exactly 9:00 AM or 5:00 PM on
random weekdays, and he will not be aware who
shot him down.
Though Kate is told their destination is Texas, she is actually taken to Mexico,
where her team begins
shooting at
random suspects near the border.
Lucky then that I was hiding out in a garage
where there just happened to be an RPG and with a
random shot, the plane was down, crashing into the town and wiping out most of my foes.