Getaway (1994) !!EXCLUSIVE!!
Rudy is waiting with a getaway plane, but he sees police cars and leaves Doc behind. After a year in a Mexican jail, Doc sends Carol to mob boss Jack Benyon, who is looking to put together a select team of experts to rob a dog track in Arizona. Benyon agrees to get Doc released from prison, in exchange for sexual favors from Carol first.
Getaway (1994)
Rudy comes to his senses just as the last of Benyon's men die. He makes one more attempt to get the money, but after a hand-to-hand fight he is killed by Doc in an elevator when Doc shoots the cables, sending the elevator plummeting down to ground level, where his body is discovered by a screaming Fran. Doc and Carol make their way out of the hotel just as the police arrive, and hijack a pickup truck driven by "Slim", an old cowboy, forcing him to drive them to the border. After safely crossing into Mexico, they buy Slim's truck from him and drive southward, making their getaway.
3. The bulk of Thompson's fiction was originally published by Dell, Fawcett Gold Medal, Lion Books, Popular Library, and Signet. Reprints have been published by Donald I. Fine, Mysterious Press, and Vintage Crime/Black Lizard. Film versions of Thompson's work include: The Getaway (1972), directed by Sam Peckinpah and starring Steve McQueen and Ali McGraw; Alain Corneau's Serié Noire (1979), based on A Hell of a Woman; Bertrand Tavernier's Coup de Torchon (1982), based on Pop. 1280; James Foley's After Dark, My Sweet (1990), starring Bruce Dern, Jason Patric, and Rachel Ward; Maggie Greenwald's The Kill-Off (1990); Stephen Frears's The Grifters (1990), starring John Cusack and Angelica Huston; and Roger Donaldson's remake of The Getaway (1994), starring Alec Baldwin and Kim Basinger. A made-for-television production of Thompson's novella, "The Frightening Frammis," directed by Tom Cruise and starring Isabella Rossellini, was aired in September 1993 as part of the series "Fallen Angels."
Other credits as body makeup artist include the crime comedy Clue (1985, with Hazel Catmull and Brad Wilder), the action film The Getaway (1994), the science fiction adventure Waterworld (1995, with Joe Colwell, James Lee McCoy, Francisco X. Perez, and Susan Zietlow-Maust), and the drama Showgirls (1995, with Thomas Surprenant and Alicia M. Tripi). 041b061a72