Rating: Not rated
Tags: Science Fiction, Lang:en
Summary
You've gotta love to hate the 1977 movie Damnation Alley,
a cheese-filled classic from sci-fi's cinematic canon. But
there's at least one good thing you can say about this
otherwise awful flick: it's prevented the movie's far
superior source material from being forgotten. Roger Zelazny's post-apocalypse novel predates the George
Peppard - Jan-Michael Vincent vehicle by about a decade and
represents the fine storytelling talents of one of science
fiction and fantasy's most daring writers (likely best
remembered for his imaginative Amber series). Speaking of vehicles: the coolest part of the movie - and
likely, thankfully, the only part most people remember -
turns out to be even cooler in the book: the flame-spewing,
.50-caliber-bullet-belching, grenade-throwing, gigantic
all-terrain vehicle that's responsible for getting a crucial
antiserum shipment from Los Angeles to Boston to stop a
deadly plague. The driver, a despicable lowlife named Hell
Tanner, has been given a not-so-difficult choice. He can
either get the drugs to the East Coast intact, save humanity,
and receive a full pardon for his crimes, or he can refuse
and spend the rest of his life in a "zebra suit." So what's the catch? Thanks to World War III, Middle
America is now an electrical-storm-torn, heavily irradiated
playground for dino-sized Gila monsters, "freak spiders,"
humongous bats "that eat off the mutie fruit trees down
Mexico way," and 120-foot-long snakes as big around as
garbage cans. And the native humans still scrambling around
the wasteland aren't much less dangerous. Damnation Alley might not be Zelazny's best, but for
reading on, say, a road trip, you can't do much better. Throw
in some '60s-style, freak-out closing riffs, and a trip down
the Alley becomes pretty hard to pass up.