Running Out of Luck

(Redirected from Running out of Luck)

Running Out of Luck is a 1985 American adventure film directed by Julien Temple and starring Mick Jagger.[1][2]

Running Out of Luck
Directed byJulien Temple
Written byJulien Temple
Mick Jagger
StarringMick Jagger
Rae Dawn Chong
CinematographyOliver Stapleton
Music byMick Jagger
Luis Jardim
Release date
  • 1985 (1985)
LanguageEnglish

Plot

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Mick (Mick Jagger) is in Rio shooting a video. He is with his wife/girlfriend played by Jerry Hall. Mick performs Half a Loaf while the director, played by Dennis Hopper, screams and yells at Mick who is drunk. Mick and Jerry Hall are trying to make each other jealous. Jerry starts making out with a cabana boy which makes Mick disturbed. Mick picks up three girls and invites them to his trailer. On the way to the trailer, Mick starts feeling up the girls and realizes that they are not girls, and the three female imposters beat up and rob Mick and throw him in the back of a truck. Jerry Hall leaves Rio alone and meets a rich man in first class while Mick has found himself lost in the countryside of Brazil, seeing mirages and going crazy from the heat.

Mick is found by a plantation owner woman who rescues him and puts him to work. She also uses Mick as her sex slave. A truckload of prostitutes come to visit the plantation workers and Mick offers his shoes to a man who is roughing up a prostitute played by Rae Dawn Chong. Mick escapes the plantation by dressing up in drag and getting on the back of the truck when the prostitutes leave.

They try to get money by cheating at a casino back in Rio, and Mick got caught and thrown in jail. Rae helps him escape by drugging the warden and Mick goes back to London. Although everyone thinks Mick is dead, the press catch on to his return as he makes new music with a new band upstairs in a pub.

Cast

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References

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  1. ^ Jay Robert Nash, Stanley Ralph Nash, Stanley Ralph Ross. The Motion Picture Guide. CineBooks, 1985.{{cite book}}: CS1 maint: multiple names: authors list (link)
  2. ^ VV.AA. Variety Film Reviews, Volume 19. Garland Pub., 1989.
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