Street Machine

MALCOLM 1986

> A COMEDY OF HOPES AND SCHEMES

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PAINFULLY shy Malcolm Hughes (Friels) makes up for a lack of social graces with a keen aptitude for mechanics, inventing crafty gadgets like a letterbox that runs on toy train tracks from his front gate to deliver the mail to the window.

Tram-loving Malcolm works at a Melbourne tram maintenanc­e depot, but when his boss finds out that he’s built a custom mini-tram during work hours and taken it out for a joyride, he’s fired from his dream job.

Suddenly unemployed, Malcolm decides to take on a boarder to help make ends meet. Enter Frank (Hargreaves), fresh out of jail and with more criminal mischief on his mind. Frank’s soon joined by his straightta­lking girlfriend, Judith (Davies).

Quick-tempered and a tad dim-witted, Frank initially doesn’t know what to make of the chronicall­y awkward Malcolm, but kind-hearted Judith finds herself charmed by his unassuming nature and mechanical smarts.

When Malcolm overhears that Frank and Judith are planning a robbery, he’s all too keen to be a part of it and sets about creating a series of devices to help them. In the film’s most iconic scene, Malcolm demonstrat­es to Frank the unusual getaway car he’s built – a yellow Honda Z360 that splits down the middle into separate halves (each with its own motor) to elude the cops.

Suitably impressed, Frank realises that Malcolm’s ingenuity could help this motley trio pull off a particular­ly ambitious and lucrative bank heist, one that can only work by employing Malcolm’s many and varied contraptio­ns.

VERDICT: 4/5

QUIRKY, warm-hearted and witty, Malcolm is a classic 80s Aussie comedy anchored by fantastic performanc­es from the three leads. And in addition to the unforgetta­ble split-in-half Honda, there’s plenty of awesome automotive eye candy to enjoy in the background, from then-new Commodores and Falcons to HQS, XBS and Valiants that were still plentiful on Aussie roads in 1986. Above all, the simple joy Malcolm finds in perfecting his mechanical inventions is something street machiners can surely relate to.

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 ??  ?? COOL FLICK FACT: One of the Hondas used for filming had minibikes welded into the shell of each half so that they really could be driven separately.
COOL FLICK FACT: One of the Hondas used for filming had minibikes welded into the shell of each half so that they really could be driven separately.
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