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Citizens Band

Play trailer Poster for Citizens Band PG 1977 1h 38m Comedy Play Trailer Watchlist
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100% Tomatometer 10 Reviews 70% Popcornmeter 250+ Ratings
A truck driver nicknamed Chrome Angel (Charles Napier) gets into an accident while passing through a small town. Spider (Paul Le Mat), a repairman, picks up Chrome Angel's distress call over his CB radio, and rescues him. The only problem is that Chrome Angel is a bigamist, and now his two wives (Marcia Rodd, Ann Wedgeworth) have both arrived on the scene. Spider also has his own set of problems, and is caught up in a feud with the local priest (Ed Begley Jr.).
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Citizens Band

Critics Reviews

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Pauline Kael The New Yorker 09/18/2023
[Citizens Band] is a palmy, elegantly deadpan comedy; the jokes aren’t pushed, so it takes viewers a few minutes to settle into the comic style, which has the mellow, light touch of thirties Renoir. Go to Full Review
David Ansen Newsweek 03/07/2023
Demme has lots of fun, and, aided by a fresh, talented cast, he artfully modulates his moods from raunchy farce to somber pathos. Go to Full Review
David Nusair Reel Film Reviews 04/16/2024
2.5/4
...a relatively solid piece of work that benefits substantially from its easygoing vibe. Go to Full Review
Leigh Charlton Los Angeles Free Press 10/23/2019
[Paul Brickman's] dialogue is rich with CB jargon and the actors have adapted well to the sound and rhythm of the CBer's language. Go to Full Review
Eve Tushnet Patheos 03/19/2019
The movie did end up feeling as noteworthy for what it excludes or doesn't examine as for the startlingly contemporary things it includes. Go to Full Review
Fernando F. Croce CinePassion 07/30/2012
A vivacious poem of American restlessness Go to Full Review
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Audience Reviews

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Scott R @ScottR 5h NYT 1000 films. This one was included for its obscure take on CB radio culture and it entertained. Some great time capsule work here and an inside look into truckers and their lives. A bit cynical at times, but also very honest. Saw on box. See more Stephen C @bob25009 Jun 30 Funny in 1 hour and 38 minutes!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!! Dubbed and subtitled in worldwide studios!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!! Filmed on May 18th, 1977, in color!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!! Celebrating 50 years in 2027!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!! Copyright 1977-2025 by Paramount Pictures!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!! See more 05/13/2013 A vivacious poem of American restlessness that holds up remarkably well. It resonates because the the CB radio serves as the internet of the 1970s. See more 04/05/2012 What a bizarre, endlessly fascinating slice of Americana this film is. Jonathan Demme's "Handle With Care' or 'Citizens Band' is a portrait of a small town and how it's connected through CB radios which form this sense of human connection. It's a great ensemble piece with each character being interconnect through circumstance whether it is primarily through the radio, physically or both. While the film is a nice piece of history a lot of themes ring incredibly true today in the age of the internet and social media. Technology creates this type of secrecy or wall for us, almost like a fantasy world where we can be someone completely different or unique than who we truly are. The character of Spider and his quest to regulate the airwaves was particularly amusing as was his alcoholic father, a complete asshole in life, but a kind, nice man while operating his CB radio. Demme has crafted a fascinating, well written film with lots of unique and interesting characters that is just fun and socially relevant as well. Surprised this film isnt mentioned more when talking about Demme's filmography. See more 12/29/2011 A small movie about communication in person and through CBs. While the dilemmas faced by those involved are never dull, none of them rise to the level of interesting either. See more 05/14/2011 Every Generation Has Its Internet, I Guess The phenomenon of connecting with people you've never seen is not new to the latest generation. It's probably relatively modern; it requires on things like reliable mail. However, when I was in high school, you could pay a couple of bucks to be hooked up with someone on another continent as a pen-pal. Remember, too, that Charlie Brown was always writing his "pencil pal"--starting in 1958, which even predates the phenomenon under discussion here. Even before that, I've read of at least one marriage wherein the parties got to know each other while working in telegraph offices a considerable distance apart. The ceremony, of course, was also telegraphed so that their friends could "be there." And for a stretch in the 1970s, the American fixation was on Citizens' Band radio. In fine Hollywood tradition, movies were made to cash in on the phenomenon. Our Hero operates under the handle Spider (Paul Le Mat), and the credits assume we don't care about his real name--anyone's real name. Anyway, Spider lives with his father (Roberts Blossom), who operates as Papa Thermodyne. Also in town is his brother (Bruce McGill) and his ex-girlfriend (Candy Clark). There are also all sorts of wacky people around the town. We take a lot of time with a trucker, Chrome Angel (Charles Napier), and what turns out to be his two wives, Dallas Angel (Ann Wedgeworth) and Portland Angel (Marcia Rodd). Oh, and his girlfriend, a prostitute who goes by the handle of Hot Coffee (Alix Elias). After a particularly frustrating fight with everyone he knows, Spider goes kind of nuts and starts a one-man crusade to get everyone in town to obey the FCC regulations for use of the CB system. This includes battling Red Baron (Harry Northup), who spews Nazi rhetoric and apparently wants to drive all non-Aryans off the radio, and The Priest (Ed Begley, Jr.), who interrupts others' conversations to proselytize. There's also illicit context, of course. There's an obnoxious teenage boy who claims to be "The Hustler" (Michael Mahler), who spends his time reading pornography over the air. More mysterious is Electra, who exchanges dirty talk with Warlock (Will Seltzer). This is one of the things Spider is determined to eliminate, leading to about the only really funny bit in the movie. He has taken to driving around to triangulate various people's signals, and The Hustler is the first one he finds. The kid claims to be home sick, and Spider pushes past him. He goes after the kid's radio with a baseball bat. The kid's mother (Micki Mann) comes home after he finished, and the kid tells her what has happened. Presumably so she'll call the cops. But anyway, her response is that she's wanted to do it for ages. I have told you this entire scene because I didn't want you to think there was a reason to watch the movie--now, you know the only funny thing which happens. I think we're supposed to find the situation with the trucker's two wives was funny, but I did not. I wanted the smarter wife to walk out on him. Honestly, I wanted him to end up with the prostitute, because their relationship was at least honest. And he did have a clever idea when he set her up with an RV and made her a . . . what do you call it when it's trucks? A truck stop follower? Anyway. The Portland wife was intelligent, and I wanted better for her. The Dallas wife, I didn't much care. She was dumb and really deserved whatever she got. Though I don't ever think much of anyone deserves having their trust betrayed. That's part of the reason I wanted the trucker to end up with Hot Coffee. No, she didn't know about his wives, but she had no reason to expect that he was faithful to her. She knew exactly what their relationship was, though of course, she was a prostitute he visited whenever he was in the area. So I guess that's fidelity of a sort. All in all, the only thing approaching new here is the use of CB radio in its tired plot devices. The relationships aren't really dependent on it most of the time, because most of these people live in the same town. It's worth noting that there's at least one case of someone pretending to be someone different from who they are, and there is probably at least one case of someone being more themselves over the CB than they are in person. Which I think is another case of "nothing new under the sun," even though people think it is. The Red Baron probably does not actually, for all he's shown doing so at the end, deliver Nazi rhetoric in person. However, the CB is a type of anonymity, the one which has only exploded in the days of the chat room and the message board. What we can do now is create even greater anonymity, of course. I can lie to all of you about where I am, because you don't have to be within a certain distance to hear me. I don't have to disguise my voice to keep you from recognizing it, because all I am to you is words on a screen. See more Read all reviews
Citizens Band

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Movie Info

Synopsis A truck driver nicknamed Chrome Angel (Charles Napier) gets into an accident while passing through a small town. Spider (Paul Le Mat), a repairman, picks up Chrome Angel's distress call over his CB radio, and rescues him. The only problem is that Chrome Angel is a bigamist, and now his two wives (Marcia Rodd, Ann Wedgeworth) have both arrived on the scene. Spider also has his own set of problems, and is caught up in a feud with the local priest (Ed Begley Jr.).
Director
Jonathan Demme
Producer
Shep Fields
Screenwriter
Paul Brickman
Production Co
Paramount Pictures, The Fields Company
Rating
PG
Genre
Comedy
Original Language
English
Release Date (Theaters)
May 18, 1977, Limited
Release Date (Streaming)
Jan 6, 2017
Runtime
1h 38m
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