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Drive, He Said
Plot Synopsis by Mark Deming

Jack Nicholson first put his well-documented enthusiasm for basketball to good use in this film, which he wrote and directed between his roles in Five Easy Pieces and Carnal Knowledge. William Tepper plays Hector, a student at a college in Ohio who shares a room with his friend Gabriel (Michael Margotta) and is the star player on the school's basketball team. Hector has been approached to quit college and play pro ball, but Gabriel is urging him to devote more time to radical political causes. Of course, both have plenty of other things on their mind; Hector is having a clandestine affair with the wife of one of his professors (Karen Black), while Gabriel, in a bid to beat the draft and avoid going to Vietnam, is trying to convince the draft board that he's insane. Unfortunately, Gabriel is feigning madness so well that he's not so sure he hasn't actually become crazy. Director Henry Jaglom and screenwriter Robert Towne also have supporting roles, as do future sitcom greats Cindy Williams and David Ogden Stiers.

Similar Works
Rain Dogs  (2006, Ho Yuhang)
Other Related Works
 Is related to:    Fast Break  (1979, Jack Smight)
   One on One  (1977, Lamont Johnson)
   Blue Chips  (1994, William Friedkin)
   Hoop Dreams  (1994, Steve James)
   He Got Game  (1998, Spike Lee)