Filming of Americana began in 1973 when David Carradine was the star of the popular Kung Fu series and continued intermittently over the years until it was finally released in 1981.
Carradine shows up on foot in the small town of Drury, Kansas (the real citizens of that town play themselves in the film), and simply says “I need a place to crash.”
He takes odd jobs, is harassed by the locals and the sheriff, and begins the slow, difficult restoration of an abandoned merry-go-round. We eventually learn that he’s a Vietnam veteran captain who only reports for his disability payments when everything else goes
wrong.
The quiet hero has troubled relationships with ex-biker/vet (Michael Greene) who sponsors cockfights in the shell of a church, and Barbara Hershey (Carradine’s common-law wife), a pretty flower-child who wanders around barefoot in a white dress.
Americana is a well-made movie that takes its time and manages to say a lot about unfortunate changes in the USA. The film was a family affair with Hershey’s father, Arnold Herzstein, playing the owner of the general store, David’s brother Bruce as the sheriff, and brother Robert worked as an assistant cameraman.
Dan (Grizzly Adams) Haggerty was also the set dresser and animal handler.
The American soldier
David Carradine
Jess’s daughter
Barbara Hershey
Mike the garageman
Michael Greene
Old storekeeper
Arnold Herzstein
Sandy
Sandy Ignon
John/Jack
John Blyth Barrymore
Greg
Greg Walker
Sheriff
Bruce Carradine
Old lady
Glenna Walters
Wrecking yard man
David Kern
Lieutenant
Claire Townsend
Colonel
Fran Ryan
Grateful Dead fan
Rick Van Ness
New storekeeper
Buz Storch
Jake
Dan Haggerty
Director
David Carradine