Malone (released in theaters on May 1, 1987) introduces Richard Malone (Burt Reynolds), a weary, disillusioned CIA assassin who decides to abruptly leave his violent profession behind. While driving across the country to start a peaceful new life, his vintage Mustang breaks down in a remote, picturesque valley in Oregon.
Stranded in a small, insular town, he is taken in by Paul Barlow (Scott Wilson), a kind, down-to-earth local garage owner, and his bright, impressionable teenage daughter, Jo (Cynthia Gibb).
As Malone patiently waits for his car parts to arrive, he quickly notices an undercurrent of intense fear and intimidation plaguing the local community.
The source of this tension is Charles Delaney (Cliff Robertson), a wealthy, fanatical right-wing extremist who is systematically buying up all the local property through intimidation and force to establish a private, heavily armed sovereign compound.
The plot intensifies into an explosive game of survival as Delaney’s thuggish henchmen, led by local corrupt elements like the Bollard brothers (Tracey Walter and Dennis Burkley), attempt to bully Paul into selling his land.
Malone’s quiet, effortless intervention on behalf of the Barlow family instantly alerts Delaney, who realizes this mysterious visitor is no ordinary drifter.
Delaney dispatches his ruthless chief enforcer, alongside a heavily armed mercenary squad to eliminate the threat.
Simultaneously, a corrupt local sheriff (Kenneth McMillan) tries to run Malone out of town.
The narrative shifts into high gear when Delaney’s forces launch a brutal assault on the Barlow ranch, forcing Malone to tap into his lethal government training.
Utilizing an array of tactical firearms and sheer survival instincts, the lone operator launches a devastating, one-man war against Delaney’s private army, culminating in a violent, explosive raid on the extremist compound to permanently liberate the valley.
Director Harley Cokeliss delivers a tightly paced, atmospheric action-thriller that functions beautifully as a modern-day cinematic western, echoing classics like Shane.
Reynolds delivers a wonderfully understated, somber performance, trading his signature wisecracking persona for a cold, intensely physical screen presence that grounds the film’s violence.
Robertson is impeccably sinister as the calculated, megalomaniacal villain, while Lauren Hutton brings a unique, chillingly elegant menace to her role as a professional killer.

Burt Reynolds in Malone (Photo/Orion Pictures)
Reception for Malone
Malone grossed $1.4 million on its opening weekend, finishing 11th at the box office. The top film of the week was The Secret of My Success, which earned $4.6 million on its fourth weekend.
The film would gross $3.1 million in its theatrical run.
Legacy
Malone‘s legacy rests on its status as a quintessential, cult-classic artifact of the late-1980s lone-hero action boom, representing a critical transitional point in Reynolds’s legendary career as he shifted into darker, more hard-boiled dramatic roles.
While it did not achieve massive box office success upon its initial theatrical release, it earned a permanent, highly dedicated following on home video and late-night cable television for its uncompromised grit, practical stunt work, and explosive pyrotechnics.
Malone stands as a fascinating blueprint for the modern “retired assassin forced back into action” subgenre that would later explode with franchises like John Wick.
Decades later, the movie is warmly celebrated by genre enthusiasts as a beautifully shot, unflinching slice of eighties popcorn cinema, remembered for its atmospheric rural aesthetic, its tense pacing, and its timeless depiction of an individual standing up against systemic corruption.














