Showing posts with label Ned Beatty. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Ned Beatty. Show all posts

Monday, June 27, 2022

Movie Review: White Lightning (1973)

 

DIRECTOR: Joseph Sargent. CAST: Burt Reynolds, Ned Beatty, Bo Hopkins, Matt Clark, Jennifer Billingsley, R.G. Armstrong, Louise Latham, Diane Ladd, Conlan Carter, Dabbs Greer, Lincolm Demyan, John Steadman, Iris Korn, Stephanie Burchfield, Barbara Muller, Robert Ginnaven, Fay Martin, Richard Allin, Laura Dern.
WHITE LIGHTNING has the distinction of being the first Burt Reynolds good ol’ boy Southern car chase flick, but it is more of a serious revenge movie than one would expect after seeing better-known vehicles like SMOKEY & THE BANDIT. You can see the roots of SMOKEY & THE BANDIT, CANNONBALL RUN, and other Burt movies forming here, but WHITE LIGHTNING is a darker, grittier story that makes excellent use of its locations. Burt is Gator McKluskey (great name), a moonshine runner serving time when he finds out that his brother has been murdered by a corrupt small-town sheriff. He agrees to go undercover for the feds to catch the sheriff in the act of taking bribes from local moonshiners. Although this is tantamount to treason among whiskey bootleggers, Gator is more concerned with taking down Sheriff J.C. Connors for killing his brother. WHITE LIGHTNING’s car chases aren’t that spectacular by today’s standards, but they are fast-paced and intense. One stunt goes completely wrong and could have been much more of a legitimately life-threatening catastrophe. Fine support cast too—Ned Beatty is excellent as the corrupt sheriff while Bo Hopkins essentially plays himself as a too-cool-for-school whiskey runner. R.G. Armstrong is great as always. WHITE LIGHTNING was actually supposed to be Steven Spielberg’s feature film debut until he decided it wasn’t for him and filmed SUGARLAND EXPRESS instead. Quentin Tarantino fans will recognize bits of Charles Bernstein’s score lifted and reused in both KILL BILL VOLUME 1 and INGLORIOUS BASTERDS.




Sunday, December 13, 2020

Movie Review: 1941 (1979)

DIRECTOR: Steven Spielberg. CAST: Dan Aykroyd, John Belushi, Ned Beatty, Lorraine Gary, Murray Hamilton, Christopher Lee, Tim Matheson, Toshiro Mifune, Warren Oates, Robert Stack, Treat Williams, Nancy Allen, Bobby DiCicco, Dianne Kay, Perry Lang, Slim Pickens, Wendie Jo Sperber, Eddie Deezen, Joe Flaherty, John Candy, Frank McRae, Susan Backlinie. 
1941 is a glorious disaster of a film; it is not a ‘good movie’ as much as it is an amazing spectacle. Personally, I cannot hate a movie simultaneously recognizing the diverse talents of Toshiro Mifune and Eddie Deezen. You certainly will not find such an ensemble cast anywhere else! 1941 is an attempt at a World War II-era comedy through the anarchic lens of Saturday Night Live or Animal House. American tension is high after the attack on Pearl Harbor just a couple days before. Wild rumors abound and everyone is on alert. Servicemen and zoot suiters are rioting in the streets and a lone Japanese submarine is lost in the Pacific Ocean while trying to find and attack Los Angeles. 1941 introduces several movies’ worth of characters and stories at once; so much is going on that most viewers would likely get lost in the chaos. Fans that can make sense of this mess will enjoy the 146-minute director’s cut that fleshes out some of the more principal characters. Although 1941 is not laugh-out-loud funny most of the time, it captures the period in which it takes place with good unpretentious fun.