CULT FILM FAVES NOT ON DVD
This is a section devoted to rare, and as yet to be released on legitimate DVD movies. Some films may have been released in some part of the world, or on some public domain label, or some may have simply never been released at all on the digital format. This section is designed to keep these films alive and to provide remembrance to those who may have seen them in some form or other, whether it be on the silver screen, on videotape, or the small screen at home.
ROLLING THUNDER (1977)
William Devane (Major Charles Rane), Tommy Lee Jones (Johnny Vohden), Linda Haynes (Linda Forchet), James Best (Texan), Luke Askew (Automatic Slim), Lawrason Driscoll (Cliff), Dabney Coleman (Maxwell)
Directed by John Flynn
"Where I was...we didn't get to see the American flag very often"
"I remember that song from when I was alive."
"Listen Cliff...I hope ya don't mind me sayin' this to ya...but I'd really appreciate it if you didn't call my kid a runt."
Once Charles Rane spends the first evening at home, his wife is noticeably nervous and shaken. Charles knows something has been going on in his absence and his wife openly admits to the affair. She even goes so far as to say that Cliff has asked her to marry him and her acceptance stemming from the belief that Charles was killed in action. The Major seems just as cold and detached here as he does throughout the remainder of the film. There's quite a lot of tension involved in these scenes and this tension reaches its apex once Cliff confronts Charles in his shed.
"You wanna know what they did? Sure you do."
It is here that the two share a drink and Charles reveals some of what he went through in the Hanoi hellhole which makes Cliff even more uncomfortable. The notion that Charles is slightly unhinged from his ordeal rears its head when he asks Cliff to assist in a recreation of a twice daily torture session.
"These are mean 'ol boys. They can make ya tell us where the money is."
This sequence is one of the most violent in the whole movie and it escalates once Rane's wife and son return home. Not wishing to see these intruders torture his father any longer, the little boy shows the men where the coins are. Once they have what they want, the leader shoots the wife and small boy and Slim fires twice into Major Rane leaving him for dead. Managing to survive, Charles seems unmoved towards everything that has transpired even claiming to not remember anything of that fateful day.
"It's like my eyes are open and I'm lookin' at ya, but I'm dead. They pulled out whatever it was inside of me."
"They're in a whorehouse over in Juarez right now. There's the four that came into my home...and there's eight or ten others."
Leaving Linda asleep inside a motel, Charles soon discovers where the whole mad group of killers are holed up. He gets his friend, Johnny and both pack up their weapons and gleefully head out for a wild night of serious bloodshed in a Mexican whorehouse which hosts the location for one of the bloodiest and brutal shootouts you'll ever see.
Devane was a wonderful actor who appeared in numerous television programs and an occasional movie such as the science fiction horror feature, THE DARK (1979) and the failed big budget comedy, HONKEY TONK FREEWAY (1981). While shooting ROLLING THUNDER, Devane frequently butted heads with John Flynn over certain aspects of the production.
Tommy Lee Jones is the most successful alum from ROLLING THUNDER (1977). He of course went on to a prosperous career in Hollywood appearing in movies like BLACK MOON RISING (1986), THE FUGITIVE (1993) and MEN IN BLACK (1997). Jones is likewise unsettling in his role as Johnny Vohden. Both he and Devane's character have a somewhat bizarre, yet kindred relationship in that they've both experienced the same horrors of war and both feel they no longer fit in with modern society.
Linda Haynes was a seductively playful and appealing actress who featured in a handful of genre movies such as the US-Japan co-production, LATITUDE ZERO (1969) and the blaxploitation classic, COFFY (1973). Her last acting role was in GUYANA TRAGEDY: THE STORY OF JIM JONES (1980). Having had enough of Hollywood, she left her acting career behind her and settled down to start a family.
James Best plays the evil leader of the thugs that further ruins the life of Major Rane. Best is probably 'best' remembered for his role as the buffoonish sheriff Roscoe P. Coltrane on the long running tv series, THE DUKES OF HAZZARD. Best also featured in a number of television appearances such as a recurring role on THE ANDY GRIFFITH SHOW and also the original TWILIGHT ZONE. Here, he's incredibly sinister. He's only in a couple of scenes, but he makes the one inside of Rane's house one of the most memorable of the film.
Of interest to fans of THE TEXAS CHAINSAW MASSACRE (1974), Paul A. Partain, who played the wheelchair bound Franklin, has a small role here as the brother-in-law in the Vohden household.
Like most 70's movies, the picture is deliberately paced with many scenes building the suspense before an explosion of violence. Action movies of today seldom let things build instead relying on quick cuts and fast editing to shave away any tension those scenes may have possessed. There's also a strong element of character development in ROLLING THUNDER that's often missing from many modern action films.