A sad spectacle
representing the near-end of a once-glorious career, Convoy was not director Sam Peckinpah’s final film, but it might as
well have been. (He only made one more picture, the lifeless ’80s espionage
flick The Osterman Weekend.)
Virtually a lampoon of every theme and visual device Peckinpah used in his
previous films, Convoy is as vapid
as the director’s other pictures are meaningful, so watching the movie is
like seeing a faded singer struggle through greatest hits he can no longer
perform with the proper energy. Exacerbating its lack of artistic worth, Convoy was the production that finally
destroyed Peckinpah’s fragile reputation in Hollywood, since substance abuse
often left him so debilitated that his friend James Coburn had to step in and
direct several scenes. Even with the extra help, Convoy came in over-budget and over-schedule, guaranteeing no
reputable producer would hire Peckinpah for years.
Providing the final insult, Convoy became Peckinpah’s biggest
box-office success.
Yes, despite making provocative classics like The Wild Bunch (1969) and Bring Me the Head of Alfredo Garcia
(1974), Peckinpah wasn’t fully embraced by American moviegoers until he
helmed a trucker flick that was adapted from a novelty song. The song, of
course, was C.W. McCall’s “Convoy,” the 1975 hit in which McCall narrated the
tale of a rebel trucker’s adventure while cheesy music composed by future
Mannheim Steamroller leader Chip Davis grooved underneath. Screenwriter B.W.L.
Norton translated the song quite literally, presenting the idiotic story of
badass trucker Martin “Rubber Duck” Penwald (Kris Kristofferson) forming a
giant convoy of 18-wheelers to battle corrupt Sheriff “Dirty Lyle” Wallace (Ernest
Borgnine).
Yet Norton should probably be held blameless for the incoherent
weirdness of the final film, since Peckinpah rewrote the script before and
during production, even taking the extreme of letting his cast contribute
material whether or not the material actually fit the overall storyline. Worse,
Peckinpah dug into the tropes of his earlier movies, layering in endless scenes
of property destruction, slow-motion violence, and sweaty men stirring up
trouble. Whenever Convoy enters a
sloppy montage of barroom brawling or cars crashing through buildings, the
movie becomes a parody of Peckinpah’s wild-man style.
Had the
filmmaker demonstrated any discipline or restraint, Convoy could easily have become a fun B-movie about outlaws
fighting the man. Certainly, the casting of the lead roles pointed the way toward
something unpretentiously enjoyable. Singer-turned-actor Kristofferson, at the
height of his beardy handsomeness, exudes rock-star cool, so he cuts a great
figure steering an 18-wheeler while wearing aviator shades and a wife-beater. Borgnine,
his gap-toothed swarthiness in full bloom, personifies redneck villainy. Yet
Peckinpah puts so much crap between these characters—driving montages,
explosions, pointless scenes featuring Kristofferson’s love interest, played by
Ali MacGraw with her usual ineptitude—that the basic story gets bludgeoned to
death. Convoy ends up feeling like a
fever dream instead of a narrative, so it’s fascinating for all the wrong reasons.
Convoy:
FREAKY
3 comments:
Is this the only movie based on a song? That's almost as ludicrous as "Pirates of the Caribbean" being based on a theme-park ride.
Just saw this last night. Loved the cast, fell asleep during the movie. Guess I'm not 15 anymore.
Shreveport, Ode To Billy Joe was released as a song in 1967 and as a movie in 1976.
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