Based on a nonfiction
story by Tom Wolfe, which was in turn based on the career of real-life NASCAR
driver Junior Johnson, The Last American
Hero is a solid character piece elevated by the documentary-style realism
of its racing sequences and by uniformly good acting. The screenplay, by
William Roberts, is a bit on the thin side, relying on broad characterizations
and a hackneyed structure, but the aforementioned strengths help smooth over shortcomings in the writing.
Jeff Bridges stars as Junior Jackson, the
movie’s fictionalized version of Johnson. He’s a willful young man
living in the Deep South, working in the family business of running moonshine.
Junior’s skill behind the wheel comes in handy for evading cops, but
because local police know all about the Jackson’s operation, Junior’s father,
Elroy (Art Lund), is in and out of jail on a regular basis. When the legal bill
related to one of Elroy’s arrests exceeds what the family can afford, Junior
steps up deliveries but also joins demolition-derby races
organized by an unscrupulous promoter (Ned Beatty).
Soon, Junior graduates to
the big time of the NASCAR circuit, where he competes with a super-confident
champion (William Smith) and courts a racetrack groupie (Valerie Perrine). The
story gains dimension once Junior starts running with a big-city crowd, because
his aspirations to independence and integrity wither upon exposure to pressures
like the need for sponsorship. In particular, Junior gets into an ongoing
hassle with Burton Colt (Ed Lauter), a hard-driving entrepreneur who sets
usurious terms and expects humiliating deference. All of this interesting
material serves the concept encapsulated by the Jim Croce-sung theme song, “I
Got a Name,” because the thrust of the story is Junior’s search for identity.
Bridges is great, as always, winningly essaying Junior’s transition from
naïveté to worldliness, and the supporting actors fit their roles perfectly.
Lund and Geraldine Fitzgerald provide earthy gravitas as Junior’s parents,
while a young Gary Busey adds an impetuous counterpoint as Junior’s brother.
Perrine, all blowsy exuberance, captures the damaging caprice of a woman caught
in fame’s tail winds, and Smith is understated as a man who realizes
his moment in the spotlight is slipping away. Lauter rounds out the principal
cast with his petty villainy, providing a formidable obstacle for the hero to
overcome.
Much of the credit for this ensemble’s work must go to director
Lamont Johnson, whose handling of the movie’s visuals is as strong as his
guidance of the actors. Though usually an unassertive journeyman, Johnson
surpasses expectations by elevating Roberts’ humdrum script into something
memorably humane.
The Last American Hero: GROOVY
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