Drive-in pulp with a
smidgen of substance, this one combines all sorts of lurid elements—blue-collar
rebellion, high-octane chase scenes, deadly revenge, rednecks, shootouts,
smuggling, truckers, a Vietnam veteran, and, just to put the cherry atop the
whole tasty treat, a colorful cast including R.G. Armstrong, Kay Lenz, Slim
Pickens, Don Porter, and Jan-Michael Vincent. In other words, if White Line Fever doesn’t get your blood
pumping, then the repertoire at the grindhouse of your dreams is far different
than the one at mine. White Line Fever
has so many cool attributes that whether the movie’s actually “good” is quasi-irrelevant—therefore,
the fact that the picture is somewhat respectable as a piece of low-rent drama
becomes a bonus.
Vincent stars as Carrol Jo Hummer (seriously, that’s the
character’s name), a good ol’ boy who returns from Vietnam intent on driving an
independent big rig and living happily with his sexy young wife, Jerri (Lenz).
In order to get the cash to buy his truck, Carrol Jo borrows money from
disreputable types who expect Carrol Jo to pay off his debt by smuggling
illegal goods. Once Carrol Jo realizes what he’s gotten into, he uses the court
system, threats, and finally violence to declare his independence. That leads
to beatings, hassles, intimidation, and, eventually, deadly results for those
around Carrol Jo. The movie climaxes with Carrol Jo striking a highly symbolic
blow against his enemies, because Our Hero uses his souped-up truck, which
bears the name “Blue Mule,” as an instrument of working-man’s justice.
Co-writer/director Jonathan Kaplan, who spent the ’70s making well-crafted
exploitation films before venturing into topical studio pictures (notably
1989’s The Accused) and then a long
career in television that continues to this day, displays his signature touch
for stirring up juicy narrative conflict. Predictably, however, logic takes a
backseat to slam-bang spectacle. Like Kaplan’s enjoyable blaxploitation
pictures The Slams (1973) and Truck Turner (1974), White Line Fever feels like a hard-edged
comic book—when Vincent struts out of his hovel with a shotgun in his hand,
then hops into the cab of “Blue Mule” hell-bent for vengeance while pounding
music blasts on the soundtrack, the movie rises to a plane of intoxicating
macho silliness.
I freely admit to having an inexplicable affinity for
Vincent’s lackadaisical screen persona, so chances are I watch this particular
B-movie through forgiving eyes. I’m also sweet on Lenz, and I can watch
Armstrong and Pickens in nearly anything. So take this praise for White Line Fever with the appropriate
caveat: If you don’t groove to the idea of Jan-Michael Vincent playing an
avenging trucker, then there’s probably only so much White Line Fever is going to do for you. But if you’re intrigued,
strap in for a trashy good time.
White Line Fever: GROOVY
I'm glad to read that you are a fan of Slim Pickens a very engaging and distinctive character actor. He is also quite funny in the offbeat 70's gem 'Rancho Deluxe'. Believe it or not he worked as a rodeo clown before he got into acting.
ReplyDeleteI also think Vincent is a better actor then he is given credit and enjoy many of the 70's movies that he is in. It is unfortunate that his self-destructive ways got the better of him and ruined his career.
ReplyDeleteYeah, I thought Vincent was pretty good. Loved him in The Mechanic with Bronson. I'll have to check-out White Line Fever, sounds fun. Thanks, Peter.
ReplyDeleteTo paraphrase my opinion of America's song "Sister Golden Hair," "White Line Fever" may not be the best movie of the 70s, but it is the perfect movie of the 70s. ha ha, yeah, I said perfect. "A trashy good time" indeed.
ReplyDeleteYeah, this one is right up my alley: seen it as teen on TV, loved it, never forgot it and just re-watched it 3 decades later. Still a good one, charming actors, good story doesn't need much logic, enjoyed brisk 90 minutes. Drive-in as it shoulda be. No masterpiece, but good ol craftsmanship and a step over TRUCK TURNER (sorry).
ReplyDelete