The voiceover hype in the
trailer says it all: “Burt Reynolds is Gator McCluskey—he’s a booze-runnin’,
motor-gunnin’, law-breakin’, love-makin’ rebel. He hits the screen like a bolt
of white lightning!” Indeed he does in White
Lightning, arguably the best of Reynolds’ myriad ’70s flicks about working-class
good ol’ boys mixin’ it up with John Q. Law. Whereas too many of the star’s
Southern-fried action pictures devolve into silly comedy—including, to some
degree, White Lightning’s sequel, Gator—the first screen appearance of
Gator McCluskey is a sweaty, tough thriller pitting a formidable hero against
an even more formidable villain. If you’ve got a hankering for swampy pulp, White Lightning is the gen-yoo-wine
article.
When the picture begins, Bobby “Gator” McCluskey (Reynolds) is
incarcerated for running moonshine. Meanwhile, back home in the boonies,
corrupt Sheriff J.C. Conners (Ned Beatty) causes the death of Gator’s little brother. Once Gator hears
the news, he swears revenge and joins an FBI sting operation targeting Conners’
crew. Using a staged jailbreak for cover, Gator hooks up with a moonshiner
named Roy Boone (Bo Hopkins) and penetrates Conners’ operation in order to
dredge up incriminating facts. However, it’s not long before the no-good
sheriff smells a rat, setting the stage for a showdown. Written by William W. Norton and directed by the versatile
Joseph Sargent, White Lightning is a
no-nonsense thrill ride. Even though the filmmakers cram all the requisite
elements into the picture’s lean 101 minutes—including a love story between
Gator and Roy’s girl, Lou (Jennifer Billingsley)—the focus remains squarely on
Gator’s hunger for vengeance, which manifests in bar brawls, car chases,
shootouts, and various other forms of 100-proof conflict.
Working in the fierce
mode of his performance in Deliverance
(1972), Reynolds is a he-man force of nature, whether he’s punching his way
through hand-to-hand combat or, in his own inimitable fashion, clutching a
steering wheel and gritting his teeth while his character guides cars through
amazing jumps. Reynolds’ fellow Deliverance
veteran, Ned Beatty, makes a fine foil, especially because Beatty defies
expectations by underplaying his role—hidden behind thick glasses, with his
portly frame bursting out of tight short-sleeve shirts, he’s a picture of
heartless greed. The gut-punch score by Charles Bernstain jacks things up, as
well, so White Lightning lives up to
its name—it goes down smooth, then burns when it hits your system.
Reynolds let
a few years lapse before returning to the character with Gator, which also represented the actor’s directorial debut.
Essentially rehashing the narrative of the fist picture, but without the
emotional pull of a murdered-relative angle, Gator finds our hero released from prison, again, to take down
another corrupt lawman. What Gator
lacks in originality, however, it makes up for in casting and production
values. Country singer-turned-actor Jerry Reed gives great villain as
smooth-talking redneck crook Bama McCall, chubby funnyman Jack Weston generates
laughs as a sidekick prone to physical injury, and gap-toothed
model-turned-actress Lauren Hutton lends glamour as Gator’s new love interest.
(TV host and occasional actor Mike Douglas shows up in a minor role, too.) The
sheer amount of property destruction in Gator
is impressive, though the movie relies too heavily on spectacle since it can’t
match the tension of its predecessor.
Oddly, the weakest link in Gator is Reynolds’ performance, because
the actor veers too far into comedy. By this point sporting his signature
moustache and demonstrating his gift for pratfalls and other slapstick
silliness, Reynolds seems to occasionally forget he’s making a thriller. Sure,
some viewers might find this take on Gator McCluskey more fun to watch than the
grim characterization in White Lightning,
but it’s worth nothing that Gator
helped start Reynolds down the slippery slope into his goofy Smokey and the Bandit and Cannonball Run movies. Gator’s worth a gander, since it’s hard
to complain about a movie being too enjoyable, but it’s not as satisfying as
the title character’s debut.
White Lightning: GROOVY
Gator:
GROOVY
Wow, Peter, knowing the tough critic that you usually are I am in a genuine state of shock that you liked 'White Lightning'. Outside of the on-location shooting done in the Diamond State I found it to be lame in just about all areas and I'm a big Burt Reynolds fan too. I met him in person in 1994 and shook his hand and got his autograph. If you or anyone else is interested here is the link to my take on this film:
ReplyDeletehttp://scopophiliamovieblog.com/2012/04/27/white-lightning-1973/
Thanks for sharing your review -- always good to get a dialogue going. And, yes, it might seem peculiar that I dug this one, but for me, the Gator movies capture what made Reynolds popular enough to cash in with subsequent (and lesser) franchises. Glad you had a fun in-person experience, too. I've never had the pleasure.
ReplyDeleteI first saw Gator at age 11,and I have loved it ever since. Yes it turns very dark in the second hour,but that is part of its charm.Bama McCall was one nasty guy! I know that I'm in the minority,but I never cared for White Lightning much. But it definitely has it's fans.
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