Filmmaker Jonathan Demme
completed his productive tenure in Roger Corman’s B-movie operation with this
uneven but watchable action picture about a principled redneck standing up to
greedy developers. There’s nothing even slightly original about the plot, but
as writer and director, Demme fills the picture with just enough idiosyncratic
flourishes to keep things interesting during the beginning and middle of the
story. Then, during the climax, Demme unleashes an exciting nighttime showdown
replete with not only gunplay but also, for novelty’s sake, death by bow and
arrow. Peter Fonda (of course) stars as Tom Hunter, a young man who returns to
his family’s home in Arkansas only to discover that every private landowner in
the immediate vicinity is under pressure from operatives of real-estate mogul
Pierce Crabtree (Philip Carey). Crabtree wants to raze low-income homes to make
way for a shopping mall, and he won’t take no for an answer, so his goons use
lethal force to frighten citizens into selling. Among those who fall victim to
Crabtree’s thugs are Tom’s brother, Charlie (Scott Glenn), and his wife. This
pushes Tom into ass-kicking mode. Meanwhile, Tom manages his relationships with
his young son, Dylan (Gina Franco); his on-again/off-again girlfriend, Lorene
(Lynn Lowry); and his salt-of-the-earth father, Jeff (John Doucette), whose
property is in Crabtree’s crosshairs.
The best parts of Fighting Mad feature Tom sticking it to the man, because the
tension between Fonda’s laconic persona and his character’s righteous passion
is consistently interesting. The star is fun to watch whether he’s
commandeering a tractor, planting explosives at a Crabtree work site, or
shooting arrows into henchmen. Whenever the action hits a lull, however, so
does the movie. Demme’s storytelling is choppy—every time it seems Fighting Mad has kicked into gear,
Fonda’s character stops for a beer or a tumble with his girlfriend. Demme also
lingers on pointless bits like musical performances, continuing his
endearing/irritating career-long habit of losing the forest for the trees.
Production values in Fighting Mad are
fairly strong for a Corman production, since Demme focuses on real locations
with loads of texture, and the performances get the job done; Doucette and
Glenn in particular lend humanity to their small roles. However, the music
score, by folk musician and frequent Fonda collaborator Bruce Langhorne, is all
over the place—the old-timey bits with lots of banjo suit the milieu, while the
electronic suspense stings hit their target but seem pulled from another movie.
Fighting Mad: FUNKY
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