Borrowing elements from Billy Jack (1971) and Death Wish (1974), this Native
American-themed revenge flick is equal parts goofy and gory, but it’s also
undeniably entertaining, in a trashy sort of way.
The plot couldn’t be simpler.
When he was younger, Native American Johnny Firecloud (Victor Mohica) used to cavort
with a white woman, June (Christina Hart), whose father, Colby (Ralph Meeker),
holds all the power in the small Southwestern town where they live. Now that
he’s an angry adult who learned a few nasty tricks while serving in the military,
Johnny spends all his time getting into hassles with the local sheriff, Jesse
(David Canary), who does Colby’s bidding. But when Colby’s thugs accidentally
kill Johnny’s grandfather, tribal chief White Eagle (Frank DeKova), all of
Johnny’s rage explodes into a vigilante campaign. Johnny murders his victims in
colorful ways, invoking clichés familiar from previous Hollywood depictions of
Indians. He buries one fellow up to the neck in a desert and cuts off the
fellow’s eyelids so he’ll go blind while he cooks in the sun. He ties another
dude to a post and then ties a bag full of rattlesnakes around the dude’s head
and torso. Naturally, one of the victims gets scalped.
Johnny Firecloud is exactly the movie you’d expect, filled with
overheated performances, slow-burn action scenes, and thunderous music cues
underscoring money shots of carnage. There’s also a little sex thrown in for
good measure, including—as per the norm for ’70s revenge pictures—a brutal rape
scene. (Playing the rape victim is lovely Native American actress Sacheen
Littlefeather, best known as Marlon Brando’s controversial Oscar proxy.) Most
of the elements in Johnny Firecloud
are ordinary, but the sum effect is satisfying for fans of a certain type of
sleazy cinema. The widescreen images are filled with robust colors, the pacing
is strong, the storytelling is clear, and the violence is suitably excessive.
While
most of the acting is florid and/or robotic, with Hollywood veteran Meeker
delivering a particularly tepid performance as a bad guy who stops just short
of moustache-twirling, future soap-opera star Canary does respectable work in
the picture’s most nuanced role. Playing the sheriff who wrestles with his conscience
upon realizing the true scope of his employer’s evil, Canary registers a few
decent moments of manly angst. Providing a counterpoint is frequently
bare-chested leading man Mohica, who plays to the cheap seats whenever he gets
the opportunity. Johnny Firecloud also
features one of the oddest threats in ’70s cinema. At one point, a thug named
Ned (Richard Kennedy) barks the following remark to Johnny: “One of these days,
you and me are gonna tangle assholes!”
Johnny Firecloud: FUNKY
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