Thanks to credible
characterizations and solid acting, Jackson
County Jail is a cut above the usual drive-in sludge from the Roger Corman
assembly line. Whereas myriad similar films from Corman’s ’70s companies use
the women-in-prison angle as an excuse for cartoonish titillation, Jackson County Jail is played totally
straight, emphasizing the horror of abuse and the tragedy of lives squandered
on criminality. Calling Jackson County
Jail a real movie might be stretching things, since the picture is a
sensationalistic compendium of violent vignettes, but it’s a drive-in flick
that a thinking viewer can watch without feeling totally ashamed afterward.
Among other things, the movie features Tommy Lee Jones in one of his first big
roles, and he elevates every scene in which he appears.
Continuing his practice
of providing juicy starring roles to onetime leading ladies whose careers had
lost momentum, Corman cast delicate beauty Yvette Mimieux to strong effect in Jackson County Jail. Playing a confident
professional woman whose sheltered life experience mostly comprises time spent
in Los Angeles and New York, Mimieux seems appropriately out of place once her
character falls into a web of crooked redneck cops and noble hillbilly thieves.
Specifically, Dinah (Mimieux) leaves LA after discovering that her longtime
boyfriend is unfaithful. Somewhere in the boonies, Dinah foolishly picks up two
hitchhikers, who steal her car and possessions—including her ID—at
gunpoint. Next, a local sheriff (Severn Darden) places her in jail for vagrancy.
When the sheriff leaves the police station for the evening, night deputy Lyle
(William Molloy) rapes Dinah, but during the assault she shoves him against
cell bars, delivering a fatal head injury. Then Coley Blake (Jones), the career
criminal in the next cell, grabs the inert Lyle’s keys and leads Dinah in a
jailbreak. During the ensuing getaway and manhunt, Dinah becomes friends with
Coley, learning his cynical perspective on life.
Written by Donald Stewart, who
later worked on fine films including Missing
(1982) and the first three Jack Ryan adventures, Jackson County Jail is humane and intelligent, even if the story
occasionally lapses into trite car chases and gunfights. The movie also
benefits from stalwart turns by supporting players Robert Carradine, Howard
Hesseman, Nan Martin, Betty Thomas, and Mary Woronov. And on some level, the
horrors of this movie’s vivid rape scene provide balance for the innumerable
Corman productions in which sexual assault is irresponsibly presented as
erotica.
Jackson County Jail: FUNKY
An alternative version screened as a CBS 'Movie of the Week' retitled OUTSIDE CHANCE.
ReplyDeleteMimieux makes her way back to urban life after her ordeal to face justice supported by a sensitive concert pianist.
I'll stick with the drive-in version, but it would be interesting to compare the two.