If you’ve ever felt something was missing from
your life because you’ve never seen a biker movie with religious themes, then J.C. is the answer to your prayers. That
is, if you’re willing to overlook the fact that beyond its periodic blending of
Christian imagery and rebel-cinema iconography, J.C. (sometimes known as The
Iron Horsmen) is an inept vanity piece by writer, producer, director, and
star William F. McGaha, whose obscurity is entirely deserved. McGaha’s only
qualifications for playing a hog-riding messiah appear to be a shaggy beard and
some with-it lingo, since he lacks charisma, formidable physicality, and
rhetorical style. One gets the sense that if he hadn’t put this picture
together, he’d be one of the interchangeable slobs in the background instead of
the main focus. Reflecting its auteur’s shortcomings, J.C. is derivative, jumbled, and sluggish. That said, the notion of
a savior on a Harley is so peculiar that it’s fascinating to watch J.C. partially to see if it fulfills the
promise of the premise, and partially to marvel at the myriad ways McGaha bungles
the storytelling. Plus, it’s not as if J.C.
totally lacks the pleasing tropes of the biker-movie genre, although these
tropes are delivered clumsily and in small doses.
The picture opens in a city,
where hirsute J.C. Masters (McGaha) gets into various hassles because of, you
know, society. For instance, he quits a job on a construction crew after the
supervisor has the temerity to critique J.C. for smoking dope at the job site
instead of working. Also tormenting J.C. are occasional visions of a “giant
winking eye” that he perceives as the voice of God. Eventually, J.C. announces
to the members of his gang that he’s had a holy vision and wants to spread
messages of peace and love. His people dig the idea and agree to accompany J.C.
on his journey. However, the journey somehow morphs into a casual trip to J.C.’s
hometown in backwoods Alabama, where J.C. reunites with his sister, Miriam
(Joanna Moore). The bikers hang out at Miriam’s farm for several days, but the
presence among their number of a black man irks the redneck locals. Enter
racist Sheriff Grady Caldwell (Slim Pickens) and his vicious deputy, Dan Martin
(Burr DeBenning), who vow to run the bikers out of town.
By now, of course, the
plot has devolved into nonsense, since it’s unclear why someone out to spread
peace would beeline to the most intolerant place he knows and deliberately
antagonize people who already hate him because of youthful transgressions.
What’s more, the bikers’ version of “spreading peace” involves trying to rape
Miriam, getting into fights with townies, and threatening to tear up the town
if the Man gives them any shit. Very late in the picture, McGaha provides a
threadbare explanation for the religious stuff, revealing that J.C.’s father
was an evangelist who trained his young son as an apprentice, thereby
making a mess of the boy’s mind. Or something along those lines.
J.C. is discombobulated right from
the beginning, and it’s also weirdly casual because McGaha’s performance is
easygoing to a fault. Still, there are minor compensatory values. In one scene,
J.C. introduces the folks on his crew, and their names include Beaver Bud,
Beverly Bellbottoms, Dick the Disciple, Happy Von Wheelie, Mr. Clean, and
Shirley the Saint. Later, J.C. opines to his sister about how silly it is for
adults to use made-up names, justifying the behavior under the general rubric
of being “free,” whatever that means. Your guess is as good as mine whether
McGaha meant to celebrate or satirize counterculture behavior, but the most
interesting moments in J.C. capture .
. . something.
J.C.:
FREAKY
3 comments:
Despite the sluggish pace, terrible acting and muddled storyline, I do dig this bizarre little flick.
It may be the disparate elements that are doing a lot of the heavy lifting here.
Can't roll a joint and doesn't know how to smoke one. You got to inhale dude. The only way to stomach this travesty would be stoned.
I saw the boom mic in two different scenes. The most egregious was in the unemployment office. I mean it's right there in plain sight moving back and forth to whomever was speaking. Didn't anyone notice this?
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