A sign that something’s rotten in Thunder Country appears during the
opening credits. Mickey Rooney has top billing, even though his character only
appears onscreen for about 10 minutes. The picture’s second-billed star, former
Addams Family giant Ted Cassidy,
plays the villain, so he’s onscreen throughout the picture, but he often trades
screen time with a group of women. Because, as some of the film’s alternate titles
suggest, this is a women-in-prison picture—except when it’s not. Also known as Cell Block Girls, Convict Women, Swamp Fever,
and Women’s Prison Escape, this
rotten flick cuts back and fourth between a quartet of female inmates and the
exploits of a drug dealer, played by Cassidy. Threads converge after the women
escape and seek refuge in a shack owned by a sweaty redneck in a Florida swamp,
because the redneck has connections to the drug dealer’s operation. Eventually,
the drug dealer and the fugitive ladies battle while authorities search the
swamp, attempting to capture various crooks and escapees. As for Rooney, he
plays a grimy shopkeeper forced by the women to escort them to the
aforementioned swamp. Thunder Country
is pointless sludge, lacking even the courage of its sleazy convictions; since
the picture bears a PG rating, the lurid elements one normally expects from a
women-in-prison picture are absent. There’s some fun to be had in watching the
Artist Formerly Known as Lurch play a slick modern-day criminal, all stylish
shades and tailored suits, but that novelty wears off quickly. Even the kick of
watching gators prey upon people gets old. If anything about this movie sounds
appealing to you, seek similar pleasures elsewhere and you’ll be glad for the
decision.
Thunder
Country: LAME
I thought it said Jack Cassidy in the labels, at first...
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