Telling the story of a
modern-day Seminole Indian youth torn between the limitations of life in his
impoverished village and the potential moral compromises of pursuing
opportunities in the outside world, Joe
Panther is clumsily effective. The story is eventful, the protagonist’s
journey is meaningful, and the themes of assimilation and identity create
believable points of conflict. Made with more sophistication, Joe Panther might have earned a place
among the best coming-of-age stories from the ’70s. Unfortunately, the film
falls short of contemporary standards for racial sensitivity thanks to any-minority-will-suffice
casting, and that’s but one of many flaws. Nonetheless, Joe Panther is commendable for a few
moments of genuine emotion as well as at least one scene of thrilling
action.
Living in a close-knit but financially troubled Seminole village near
Miami, fatherless Joe Panther (Ray Tracey) worries about how to provide for his
mother and his younger brother. Joe isn’t thrilled by his prospects in the
village, and it galls Joe to watch his best friend, Billy Tiger (A Martinez),
put on alligator-wrestling exhibitions for tourists. When Joe hears about a job
on a fishing boat owned by kindly Captain Harper (Brian Keith), Joe accepts a
wild challenge as a condition of employment—he must venture into the Everglades
and capture an 11-foot gator that Harper’s brother can use as a tourist
attraction at his resort. The mission becomes Joe’s trial by fire, especially
when his wise Uncle Turtle (Ricardo Montalban) offers ominous warnings about
the dangers of the Everglades.
Casting Latin actors in prominent Seminole roles
is distracting, and the thriller subplot that dominates the last third of the
movie is a bit much. Yet parts of Joe
Panther have real grit. The sequence of Joe trapping a giant alligator is
frightening, and the bond that Martinez and Tracey convey is persuasive. So
even if the movie often edges into drab formulas, as when both Keith and
Montalban give monologues about the meaning of life, the picture’s intentions
seem pure. Everything right and wrong about Joe Panther is epitomized by the gentle theme song, which is
performed by soft-rock hitmakers England Dan & John Ford Coley—the message
is there, but the choice of messengers is highly questionable.
Joe Panther: FUNKY
Montalban played another badly-wigged First Nations person in the Euro-western 'The Deserter'.
ReplyDeleteSomeone should re-release this and get some of that 'Black Panther' action.
I love these picks of yours lately. we're going way out past the outer limits ha. Thanks as always, for another one I never heard of and looks like worth taking a look at. On my way to hunt down the "panther."
ReplyDeleteFor some unimaginable reason, this was re-released in 1979 or 1980 with the most misleading ad campaign imaginable: it was re-titled "Joe Panther vs. the Swamp Monster"--or, to reflect the sizes of the type, "joe panther vs. THE SWAMP MONSTER"--and an illustration in a mock-Frazetta style depicted a mighty-muscled warrior against a sort of alligator man. You have to assume that the people drawn in by this were a tad disappointed by the actual film.
ReplyDeleteSome trivia for you: A "Joe Panther" newspaper comic strip, based on the same novel as the film, was pitched in the early '60s, but it failed to sell.