I know every word to this album to this day. |
"Look at that excellent use of light and shadow"
"Gee, ya think?"
No, I spend most of my time banging on about movies that I love that I don't think are given the appreciation they deserve. AKA Big Fun Comedies. I can go on for an hour about why Animal House is a much better movie than people give it credit for being. Or why Dirty Rotten Scoundrels should have won a couple of oscars. These aren't overlooked or forgotten films, they're just not the sort of movies film bores spend their time dissecting because popular comedy is rarely given that treatment.
Anyway, I was watching Smokey and the Bandit for the umpteenth time the other day and I was struck by just how simple, funny and goddamn FUN the movie is. So I figured what the heck. Why not write a blog about it. People blog about considerably less consequential things on the daily.
So here goes!
So this movie came out in 1977 when I was 8. For reasons I can't possibly explain, America was obsessed with long haul truckers in the mid to late 70's. I'm sure it had something to do with the song CONVOY and the rise in popularity of CB radios but whatever the reason, truckers were - for a brief shining moment - cool. We all wanted to drive big rigs and say breaker one nine and have cool handles like Rubber Duck or Pigpen and call cops Smokey and take 10-100's instead of pees.
According to the internet S&tB was released two days after Star Wars and ended up making a pretty unbelievable $126 million. I probably saw both in the theater an equal number of times. Burt Reynolds was pretty much my movie hero back then. I went to see everything he was in, whether it was The End or Starting Over. Burt was The Man.
And he was never more The Man than in Smokey and the Bandit.
Let me begin by putting on my screenwriter hat and observing that the film is deeply flawed structurally. There is no third act. In fact in the place where the third act should take place, Bandit is chased by a bunch of anonymous cops and Justice is inexplicably sidelined until the final scene. Why would a movie take the antagonist out of the picture as it's reaching it's peak? Well it's safe to assume that Burt, Hal and Jerry were more concerned with having a good time than worrying about egghead stuff like act breaks and escalating tension.
Also the film has no real stakes. Sure, if the Bandit is caught he'll go to jail for a while and Snowman will lose his license, but those are self-imposed consequences brought on by what could be construed as a very bad decision. If you take a step back and think about it, Cletus is a blue collar father of six and is risking his livelihood for this run just to make some quick cash. Is that a Bad Dad move?
So there's no real reason for the boys to make the run other than "they say it can't be done." Now that's a good enough reason to do something and perhaps it speaks to the characters more than some artificial external "need" ("we have to make this run to pay for that operation/tax lien/orphanage") but I can't help but think that in the process of modern development someone would insist that there be a very specific reason why this run has to happen and why it can't fail.
The movie starts with an information dump. Over the opening credits Jerry Reed sings about the Legend of the Bandit - a trucker who's outsized feats of driving expertise and general derring do have made him a sort of gearhead folk hero. It helps because we never actually SEE Bandit drive a semi. Right off the bat we see a random trucker being arrested for bootlegging Coors beer over state lines. This is the horrible fate that awaits anyone who runs afoul of interstate commerce laws!
I plan to make this a Halloween costume for my son and I. |
That is what we call a stroke of sheer genius.
They find Bo "Bandit" Darville (He introduces himself to Sally Field as "Bo" and refers to himself as "Bandit Darville" to Justice in case you're wondering if and when his name is said in the flick). The first sound out of Burt's mouth is that laugh. Another stroke of sheer genius. There may be an entire generation of young people who are unfamiliar with Burt Reynolds' laugh and that is a goddam travesty. The Burdettes lay out the challenge - bring 400 cases of Coors beer to Georgia from Texarcana in 28 hours. If he can make it they'll give him $80,000. If not well.... they never really say. We know he'll get arrested if he gets caught, but if he runs out of time without getting caught I guess he gets to keep the beer? It doesn't matter but it's something I noticed.
(Also I shall refrain from making comments about their beer of choice but suffice it to say I could write an equally long and opinionated blog on that subject as well.)
This is one of the greatest guitar players that ever lived. BTW. |
Would you buy a used car from this man? |
They pick up the beer without event and head back. Looks like this is gonna be the easiest $80 grand they ever made! Not so fast, on the run back Bandit picks up a runaway bride played by Sally Field. This is Carrie, a high strung motormouth with Broadway aspirations who was adorkable decades before we knew that was a thing. Bandit and she are mismatched opposites but their chemistry is - as they say - undeniable. He calls her Frog and that's easier to type than Carrie so I shall as well.
And then we meet Justice.
Sheriff Buford T. Justice. Jackie Gleason in a hall of fame performance from start to finish. I believe that the unexpected mega-success of this film is largely because of Gleason's tour-de-force performance. You make this exact same film but replace Gleason with one of Burt's equally qualified buddies like Ned Beatty or Brian Keith (both fine actors) and the movie is still good but probably not a mega hit that bloggers spend their precious time on this Earth writing long posts about.
I'm a 300 lb alcoholic who chain smokes and I'm gonna live to 71. Take that, fuckers. |
Justice's son has been left at the altar by Carrie and the sheriff intends to run roughshod over the sombitch who is helping her get away. Justice is aided by some dudes scavenging Carrie's car who helpfully saw and memorized the Bandit's personalized license plate, state and everything. Good eye, dudes! Also good work getting a personalized plate on such short notice, Bandit. Although is a personalized plate a good idea when you're trying to avoid capture? Who cares.
Along for the ride with Justice is his son Junior and this is the one casting flaw of the film. Junior is played by a fellow named Mike Henry who was a former football player and while it would be gilding the lilly to stick Gleason in a car with a fellow comedic genius, Henry isn't even a particularly good straight man. Yeah, I get it, we have to understand why Frog left him and he exists as basically an object for Gleason to be enraged by but in a film full of perfect performances he still seems wooden and out of place.
As you know most of the movie is a series of long and well choreographed car chases with some super practical stunts. Justice is on his ass and closing in and Bandit is always one step ahead. Frog and Bandit are total opposites but they begin to fall for each other. Jerry Reed has his basset hound with him. For most of the film Bandit and Justice only speak over CB radio.
That is until 37 minutes in when the Bandit and Justice wind up at the same lunch counter in a greasy spoon diner. This scene is - as the kids say - epic. Bandit knows who he is but Justice has no idea he's sitting next to his nemesis. Bandit playfully winds Justice up to the point where he looks like he's going to have a heart attack in real life while trying to choke down his Diablo sandwich. This is one of my favorite scenes in movies and kills me every time I watch it.
Click here to see the scene (TRT 2:00)
The rest of the movie is more of the same - cars crash into cars and buildings and trucks. Cops are made to look like fools, many "beaver" jokes are made and as Bandit's fame spreads via CB radio other truckers and CB enthusiasts come to his aid to elude the Smokeys. It's anti-authority at its finest.
Toward the end of what should be the second act, two things happen. Bandit and Frog hook up romantically and Cletus gets the shit beat out of him in a roadside diner when he takes on some punk-ass bikers who were harassing his dog. At first the scene is oddly out of place in the movie, it's a gin-u-wine beat down and Cletus takes the worst of it but he can still drive and they aren't that far off schedule so it doesn't affect the plot. It seems like this scene doesn't serve any real purpose but upon a moment's reflection it actually plays out like a verse from a classic outlaw country song and for that reason it's in fact perfect for the film.
Also Stroker Ace is a metaphor for the first Punic war. |
Sorry. I should have mentioned I had a few beers when I was watching it.
Anyway, as things wrap up Justice is incapacitated for reasons the movie isn't clear on and Cletus is pulled over by an anonymous cop. To get the cop off his ass Bandit pulls up and Frog gives the cop the finger and the chase is back on. More and more anonymous cars follow bandit and Snowman and a helicopter joins the chase and Justice is nowhere to be seen. Regardless of his inexplicable absence it looks like it's all over for our guys. They have a helicopter for the love of George Jones! But in that moment of hopelessness, the Snowman rallies the fuck up, puts the pedal to the medal and makes it across the finish line with mere minutes to spare. Yay! The rich rednecks get their shitty beer! (Sorry I said I wouldn't comment on that)
Contrary to popular belief, much like The Matrix there are NO sequels to this movie. Not even the second one which while funny isn't on the same plane of existence as this movie. |
So why do I love this damn film so much? Because it's pure, unadulterated anti-establishment fun. Justice is never portrayed as corrupt or evil, just hubristic and impotent. Bandit is a criminal but the laws he breaks don't hurt anyone. It's pretty much a Warner Brothers cartoon in live action form. Bugs vs. Yosemite Sam. Roadrunner V. Coyote. There's no message here, no lessons, no big picture. A bandit runs from justice. Simple as that. There's a real art to simplicity like that executed well.
These days car chase movies are deathly cool and complex. Yes, the Furious movies have a self-awareness and a sly wink behind the antics but they are also heavy on an "attitude" that I like but just isn't the same as the simple "fun for the sake of fun" of Smokey. Like the Marx Brothers outwitting those stuffy society types or Delta House tormenting Dean Wermer and Omega house, Bandit outruns justice and that's all that matters.
(Also I think we all agree that car stunts are much better with real cars crashing into each other instead of CG creations defying the laws of physics and logic. But that goes without saying.)
So that's it.
I like Smokey because it's fun and purely fun movies are few and far between anymore.
What a deep insight!
Thanks for reading (if you did) this was longer than I expected but it was fun to write!