Smokey and the Bandit

Director: Hal Needham
Written by: James Lee Barrett, Charles Shyer, Alan Mandel
Cast: Burt Reynolds, Sally Field, Jerry Reed, Jackie Gleason

Year / Country: 1977, USA
Running Time: 96 mins.

Trucking comedy Smokey and the Bandit was originally conceived as a B-movie, but became more of a mainstream project when Burt Reynolds got involved. Upon release it was a huge box office hit (second highest grossing movie after Star Wars in 1977). Nowadays, the comedy elements are pretty much outdated, but for nostalgic reasons it can still be a guilty pleasure.

The movie’s director, Hal Needham, was a professional stuntman at that time and not a filmmaker. He came up with the story and showed a script draft to Reynolds, for whom he had been a stunt double on various movies such as The Longest Yard and Gator. Reynolds agreed to do it and thereby replaced Jerry Reed who had originally been cast as the Bandit. Reed was cast instead as Bandit’s friend Snowman and would later play Bandit in Smokey and the Bandit Part 3.

The plot of this movie is anorexic. Bandit is a cowboy truck driver who accepts the job to haul a truckload of Coors beer to a car race in Georgia. This was considered bootlegging at the time and pretty soon, the Bandit is pursued by Sheriff Buford T. Justice aka Smokey (Jackie Gleeson). He also picks up hitchhiker Carrie (Sally Field), a runaway bride from Smokey’s son Junior. A cross-country pursuit begins that doesn’t end until the credits roll.

As a racing film, it is a little disappointing. There are decent stunts surely, but from a professional like Needham I had expected more innovation. Oh well, this is mostly just a pleasant reminder of the good ol’ days. Though it’s unlikely to attract many viewers from a younger generation I would still recommend it to anyone who likes to go through a time machine. The humour of this film has long been reinvented but is still infectious enough to put a smile on one’s face. The cartoonish characters also add to the fun factor.

Rating:

Biography: Hal Needham (1931, Memphis, Tennessee) served in the Korean war before becoming a stuntman. His break came in 1957 with TV western Have Gun – Will Travel as a stunt double for Richard Boone. In the sixties he became a top stuntman working on western hit movies such as The Man Who Shot Liberty Valance, How the West Was Won and Donovan’s Reef. In his long career, Needham also worked on many TV-shows including Gunsmoke, Rawhide and Black Saddle. He was also stunt double for Clint Walker, Burt Reynolds and others. In the seventies he became stunt coordinator on several Burt Reynolds films including White Lightning, The Longest Yard and Gator. He made his debut as a director in 1977 with Smokey and the Bandit. It became a massive hit. Throughout the next two decades he made many follow-ups and similar films usually starring Reynolds. In the nineties, his work consisted mostly of TV projects including four Bandit TV films.

Filmography: Smokey and the Bandit (1977), Hooper (1978), The Villain (1979), Death Car on the Freeway (1979, TV), Stunts Unlimited (1980, TV), Smokey and the Bandit II (1980), The Cannonball Run (1981), The Stockers (1981, TV), The Stockers (1981, TV), Megaforce (1982), Stroker Ace (1983), Cannonball Run II (1984), Rad (1986), Body Slam (1986), B.L. Stryker (1990, TV episode), Bandit: Bandit Goes Country (1994, TV), Bandit: Bandit Bandit (1994, TV), Bandit: Beauty and the Bandit (1994, TV), Bandit: Bandit’s Silver Angel (1994, TV), Street Luge (1996), Hard Time: Hostage Hotel (1999, TV)

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