En Misisipi de la década de 1950, la adolescente Bobbie Lee Hartley navega por sus florecientes hormonas mientras es cortejada por Billy Joe McAllister, que se dirige a la tragedia.En Misisipi de la década de 1950, la adolescente Bobbie Lee Hartley navega por sus florecientes hormonas mientras es cortejada por Billy Joe McAllister, que se dirige a la tragedia.En Misisipi de la década de 1950, la adolescente Bobbie Lee Hartley navega por sus florecientes hormonas mientras es cortejada por Billy Joe McAllister, que se dirige a la tragedia.
- Dirección
- Guionistas
- Elenco
- Premios
- 1 nominación en total
Opiniones destacadas
The backstory on this 1976 film is interesting. 10 years earlier the country music singer Bobbie Gentry had written a song with the same title which tells of a young man committing suicide by jumping off the Tallahatchie Bridge. But Gentry's lyrics never reveal why the fictional Billy Joe killed himself and in interviews about the song she was very coy and unrevealing.
So, they made a movie about it. Robbie Benton, teen idol of the 70s, plays the title character although this movie is really about the young girl who loves hm: Bobby Joe Hartley, played by Glynnis O'Connor. I thought these two young actors were incredible in their roles and they held this otherwise flawed movie together. The subject matter can feel a little strange at times (there aren't many movies these days that delve into the sexual desires of a 15 year old girl) but if you can get past that, I think you'll enjoy this movie. It's not an all time great one but just for Benton and O'Connor's acting alone, it was worth watching.
If you read the lyrics to Bobbie Gentry's song, it seems pretty darn obvious that what the narrator and Billie Joe are throwing off the Tallahatchee Bridge is their out-of-wedlock baby.
Just Google search the lyrics, listen to the song, and see if that interpretation doesn't make much more sense than how the movie presents the story.
¿Sabías que…?
- TriviaThe release weekend for this movie coincided with the date from the first line of the song that inspired it: "It was the 3rd of June, another sleepy, dusty Delta day"
- ErroresAs Papa Hartley and the three boys are battling it out in their trucks on the bridge the camera moves from inside the Hartley truck looking out to outside looking in. As they do this you see from the inside that the windshield in front of the driver is badly cracked but as they move to the outside angle it is not cracked at all.
- Citas
Bobbie Lee Hartley: It's gonna be all right. We've just been waiting so long and trying so hard. Oh, it's all right Billy Joe.
Billy Joe McAllister: It ain't all right! I ain't all right!
[long pause as Billy Joe walks a few steps away from Bobbie Lee]
Billy Joe McAllister: Bobbie... I have been with a man! Did you hear me? Which is a sin against nature! A sin against God! I don't know how I could have done it, I swear! I don't know how I could be wanting you and do that.
Bobbie Lee Hartley: But you were drunk. Maybe you just imagined it.
Billy Joe McAllister: I didn't imagine nothing!
Bobbie Lee Hartley: But you were drunk. Everyone saw how drunk you were.
Billy Joe McAllister: I... I knew. I knew what was happening.
Bobbie Lee Hartley: Who was it?
Billy Joe McAllister: I ain't gonna say.
Bobbie Lee Hartley: Why? I wish I could understand.
Billy Joe McAllister: I wish I could.
- Versiones alternativasThe opening Saul Bass variant of the Warner Bros. Pictures logo is replaced by the 1990 variant in the VHS and 1992 variant in the WAC DVD.
- ConexionesReferenced in The Carol Burnett Show: Dinah Shore - Went with the Wind (1976)
- Bandas sonorasOde to Billie Joe
Written and Performed by Bobbie Gentry
Selecciones populares
- How long is Ode to Billy Joe?Con tecnología de Alexa
Detalles
- Tiempo de ejecución1 hora 46 minutos
- Mezcla de sonido
- Relación de aspecto
- 1.85 : 1