Agrega una trama en tu idiomaAn ex-convict stock-car driver turns to crime to fund his escape from local bigots in rural Georgia.An ex-convict stock-car driver turns to crime to fund his escape from local bigots in rural Georgia.An ex-convict stock-car driver turns to crime to fund his escape from local bigots in rural Georgia.
William F. Conrad
- Arlo Belk
- (as Ad Zimmerman)
- Dirección
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Opiniones destacadas
I was fairly surprised with this film. It's actually better than I expected it to be. It's a pretty good story - no not great - but decent. I liked it to a degree. It's not a film I would watch over and over but one that I might watch again sometime.
Stereo-typical redneck movie... not all Southerners are like some of the people in the film but some are. You can expect to see car chasing, bank robberies and love story in this movie. It's sorta a Bonnie and Clyde type of film.
This movie is OK if you like to watch B crime-dramas - you aren't missing anything if you pass this film up but if you do decide to watch it just know it's just an "ok" film but not all that bad either.
4/10
Stereo-typical redneck movie... not all Southerners are like some of the people in the film but some are. You can expect to see car chasing, bank robberies and love story in this movie. It's sorta a Bonnie and Clyde type of film.
This movie is OK if you like to watch B crime-dramas - you aren't missing anything if you pass this film up but if you do decide to watch it just know it's just an "ok" film but not all that bad either.
4/10
In the late 60's / early 70's a lot of films followed the template laid down by the landmark crime film Bonnie and Clyde (1967). There was a plethora of films about young couples getting involved in crime and then going on the run from the law. Country Blue is a pretty typical example of this. It's about a young guy just out of prison who starts an affair with his boss's daughter, before long they embark on a crime spree, robbing banks as a means of getting out of their dirt poor environment and starting a new life somewhere else.
Films set in the American South often focus on characters trying to get out of their environs. The rural South depicted in this film is shown warts and all. It's a place of poverty and hopelessness, full of run-down people. It's this very authentic location and feel that give it quite a bit of its interest. In this regard it reminded me a little of films such as Moonrunners (1975) and indicates that like that one Country Blue was a little ahead of the curve in terms of the soon-to-be- massively popular spate of films set in the Southern states – if you went to the cinema in the late 70's I daresay you'd be tripping over them, there were so many. Country Blue is a much lower budgeted affair than those though and it doesn't feature all that much good ol' boy humour. But its lower production values have, if anything, only accentuated the authenticity as the locations here are properly lived-in and battered.
For the most part it qualifies more as a crime-drama than anything else, with the action only really escalating in its final section, where we have bloody shoot-outs with the cops, a beating, an attempted rape and lots of car chases. It also has one of those organic sounding scores, compromising of country rock and pop songs which so many early 70's American movies have and which I am always a sucker for. All-in-all, Country Blue might be a little rough around the edges but it has an attitude and feel that I found very easy to get behind.
Films set in the American South often focus on characters trying to get out of their environs. The rural South depicted in this film is shown warts and all. It's a place of poverty and hopelessness, full of run-down people. It's this very authentic location and feel that give it quite a bit of its interest. In this regard it reminded me a little of films such as Moonrunners (1975) and indicates that like that one Country Blue was a little ahead of the curve in terms of the soon-to-be- massively popular spate of films set in the Southern states – if you went to the cinema in the late 70's I daresay you'd be tripping over them, there were so many. Country Blue is a much lower budgeted affair than those though and it doesn't feature all that much good ol' boy humour. But its lower production values have, if anything, only accentuated the authenticity as the locations here are properly lived-in and battered.
For the most part it qualifies more as a crime-drama than anything else, with the action only really escalating in its final section, where we have bloody shoot-outs with the cops, a beating, an attempted rape and lots of car chases. It also has one of those organic sounding scores, compromising of country rock and pop songs which so many early 70's American movies have and which I am always a sucker for. All-in-all, Country Blue might be a little rough around the edges but it has an attitude and feel that I found very easy to get behind.
Another one of the ol Mill creek 200 drive I cult cinema box set ya hear. Not a bad movie at all. Decently acted and shot. And the story was pretty good probably would watch this again. Even the music was pretty good.
A man on parole, in love with his bosses married daughter, robs a bank and then runs off to Mexico with the daughter in tow.
If you've ever wondered what Southern drive-in fare was like in the early 1970's, look no farther. This is the sort of low budget movie that played all along the South during the boom days of the drive-in movie theater. My guess this would have been the second or third feature of a multi feature program.
While this is not the best movie in the world (an understatement) it does have a certain nostalgic charm, at least for me. I like the fact that Dub Taylor, a character actor who's work goes all the way back to the Frank Capra movies of the 1930's is allowed to play something close to a lead. The movie itself is just okay, but its clearly a film that never could stand on its own except as a filler on a multi feature program.
Is it worth seeing? As a stand alone feature probably not, but if you're going to have a night of movies you might want to throw this one into the mix, especially if you're doing an evening of country themed drive-in movies.
If you've ever wondered what Southern drive-in fare was like in the early 1970's, look no farther. This is the sort of low budget movie that played all along the South during the boom days of the drive-in movie theater. My guess this would have been the second or third feature of a multi feature program.
While this is not the best movie in the world (an understatement) it does have a certain nostalgic charm, at least for me. I like the fact that Dub Taylor, a character actor who's work goes all the way back to the Frank Capra movies of the 1930's is allowed to play something close to a lead. The movie itself is just okay, but its clearly a film that never could stand on its own except as a filler on a multi feature program.
Is it worth seeing? As a stand alone feature probably not, but if you're going to have a night of movies you might want to throw this one into the mix, especially if you're doing an evening of country themed drive-in movies.
This is a Bonnie and Clyde-type film, though done in then-present-day 70's Deep South. It has a gritty feel, and one feels the angst of the stars, Bobby Lee (who just got out of the slammer on parole, having been inside for a year for an attempted grocery store robbery) and his girlfriend, Ruthie (married to another guy, but can't afford a divorce), trying to get their lives back on track in a dead-end hick-town he can't stand and is tired of just two days later. It's certainly watchable and is in no way as bad as reviews tend to give it. This is Jack Conrad's filmmaking debut, but it's not a monstrosity. After negotiations with Jeff Bridges and Robert Blake broke down for the main part of Bobby Lee, Conrad was forced to play the role himself, and he's no embarrassment. Though it tends to be ridden with cliché, and the main characters are extremely unintelligent in their bank-robbing and getaway approaches, it's still a fun ride and worth checking out if you have the opportunity.
¿Sabías que…?
- TriviaNegotiations with Jeff Bridges and Robert Blake to play the role of Bobby Lee broke down because of budget limitations, so Jack Conrad had the choice of canceling the shoot or playing the role himself.
- ErroresDuring a rape scene, a radio microphone is knocked off of the table. A couple of shots later, it is back on the table where it stays.
- Bandas sonorasCountry Blue
Written by Abby Marable & Kelly Gordon
featuring Mickey Raphael on harmonica
Sung by Abby Marable
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Detalles
Taquilla
- Presupuesto
- USD 180,000 (estimado)
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By what name was Country Blue (1973) officially released in Canada in English?
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