Durante um exercício de rotina, uma equipe da Guarda Nacional é ameaçada por moradores locais furiosos e violentos.Durante um exercício de rotina, uma equipe da Guarda Nacional é ameaçada por moradores locais furiosos e violentos.Durante um exercício de rotina, uma equipe da Guarda Nacional é ameaçada por moradores locais furiosos e violentos.
- Bowden
- (as Carlos Brown)
- Cajun Dancer
- (as Jeanne Louise Bulliard)
- Direção
- Roteiristas
- Elenco e equipe completos
- Produção, bilheteria e muito mais no IMDbPro
Enredo
Você sabia?
- CuriosidadesWriter-director Walter Hill later said he was "always amazed" by the reception to the film: "The American reception was a real kind of nothing. But it was very nicely received around the world."
- Erros de gravaçãoThe M-60 machine gun and the M-16 rifles are repeatedly shown firing blanks on automatic and semi-automatic fire settings, respectively, but without the required blank adapters covering the muzzles. Blank adapters cause a back-up of gas pressure within the barrel, a function normally performed by fired bullets, which allows the weapons to cycle and reload automatically. Blank adapters are clearly visible attachments; without them, the weapons would have to be cycled (i.e. reloaded) manually after each individual blank is fired. These are obviously Hollywood weapons which have had their barrels partially plugged sufficiently to perform the function of blank adapters, while making them appear more like weapons that most viewers are familiar with.
- Citações
Cajun Trapper: I ain't gonna kill y'all if I don't got ta... you got a bayou over dere... take it... stay to the west side... you're gonna find a road about a mile up dere.
Hardin: Do you mind tellin' us what the Hell this is all about?
Cajun Trapper: It real simple... we live back in here... dis is our home, and nobody don't fuck with us.
Hardin: [pointing at Bowden, who is hanging dead from a tree] What about HIM?
Cajun Trapper: What about 'im?
Hardin: Did he do it to himself or did your friends help him out?
Cajun Trapper: [fires shot at Hardin's feet] Now, if I was you all, I'd quit askin' questions and haul ass... 'cause my buddies... dey not nice like me.
Hardin: Are we supposed to say thanks?
Cajun Trapper: You not supposed to say nuttin'... soldier.
Nine (not ten) Louisiana National Guardsmen enter the bayou, miles away from civilization, for a routine weekend warrior training exercise. Despite their training, they get lost in the swamps and borrow Cajun pirogue boats to make up for lost time. A practical joke by one of the dimmer weekend warriors backfires. The Cajuns are not pleased an retaliate with real ammo, which is no match for the blanks the Guardsmen brought with them.
One by one, the Guardsmen are picked off. They are unwanted soldiers in a strange, hostile land, that happens to exist within the borders of the United States. Each Guardsmen brings a distinct personality to the screen, all variations of male machismo: The cocky but ineffective second-in-charge Casper, who becomes the leader after the more serious Poole gets shot near the beginning of the film; the brute Reece, who as one character says "acts as if he's in a dime novel;" the aforementioned prankster Stuckey, "who can't even read a dime novel"; the likely unbalanced high school football coach Bowden; the wise-cracking Black Guardsman; and so on.
Keith Carradine's Spencer and Powers Boothe's Hardin are the only two grounded members of the team, besides Peter Coyote's Poole, who we really don't learn much about before his murder. Of course they turn out to be the sole survivors in the swamp. They initially believe all is well when they end up at a Cajun village, miles away from any non-Cajun town. Spencer believes "these are the good Cajuns." But the appearance of the hulking character actor Sonny Landham as a Cajun hunter suggests otherwise (the late Landham had a career of playing psycho villains, including his character in Hill's next film, 48 Hrs.)
Another character who appears several times to make things complicated for the Guardsmen is a trapper played by another late character actor best known for villain roles: Brion James.
The atmosphere depicted in the film is moody and dangerous. Ry Cooder's score is equally ominous. And although a few women appear near the end in the Cajun village, this is definitely a male-dominated action/thriller. The sequence at the Cajun village near the end is memorable and disturbing, as Hill intercuts the ritualistic slaying of a boar with the scenes pitting Spencer and Hardin against the hunters (the sequence also works as a tribute, or rip-off to more cynical viewers, to the climax of Apocalypse Now).
The actors are first-rate. Carradine is our sympathetic center of attention, and gets top billing. Boothe is also supposed to be a hero in the movie but his character seems "off" as well - he has a giant chip on his shoulder, and as a chemical engineer, feels "above" his fellow weekend warriors. Fred Ward is especially memorable as the bullying Reece, who does nothing to hide his animosity towards James' trapper character (the trapper may or may not have been involved with the killings of the men). Ward and James would reunite more civilly twelve years later in Robert Altman's The Player.
Hill's later films were an uneven bunch, ranging from a Sam Peckinpah-inspired western, to a "rock and roll fable," to a silly Richard Pryor/John Candy buddy comedy, to a strange road movie musical hybrid. Southern Comfort, and possibly The Long Riders, rank as the director's most artistically gratifying works.
- Katz5
- 5 de mar. de 2022
- Link permanente
Principais escolhas
Detalhes
- Data de lançamento
- País de origem
- Idiomas
- Também conhecido como
- Southern Comfort
- Locações de filme
- Empresas de produção
- Consulte mais créditos da empresa na IMDbPro
Bilheteria
- Faturamento bruto nos EUA e Canadá
- US$ 5.000.000
- Fim de semana de estreia nos EUA e Canadá
- US$ 116.943
- 27 de set. de 1981