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Billy Jack

  • 1971
  • GP
  • 1h 54m
IMDb RATING
6.2/10
6.9K
YOUR RATING
Billy Jack (1971)
Watch Official Trailer
Play trailer3:08
1 Video
37 Photos
Martial ArtsPolitical DramaActionDrama

Ex-Green Beret hapkido expert saves wild horses from being slaughtered for dog food and helps protect a desert "freedom school" for runaways.Ex-Green Beret hapkido expert saves wild horses from being slaughtered for dog food and helps protect a desert "freedom school" for runaways.Ex-Green Beret hapkido expert saves wild horses from being slaughtered for dog food and helps protect a desert "freedom school" for runaways.

  • Director
    • Tom Laughlin
  • Writers
    • Tom Laughlin
    • Delores Taylor
  • Stars
    • Tom Laughlin
    • Delores Taylor
    • Clark Howat
  • See production info at IMDbPro
  • IMDb RATING
    6.2/10
    6.9K
    YOUR RATING
    • Director
      • Tom Laughlin
    • Writers
      • Tom Laughlin
      • Delores Taylor
    • Stars
      • Tom Laughlin
      • Delores Taylor
      • Clark Howat
    • 142User reviews
    • 49Critic reviews
    • 50Metascore
  • See production info at IMDbPro
    • Awards
      • 1 win & 2 nominations total

    Videos1

    Official Trailer
    Trailer 3:08
    Official Trailer

    Photos37

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    Top cast43

    Edit
    Tom Laughlin
    Tom Laughlin
    • Billy Jack
    Delores Taylor
    Delores Taylor
    • Jean Roberts
    Clark Howat
    Clark Howat
    • Sheriff Cole
    Victor Izay
    Victor Izay
    • Doctor
    Julie Webb
    • Barbara
    Debbie Schock
    • Kit
    Teresa Kelly
    • Carol
    Lynn Baker
    • Sarah
    Stan Rice
    Stan Rice
    • Martin
    David Roya
    • Bernard
    John McClure
    • Dinosaur
    Susan Foster
    • Cindy
    Susan Sosa
    • Sunshine
    Katy Moffatt
    • Maria
    Gwen Smith
    • Angela
    Richard Stahl
    Richard Stahl
    • Council Chairman
    Alan Myerson
    • O.K. Corrales
    • (as Allan Meyerson)
    Ed Greenberg
    • Drama Teacher
    • Director
      • Tom Laughlin
    • Writers
      • Tom Laughlin
      • Delores Taylor
    • All cast & crew
    • Production, box office & more at IMDbPro

    User reviews142

    6.26.9K
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    Featured reviews

    8drguitar20783

    late 60s fun and social consciousness

    This movie takes me back to 1969 (when it was first started) Also: note the high school football schedule for 1969 on the ice cream shop door with the school name marked out to preserve its anonymity). You really had to live through these days to appreciate the fact that some people really did think and act like the actors in this film.While all hippies were certainly NOT non-violent, this film earnestly tries to present an enlightened message to an adult audience that at that time was not the most socially aware in the world. =)And yes, people really did say things like: "Damn hippies! They oughtta get their hair cut! they're ruining the country!!"

    The New Left movement which really became influential around 1972 and years following was the hippie fringe in 69.

    This movie is simply a lot of fun. To insist it be more than that is unrealistic. It was independently produced by a guy (Laughlin) who believed in his message, wrote it and called all the shots himself. Its really not bad taken in that context. The little blonde girl singing the anti-war song is Tom and Delores' real life daughter Theresa. The comedy troupes used to appear on shows like the Smothers Brothers and were considered "way out". =) (amazing how cynical we've become isn't it??) While most of America in those days was more like the townspeople than the school people, it is still very very entertaining to see those days played out again.
    7AlsExGal

    A moment and an attitude captured in time...

    ... and you have to love the anti-violence screeds followed by onscreen massacres.

    The start of the film really has nothing to do with Billy Jack. It is a deputy in the town having his runaway teen daughter returned to him. She tells him she is pregnant and she has been with so many guys she doesn't even know the father's race. Dad explodes in anger and beats her. The deputy panics and dumps what may be her "body" for all he knows out in the wild. Billy Jack finds the girl and hides her at The Freedom School - a counterculture alternative school with mainly native students, but the school is open to any kid with problems.

    So the rest of the movie is based on the deputy's lie that his daughter ran away again, that she is pregnant, and that a boy at the Freedom School is the father. And weirdly enough, deputy dad never recants this story, and seems to come to believe it himself.

    Now things were never great between the counterculture pacifist school and the traditional townspeople, but the story of the deputy's daughter brings things to a boil.

    And in the middle of all of this is Billy Jack, a half native American ex special forces vet who protects the school - as best as one guy can - with physical force when he has to, and plus he really seems to enjoy it too. And the film gives you two hissable villains, town political boss Posner and his bullying cowardly son Bernard, always retreating to the safety of dad's shadow when his misdeeds get him in bad with Billy Jack.

    This film only cost 800K to make yet raked in 33 million with largely wooden acting, a script that meanders and often contradicts itself, and lots of on location shooting so that expensive sets were not needed. So why did people flock to this little indie in droves? Because if you want to understand the Vietnam era and counterculture movement of the late 60s/early 70s I would say watch this film rather than the more famous and acclaimed "All In the Family". The hypocritical and racist townsfolk - often to the point of being cartoonish - actually symbolize how the oldest crop of the boomers saw the establishment. Billy Jack really did symbolize a hero as he had to be, where Jean was a hero/heroine the way people would have liked to be. And it had much to say about the ugliness of racism practiced by everyday people.

    For film history buffs, I would say this film is worthwhile. It also has many quotable quotes, and if you look carefully you'll see Howard Hesseman (Doctor Johnny Fever of WKRP in Cincinnati) in a very small and early role as a drama teacher at the school who shows up at a hearing about closing the school and recites a speech that he at first claims is by George Washington, and then reveals it was written by Adolph himself. Not that this speech had anything to do with what the hearing was about, and such is the disorganized symbol of an era that this film became.
    6carlsez_1

    A cult film with attitude

    Before the smug heroics of Steven Segal's characters there was Billy Jack, the original self proclaimed savior with an attitude. If you like to see self-righteous jerks stylishly beating up even bigger jerks then this is your movie. Each fight scene is setup explicitly for Jack to do an affected restraint merely as a taunt before dispensing his own brand of justice. The spoiled, morally depraved Bernard seems to exist only for the purpose of angering the audience and thus justifying his punishments at the hands and feet of Jack.

    Ostensibly about taking a stand against a corrupt authority and abusive bigots 'Billy Jack' is mostly a guilty pleasure for pacifists who feel they've been pushed around long enough. Jack's own claims of trying to be less violent seem hollow as he relishes every punishment he dishes out. He functions as the darker id or alter ego of the peace-love generation.

    If not taken nearly as seriously as it wants to be 'Billy Jack' can be enjoyed for it's low budget earnestness, in spite of its somewhat conflicted messages.
    Nat-21

    Time has not been kind to this movie.

    I recall seeing this movie at the theater. At the time I was a teenager ripe for the anti-establishment theme (and thrilled with the "cool " violence in the movie). I thought it was the greatest movie ever made. On re-viewing it recently, I couldn't believe how stupid I was. This movie is so bad it is laughable. You can almost feel the characters straining to get their point across. The plot is simplistic and the acting is. Of course, things have changed in nearly 30 years. My taste in movies is one of them.
    gozor

    Good movie with strong messages for its time.

    Generation Xters will not have a chance at understanding this to the magnitude planned. Keeping things in proper perspective requires consideration of the time frame of this movie. In the real world we were still "in country"/Nam and getting very fed up with the associated atrocities both there and here. The differences between liberals and conservatives were at an all-time-high. This movie definitely leans to the left on many issues but only really to point out how important it is to not lose our humanity. It was really about a man who, disillusioned by what he saw his own country do overseas, came home to find the same thing. The fighting scenes were excellent for their time. The use of a hard style of martial arts was different and very impressive. Tom's execution of moves were both well done and in most cases reasonably realistic (maybe a few too many karate chops). The acting was anywhere between good to just adequate,,, which in some cases gave it a more realistic feel (less hollywoodlike).

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    Related interests

    Bruce Lee in Enter the Dragon (1973)
    Martial Arts
    Martin Sheen in The West Wing (1999)
    Political Drama
    Bruce Willis in Die Hard (1988)
    Action
    Mahershala Ali and Alex R. Hibbert in Moonlight (2016)
    Drama

    Storyline

    Edit

    Did you know

    Edit
    • Trivia
      Tom Laughlin had no martial arts training before he started training for the movie. He studied under a master teacher for six months before filming started.
    • Goofs
      Martin credits the Serenity Prayer to St. Francis of Assisi. It was actually written by American theologian Reinhold Niebuhr, and first published in the 1930s.
    • Quotes

      [Billy Jack is surrounded by Posner's thugs]

      Mr. Posner: You really think those Green Beret Karate tricks are gonna help you against all these boys?

      Billy Jack: Well, it doesn't look to me like I really have any choice now, does it?

      Mr. Posner: [laughing] That's right, you don't.

      Billy Jack: You know what I think I'm gonna do then? Just for the hell of it?

      Mr. Posner: Tell me.

      Billy Jack: I'm gonna take this right foot, and I'm gonna whop you on that side of your face...

      [points to Posner's right cheek]

      Billy Jack: ...and you wanna know something? There's not a damn thing you're gonna be able to do about it.

      Mr. Posner: Really?

      Billy Jack: Really.

      [kicks Posner's right cheek, sending him to the ground]

    • Crazy credits
      "Directed by T.C. Frank" Tom Laughlin's pseudonym in honor of his children Teresa, Christina and Frank.
    • Connections
      Featured in Precious Images (1986)
    • Soundtracks
      One Tin Soldier
      Performed by Coven

      Sung by Jinx Dawson of Coven

      Written by Dennis Lambert and Brian Potter

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    FAQ23

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    • How could Billy be bitten six times by a rattlesnake and live?

    Details

    Edit
    • Release date
      • August 2, 1971 (Sweden)
    • Country of origin
      • United States
    • Language
      • English
    • Also known as
      • Billy, el defensor
    • Filming locations
      • Prescott, Arizona, USA
    • Production companies
      • Eaves Movie Ranch
      • National Student Film Corporation
      • Warner Bros.
    • See more company credits at IMDbPro

    Box office

    Edit
    • Budget
      • $800,000 (estimated)
    See detailed box office info on IMDbPro

    Tech specs

    Edit
    • Runtime
      • 1h 54m(114 min)
    • Sound mix
      • Mono

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