Tennessee Sheriff Buford Pusser attempts to stop a moonshiner whose bad liquor has blinded several teens.Tennessee Sheriff Buford Pusser attempts to stop a moonshiner whose bad liquor has blinded several teens.Tennessee Sheriff Buford Pusser attempts to stop a moonshiner whose bad liquor has blinded several teens.
Ed Call
- Grady Coker
- (as Edward Call)
Maureen Shannon
- Amelia Biggins
- (as Maureen Burns)
- Director
- Writers
- All cast & crew
- Production, box office & more at IMDbPro
Featured reviews
This shoddy TV movie badly exploits the success of 'Walking Tall'. Trying to imitate the dramatic original with a badly written script, filled with shallow situations and bland rip-off characters. Brian Dennehy does a good job as Sheriff Bufford Pusser but the trite script lets him and his above average support cast down badly.
The Flashback DVD is taken from a VHS tape with soft focus and some tape drop-outs. One for the easily pleased or to be avoided.
The Flashback DVD is taken from a VHS tape with soft focus and some tape drop-outs. One for the easily pleased or to be avoided.
While I am only 34 i grew up on gorgeous guys like Dennehy. Watched Rambo before i was 10 and consider last of the finest to be one if the best movies ever made. My dad who i was very close with had this on VHS but as much as he liked Dennehy and the walking talls i never remember him watching this. I like the one Baker did and the Svenson ones too. The new ones were trash. It started out really good this movie. I thought Dennehy did a good job. Some kids get poisoned by bad booze and that sets Pusser off. Ken Howard showed up. Nice looking. I have yet to see his manhunter series anywhere. Generally the same storyline. Same baddies getting away with stuff and Pusser tries to set them right. Love it when he runs in the old broads for the bingo game but i did not care for his fake accent.
Having seen all the Walking Tall movies, thus made for TV version is undoubtedly the "tamer" of the lot. Not taking away from any of the cast members, I found them all somewhat lacklustered. The ommision of Buford's wife, Pauline Pusser, is in my opinion, extremely noticeable. This, again in my opinion, is a large deterent in this vehicle getting a higher rating.
Pauline Pusser's murder was a huge factor in the "incidents" that followed in Buford's remaining life.
The movie as a whole was entertaining in and of itself.
Pauline Pusser's murder was a huge factor in the "incidents" that followed in Buford's remaining life.
The movie as a whole was entertaining in and of itself.
10MEEdmo42
I have seen several versions of this sheriff and for me, Brian Dennehy is the one who seems most able to hold his own against the "bad guys". He portrays a man who loves his town and wants more than anything to rid the area of those who would destroy it.....including the children and teens. (Ken Howard did a great job with his part) I think it was excellent because I found it believable. The surrounding characters also lent great credibility, well done by all. I am a fan of Sheree North anyway, and find that in this movie she is as beautiful a lady as always. I really enjoyed how she was finally accepted by the better-than-thou church lady. If you have seen the other Buford Pusser movies and not this one, then you have missed a treat. Of all of Brian's movies, (I am a Jack Reed fan), this is one of his best of his earlier ones. I bought mine second hand online and was not disappointed.
"A Real American Hero" looks and feels like what it is: a late '70s telefilm. But it benefits from strong performances by Brian Dennehy as the legendary (or infamous?) Sheriff Buford Pusser, Forrest Tucker as Pusser's father, and Sheree North as an ex-prostitute trying to start over after serving a prison sentence for killing her pimp. Ken Howard is okay as Pusser's moonshining nemesis, but he lays on the phony Southern accent a bit thick. A film like "A Real American Hero" is best viewed on a warm summer night as you relax in your favorite chair, a can of beer in your hand. If you're from my generation (and particularly if you grew up in the Deep South), the car chases and punch-outs will bring back pleasant memories :)
Did you know
- TriviaEd Call who plays Grady Cole in A Real American Hero, plays Buford Pusser's high school friend in the original Walking Tall (1973).
- Quotes
[opening narration]
Buford Pusser: The wrong kind of people have had their say for too long and I want to remind them that somewhere in this world there is a little law and order left - to let them know in the only way their kind understands, that they can't bribe or threaten their way and they will damn well pay pay dearly for every crime they commit.
- ConnectionsFollowed by Walking Tall (1981)
Details
Contribute to this page
Suggest an edit or add missing content