Review: Gator
State governor Mike Douglas gets New York
federal agent Jack Weston to find the title moonshiner (Burt Reynolds) out on
parole, and get him to track down and help bring down nasty Bama McCall (singer
Jerry Reed, doing fine Charles Napier-like work and even crooning the cool
title tune), Gator’s former buddy. Behemoth William Engesser and the
ever-smiling Burton Gilliam (surprisingly menacing) are McCall’s henchmen Bones
and Smiley.
One of Burt’s better (and more underrated)
films, this 1976 swamp actioner, a sequel to “White Lightening”, also marked his directorial debut. The action
is quite enjoyable, and hell even Burt lightens up for once (he’s not as
misogynistic and thuggish here as in other films like “The Longest Yard”), but it’s the supporting cast that sell this
one. Weston, Gilliam (one of his best-ever parts, you might remember him as one
of the Flying Elvis’ in “Honeymoon in
Vegas” or his side-splitting work as the Chain Gang boss in “Blazing Saddles”), Alice Ghostley, and
Reed constantly steal scenes from the two leads, especially from Lauren Hutton
who isn’t much of an actress either. It helps if you like TV’s “The Dukes of Hazzard”, which I most certainly
do. The screenplay is by William Norton (“Big
Bad Mama”, “The Scalphunters”).
Rating: B-
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