White Line Fever
July. 16,1975 PGAn independent trucker with a pregnant wife fights cargo crooks and the big shot they work for.
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Too much of everything
Let's be realistic.
In truth, there is barely enough story here to make a film.
I cannot think of one single thing that I would change about this film. The acting is incomparable, the directing deft, and the writing poignantly brilliant.
"White Line Fever" was a big hit on the drive-in circuit when it was released. Seeing it today, it's pretty easy to figure out why it appealed to audiences then, having ingredients that appeal even more than 40 years later. The whole trucking industry angle, for one thing, though even more appealing is the irresistible there of the "little guy" against a corrupt system. Jan-Michael Vincent makes for an appealing little guy hero, fighting against some nice bad guys, including the dependable L. Q. Jones. Toss in some good action (there's an awesome stunt at the climax!), and you have a winner of a B movie.As appealing as the movie is, I will admit it's not perfect. Though Vincent is charismatic and you root for his character, his character is a little thin in some details (it's never explained why he's so honest.) It's also a little uncomfortable to see Vincent in several scenes drink alcohol knowing what eventually happened to Vincent in real life. Also, it's not clear if the chief bad guys get punished in the end or not. But if you can overlook minor flaws like those, the movie is still enjoyable to watch.
Jan-Michael Vincent, at the peak of his charisma and movie stardom, registers strongly as good, honest young man Carrol Jo Hummer, fresh from a stint in the Air Force. He gets a loan, which he uses to pay for his own diesel truck, which he dubs The Blue Mule. Initially thinking of working for family friend Duane Haller (Slim Pickens), he ultimately decides to fight corruption in the transport business, making enemies out of slimy people like Buck Wessle (L.Q. Jones) and Cutler (Don Porter). Kay Lenz plays Jerri, the wife who stands by his side.The prolific director Jonathan Kaplan, who at this time was firing off one entertaining B picture after another, wrote the script with Ken Friedman. Like so many other young directors during the 70s, he'd gotten his start working for Roger Corman, and was able to hone his craft. Here he creates an adequately paced, sometimes pretty serious (but never overly melodramatic), gritty little movie. It gets a lot of mileage out of its time honoured premise of one good man at war with a corrupt system.Carrol Jo must do battle both on the road and off, and proves himself capable of handling himself in a number of scraps, which are often instigated by swaggering bully Clem (Martin Kove). The action in "White Line Fever" is well executed, and the photography, by Fred J. Koenekamp, is simply gorgeous. One sequence with Carrol Jo on the road as he makes his way to snowy Utah is breathtaking. This is overall very slickly made and engagingly written and performed.A bright-eyed and earnest Vincent is extremely well supported by the lovable Lenz, ever amiable Pickens, and an effectively sleazy Jones. The cast features other familiar faces such as the ever reliable Dick Miller, and R.G. Armstrong as a prosecuting attorney. Sam Laws, Leigh French, and Kaplan regular Johnny Ray McGhee also appear. Cinematographer Jamie Anderson ("Piranha" '78) has a rare acting role here as Jamie, and Ann Dusenberry of "Jaws 2" is seen briefly as a barmaid.David Nichtern does the flavourful score for this solid entry into the trucker cinema genre of the '70s. The ending is more low key than the viewer might expect, and may not be totally satisfying to some people.Seven out of 10.
SPOILER ALERT! Great action flick with well-written characters, often compared to "Billy Jack" and "Walking Tall." Fistfights and tough guys galore, Kay Lenz looking adorable, what more could you ask for? Climactic scene of Jan-Michael Vincent's "Blue Mule" diesel tractor truck barreling through a guard shack and becoming airborne is one of the most memorable bits of 70's action cinema. Highly recommended by me.
This movie sucked production grade hole. It started to be about some in fighting among cheese ball truckers. It could have ended there. Instead, it becomes a romance story about the formation of a truckers union. One gets the distinct feeling the writer quit halfway through. This movie must have been a tax write-off.