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The moonshiner has been a staple of the movies since the earliest days of Hollywood. Literally hundreds of one- and two-reelers
depicting the adventures of feuding hillbillies and their illegal mountain brew flooded
the nickelodeons of America in the first two decades of the twentieth century - cornpone
comedies with titles like Why Kentucky Went Dry,
Who's Who in Hogg's Hollow and Jerry and the Moonshiners. The backwoods mountain man was an easily
exploitable type, ripe for mockery and cheap laughs, yet the cinematic image of the
moonshiner proved a malleable one. The
slack-jawed yokel eventually morphed into a sort of folk hero, a rugged individualist
whose outlaw activities harm no one, but who must eventually fight back against the
corrupt forces that seek to destroy him.
Moonshine is, of course, illegally manufactured whiskey on which no tax
is paid. In the 18th and 19th centuries,
distilling spirits was a family business for many inhabitants of Appalachia and the Deep
South, no different than farming or picking cotton.
With the advent of the federal excise tax on whiskey - and later, the passing of
the Eighteenth Amendment prohibiting the manufacture and distribution of alcohol - the
moonshiner became a bootlegger overnight. He
hid his distilleries deep in the mountain woods, far from the prying eyes of
"revenuers", federal agents sent from Washington to locate and destroy stills
and prosecute their operators and distributors.
During the 20's and early 30's, the period when alcohol was outlawed in
America, vast syndicates trafficking in illegal booze arose and flourished. 1970's The
Moonshine War is an adaptation of an early Elmore Leonard novel (see links below)
about such an operation (Leonard himself penned the script), set in the waning days of
Prohibition. Alan Alda stars as
"Son" Martin, the heir to a Kentucky moonshine dynasty who has hidden his stash
away until the repeal of the Eighteenth Amendment, which he feels certain will follow hot
on the heels of the impending election of Franklin Roosevelt as president. In a bizarre turn reminiscent of some of Brando's
nuttier 60's performances, Patrick McGoohan plays Frank Long, a revenuer gone bad who has
teamed up with a band of thieves intent on relieving Martin of his stock. Though enlivened by McGoohan's loony efforts and
a couple of offbeat scenes, The Moonshine War
lacks the funhouse plotting and pungent dialogue of Leonard's best work and is marred by
Alda's ludicrous hillbilly accent and a jarring boogie rock theme song by the
long-forgotten Five Man Electrical Band.
1970 also saw the release of I
Walk the Line, a John Frankenheimer drama exploring a similar milieu decades after the
lifting of Prohibition. Despite authentic
locations and faces, an unusual role for Gregory Peck as a morally conflicted Tennessee
sheriff who falls in love with the proverbial moonshiner's daughter (Tuesday Weld), and
Frankenheimer's typically freaky widescreen compositions, this is a logy and uninvolving
potboiler. Even a handful of Johnny Cash
songs (including the title tune) prove insufficient to pump up the energy level. Though the attempt at injecting some ambiguity
into the standard Southern sheriff figure is admirable, Peck is a stiff in the part,
unable to generate any empathy for his character. In
fact, the tangiest performance comes courtesy of Charles Durning as Peck's deputy, who
embodies all the stereotypical redneck attributes absent from Peck's Sheriff Tawes.
As a romantic figure of moonshine mythology, however, no redneck
sheriff or corrupt revenuer or salt-of-the-earth whiskey-maker can compare to the runner,
that devil-may-care hot rodder tearing down the mountain trails with a trunkful of corn
likker and the law on his tail. America's
fastest growing sport, NASCAR, originated on these dusty back roads; many of the original
stock car drivers got their start running 'shine. In
1958, big bad Robert Mitchum immortalized the archetype on film and in song with Thunder Road.
Though the movie begins with a presumably censor-mandated crawl informing us
that millions of dollars in taxes are lost to the American people each year, and ends with
Mitchum's Luke Doolin meeting with the ultimate punishment for his crimes, there can be no
doubt where the movie's sympathies lie. Mitchum
co-produced the picture and penned the original story on which it is based. (He also crooned "The Ballad of Thunder
Road," though his version is not included in the film.) His character is a 50's greaser, a rebel with a
cause - in this case, his refusal to knuckle under to the syndicate attempting to take
over his family's operation. Mitchum brings
his patented mix of sleepy-eyed cool and tough-guy bravado to the proceedings, pretty much
carrying the movie on his massive shoulders. Produced
on the cheap, Thunder Road played forever on the
Southern drive-in circuit, though today it looks quaint at best. Its enduring popularity was no doubt due less to
the melodramatics and awkward chase scenes than to Mitchum's myth-making; Luke Doolin's
1950 Ford coupe is a virtual proto-Batmobile, complete with quick-release whiskey tank in
the trunk and switch-operated jets that spurt oil into the path of pursuing lawmen.
Had Luke Doolin been captured and spent a few years behind bars, he
might have become Gator McKlusky, the anti-hero of 1973's White Lightning.
One of the earliest in the cycle of hick flicks that Burt Reynolds rode to
superstardom (and the direct predecessor of Gator, Reynolds'
directorial debut), this quintessential "good ol' boy" picture finds
incarcerated 'shine runner McKlusky being released early from his sentence in order to act
as a government snitch against the corrupt sheriff he believes killed his younger brother. Multiple car chases ensue. Director Joseph Sargent juices up some fairly
routine action sequences with convincing doses of regional flavor; the Arkansas locations
are evocative and, as in I Walk the Line, the
extras and supporting players are rugged and raw. Ned
Beatty breathes some low-key menace into the stock role of Sheriff Connors and Reynolds,
still several years away from his blithe wink-and-a-grin heyday, makes a genuine emotional
connection with his character.
Though the old-time mountain moonshiner is a dying breed, a few still
carry on the tradition, mostly providing liquor for illegal shot houses in the inner
cities. Likewise, while the moonshine movie
is nearly extinct, there are exceptions (the 1996 Kyle MacLachlan vehicle Moonshine Highway,
for example), though few of them are worth seeking out in the late night cable slots they
generally occupy. As a subgenre it may never
have produced anything approaching a classic, but TCM's moonshine marathon is worth
catching, at least in part, if only for its fleeting glimpses of a near-forgotten way of
life. Pull up a jug of fresh corn squeezins
and enjoy.
- Scott Von Doviak