To get away from a business where he’s always told what to do, to please his
wife Pauline (Elizabeth Hartman), and to provide a steadier home for their
children, the delightfully named Buford Pusser (Joe Don Baker) retires from
wrestling to the small Southern town where he grew up in and that parts of his
family still call home.
The place has changed, though, and not necessarily for the better. It has
grown its own little vice district, and while the things going on there look
pretty damn harmless to my eyes, Buford seems rather shocked on his first
encounter. When he makes a fuss about the local casino cheating one of his old
buddies – who clearly isn’t the most intelligent or mentally healthy to boot –
the owners of the place react absurdly violent, not just beating Buford to an
inch of his life, but also cutting him up with knives and leaving him somewhere
by the side of the road to die. Our hero’s made from stern stuff, though, and
survives his ordeal. Afterwards he doesn’t just learn the bastards also stole
his station wagon but that the local sheriff’s not willing to do a damn thing
about the people who nearly murdered him. Consequently, once he has recovered,
he makes himself a very big stick and goes out for some vigilante justice,
combining brutally beating up his would-be killers with having them pay an
invoice for his damages. Him, the Sheriff does arrest, but the ensuing
trial sees Buford giving a rousing speech and getting of scot free.
Next step in his project to clean up town is to run for Sheriff himself.
Clearly, there’s a demand for an honest man in the role, even if he’s an amateur
like Buford. Before and after he becomes Sheriff, Buford has to cope with
various attacks on his life, family troubles, and the general corruption of
parts of the charming little town.
Walking Tall is the first of the two films at the end of his career
veteran director Phil Karlson made with Joe Don Baker, and it is generally
considered to be the slightly superior one. Personally, in a cinch, I’d probably
go with Framed as the slightly superior film, but that has more
to do with that film’s shorter running time, tighter structure and more
controlled sentimentality than with anything Walking Tall does terribly
wrong. This is just a differently shaped film, telling a story of a greater
scope in time and vaguely basing itself on actual events concerning the real
Buford Pusser. To which degree, I don’t know, and frankly, I’m not sure I want
to.
In theory, this could be one of those films whose too loud love for vigilante
justice and dislike for stuff like the actual rule of law or the separation of
power between judicative and executive could sour me on it too much to have fun
with it. In practice, the film does use these latter bits also to portray the
degree of Pusser’s naivety when it comes to the things needed beside a moral
compass to do his new job properly.
In other regards, this is just a simple joy to watch: Joe Don does the Joe
Don Baker swagger, inhabiting his role in a way which makes questions of
“acting” seem pointless, Karlson uses his direct but effective style to
the best, and most entertaining effect, and the whole thing has a wonderful
sense of place. Of course, that place is a made-up sort of South made of
idealisations, clichés and truth in probably equal parts but it feels alive and
real on film.
Speaking of the US South, I do find it interesting to point out that both of
the Baker/Karlson films feature one major black character as a friend of Joe
Don’s respective character who isn’t a caricature, with actual things to do in
the plot, and positioned in a way to give the film some opportunity to talk
about racism in its specific Southern variety, in scenes that suggest someone
involved in the production had some practical experience with these matters
beyond the burning crosses and knew how this sort of thing played out in real
life in smaller – but not less painful – ways at this time and place. It’s also
just pretty cool to have a film showing a guy like Joe Don actively trying
not being a racist prick, and even apologizing when parts of his
socialisation make him act like a prick.
If you don’t care about that sort of thing and only come to see Joe Don Baker
smite evildoers with his big stick, you’re well provided by Walking
Tall, too.
Wednesday, December 6, 2017
Subscribe to:
Post Comments (Atom)
No comments:
Post a Comment