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词条 White Line Fever (film)
释义

  1. Plot

  2. Production

  3. Cast

  4. Reception

  5. See also

  6. References

  7. External links

{{Infobox film
| name = White Line Fever
| image = White Line Fever 1975.jpg
| image_size =
| caption = Theatrical release poster
| director = Jonathan Kaplan
| producer = John Kemeny
| writer = Jonathan Kaplan
Ken Friedman
| narrator =
| starring = Jan-Michael Vincent
Kay Lenz
Slim Pickens
L. Q. Jones
Don Porter
R. G. Armstrong
Dick Miller
Martin Kove
| music = David Nichtern
| cinematography = Fred Koenekamp
| editing =
| studio = Columbia Pictures
International Cinemedia Center
White Line Fever Syndicate
| distributor = Columbia Pictures
| released = {{Film date|1975|07|16|U.S.|1975|08|01|Canada}}
| runtime = 90 minutes
| country = United States
Canada
| language = English
| budget = C$1,400,000
| gross = $35 million[1]
}}

White Line Fever is a 1975 American-Canadian action film directed by Jonathan Kaplan and starring Jan-Michael Vincent. The film was released by Columbia Pictures on July 16, 1975.

Plot

Sam Hummer was a local truck driver from Tucson, Arizona who worked for a Tucson-based produce-shipper called "Red River". His driving partners were Duane Haller and "Pops" Dinwiddie. Eventually Sam's son, Carrol Jo, is old enough to ride with his father and the two of them then become partners as well. Sam changes the lettering on the trailer of his rig to read "Sam Hummer and Son".

Carrol Jo begins dating Jerri and the two want to be married, but Sam dies and the trucking partnership suddenly ends. As a result, Carrol Jo joins the Air Force and is soon sent to Vietnam. While in Vietnam, Carrol Jo has a successful career and is deemed a hero, but all he wants to do is return home to Jerri. Jerri spends these years waiting for his return and this is the subject of the film's theme song "Drifting and Dreaming" by Valerie Carter. The opening sequence shows Carrol Jo's plane arriving from overseas as Jerri and her brother give him a hero's welcome. We see the two get married and start their life together in humble settings.

Carrol Jo obtains a loan from the bank to purchase a new truck. He and Jerri then visit a local used truck sales lot where he purchases a repossessed 1974 Ford WT9000 cabover rig with a Cummins turbo diesel engine. The salesman throws in a custom paint job to seal the deal and Carrol Jo picks a blue and white paint scheme, highlighted with the words "BLUE MULE". Later, the two are jubilant as they drive their new truck through the deserts around Tucson, imagining the new life that awaits them.

CJ announces to the local listeners on the CB radio that he is in business for himself and is intent on getting as much as he can, so that he can get out of hock to the bank as quickly as possible.

When CJ goes back to work at Red River he finds out that things are very different. Duane Haller informs him that the company is now hauling un-taxed cigarettes and slot machines and that if he wants to stay out of trouble and keep working, he’ll have to keep his mouth shut. CJ gets angry and forces his rig to be unloaded, vowing never to haul illegal cargo. Later, Carroll Jo is pulled over on a lonely highway and discovers that the local sheriff is in on the crooked dealing as well, when he is handcuffed to his truck. Three men from Red River then show up and break his ribs.

When CJ tries to find work at other trucking companies around Tucson, he discovers that Red River has blackballed him as a troublemaker, and he is unwelcome everywhere he goes. Livid, he returns to Red River with a shotgun and threatens Duane Haller. Duane informs him that he is just a pawn in the game and that the person he actually needs to talk to is Duane’s boss, Buck Wessler (L.Q. Jones). Buck is a sleazy, lower-level crook who now manages Red River. Buck agrees to let CJ take a load to Dallas, free of any contraband. Sam Hummer’s old friend “Pops” Dinwiddie decides to come along, to help keep Carroll Jo safe on his trip. En route, they are attacked by men from Red River, but manage to fight them off and continue on their way.

Throughout the rest of the story, Carroll Jo tries to make a living by driving daily loads in and out of Tucson, mainly for Red River. He slowly discovers that Red River is actually owned by a large corporation based in Phoenix called the “Glass House”, a diversified energy and transportation company. Unbeknownst to him, though, Glass House is actually a front for organized crime. They use the trucking companies that they own as a transportation system for their syndicate and its illegal shipments.

Over the course of several months, CJ tries to organize the other drivers at Red River and around Tucson to stand up to the Glass House and refuse to haul illegal cargo. In the process he is beaten, vandalized, cheated and then eventually framed for Duane Haller’s murder. After his acquittal, CJ discovers the body of Pops Dinwiddie, who has been driving the Blue Mule while CJ was in jail, in his house. This leads to a climactic confrontation between all of the Red River drivers and Buck at the loading dock. Carroll Jo beats Buck, until CJ’s brother-in-law pulls him off of him.

That night, CJ and Jerri are viciously attacked while they sleep and their house is set on fire. Carroll Jo wakes up and gets both of them out of the house before it burns down. At the hospital, the doctor informs him that Jerri has lost the baby she was carrying and will never be able to have children. CJ returns home in despair.

Moments later, he emerges from the house with a shotgun and gets into the Blue Mule. He radios Deputy “Bob” that he is headed for the Glass House and to tell them that he is coming. Bob tries to intercept him on a two-lane road, but Carroll Jo runs the deputy off the road, destroying his patrol car. CJ shows up at the Glass House headquarters, faced by several heavily armed security guards who are waiting for him. He accelerates as fast as he can toward them, but his truck is riddled with bullets, blowing out several tires, the radiator and the windshield. CJ takes one bullet to the face. He manages to run through the security gauntlet, but he knows he won’t be able to get the crippled truck all the way to the corporate headquarters, so he aims for the giant sign that stands in front of the building, an enormous two-story glass structure with the letters “GH”. Carroll Joe runs up an embankment leading to the sign and crashes through it, completely destroying it and his truck at the same time.

In the last scene, a TV news reporter is announcing that all truckers in Tucson are on strike. The strike is being held in protest of the corrupt system set up by the Glass House and in honor of one trucker who dared to stand up against them, Carroll Jo Hummer. CJ’s brother-in-law wheels him out of his hospital room to the parking lot, which is filled with semi-trucks and truckers. They all begin to clap. Carroll Jo then begins to smile. Jerri is in a window directly behind him (apparently still hospitalized herself), overlooking all of this. Her lack of a smile may indicate that she is still unsure about living her life as the wife of a whistle-blowing hero who is willing to die for his family and the truth.

Production

Kaplan received the offer to direct the movie from Peter Guber at Columbia Pictures after the success of Truck Turner (1974). He says Guber mistakenly thought Truck Turner was about trucks. He said his goal was to make a modern day Western, heavily influenced by the films of Sam Peckinpah. Jan-Michael Vincent was cast by Guber, who thought he was going to be a big star; Kaplan claims this was the film where Vincent first used cocaine.[2]

Kaplan says "politically I was trying to counter-act the right-wing vigilantism of some of the pictures that were around at the time."[3]

Filming was in and around Tucson, Arizona as well as Monument Valley in Utah.[4]

Cast

  • Jan-Michael Vincent as Carrol Jo
  • Kay Lenz as Jerri
  • Slim Pickens as Duane
  • Sam Laws as Pops
  • L.Q. Jones as Buck
  • Don Porter as Cutler
  • R.G. Armstrong as Prosecutor
  • Leigh French as Lucy
  • Martin Kove as Clem

Reception

The film earned $6 million in theatrical rentals in North America.[5]

See also

  • List of American films of 1975

References

1. ^Roger Corman & Jim Jerome, How I Made a Hundred Movies in Hollywood and Never Lost a Dime, Muller, 1990 p.188
2. ^Jonathan Kaplan on White Line Fever at Trailers From Hell
3. ^{{cite magazine|last=Taylor|first=Paul|title=Keep on Truckin' - Jonathan Kaplan|magazine=Monthly Film Bulletin|edition=56.661|date=1 Feb 1989}}
4. ^{{cite book|last1=D'Arc|first1=James V.|title=When Hollywood came to town: a history of moviemaking in Utah|date=2010|publisher=Gibbs Smith|location=Layton, Utah|isbn=9781423605874|edition=1st}}
5. ^"All-time Film Rental Champs", Variety, 7 January 1976 p 46

External links

  • {{IMDb title|id=0073896|title=White Line Fever}}
  • {{Amg movie|54313|White Line Fever}}
{{Jonathan Kaplan}}{{Trucking industry in the United States}}

15 : 1975 films|1970s action films|1970s crime drama films|English-language films|American road movies|1970s road movies|Trucker films|Films directed by Jonathan Kaplan|Columbia Pictures films|Films produced by John Kemeny|Films shot in Utah|Films shot in Arizona|Canadian films|Canadian road movies|Citizens band radio in popular culture

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