TV영화관

Ode to Billy Joe (film)

배중진 2017. 7. 19. 13:00

Ode to Billy Joe (film)

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Jump to: navigation, search
Ode to Billy Joe
BillieJoeMovie.jpg
Directed byMax Baer, Jr.
Produced byMax Baer, Jr.
Screenplay byHerman Raucher
Based onOde to Billie Joe by Bobbie Gentry
StarringRobby Benson
Glynnis O'Connor
Music byMichel Legrand
CinematographyMichel Hugo
Edited byFrank Morriss
Distributed byWarner Bros.
Release date
  • June 4, 1976 (1976-06-04)
Running time
105 min
CountryUnited States
LanguageEnglish
BudgetUS $1.1 million

Ode to Billy Joe is a 1976 film with a screenplay by Herman Raucher, inspired by the 1967 hit song by Bobbie Gentry, titled "Ode to Billie Joe".[1]

The film was directed and produced by Max Baer, Jr. ("Jethro" of The Beverly Hillbillies fame) and stars Robby Benson and Glynnis O'Connor. Made for $1.1 million, it grossed $27 million at the box office, plus earnings in excess of $2.65 million in the foreign market, $4.75 million from television, and $2.5 million from video.[citation needed]

Gentry's song recounts the day when Billie Joe McAllister committed suicide by jumping off the Tallahatchie Bridge on Choctaw Ridge, Mississippi. When Gentry and Raucher got together to work on the screenplay, she explained that while the song was based on an actual event, she had no idea why the real person who inspired the character of Billie Joe had killed himself[citation needed]. Raucher thus had a free hand to pick one.

Plot[edit]

Set in 1953, the film explores the budding relationship between Billy Joe McAllister (Benson) and Bobbie Lee Hartley (O'Connor) (who corresponds to the unnamed narrator of the original song), despite resistance from Hartley's family, who contend she is too young to date. one night at a jamboree, McAllister gets drunk and seems nauseated and confused when entering a makeshift brothel behind the gathering. It turns out that in his inebriated state, he had sex with another man, later revealed to be his sawmill boss, Dewey Barksdale (James Best).

After his intimate encounter with Barksdale, Billy Joe disappears for several days. He then returns to bid an enigmatic goodbye to Bobbie Lee, telling her that he has been with a man. Overcome with guilt, Billy Joe subsequently kills himself by jumping off the bridge spanning the Tallahatchie River. The local preacher, who has seen Billy Joe and Bobbie Lee together, and other townsfolk spread the false story that Billy Joe had impregnated Bobbie Lee out of wedlock and had committed suicide.

In the film's final scene, Bobbie Lee meets Dewey on the bridge as she is leaving town, and he guiltily confesses to her that he was the man with whom Billy Joe had sex. She tells Barksdale, who is on his way to her house to confess to her father, that the town already suspects that she is carrying Billy Joe's baby and that it would do no good for Barksdale to confess now. Agreeing with the girl's logic, Barksdale offers Bobbie Lee a ride to the bus station, which she courteously accepts.

Cast[edit]

  • Robby Benson as Billy Joe McAllister
  • Glynnis O'Connor as Bobbie Lee Hartley
  • Joan Hotchkis as Anna 'Mama' Hartley
  • Sandy McPeak as Glenn 'Papa' Hartley
  • James Best as Dewey Barksdale
  • Terence Goodman as James Hartley
  • Becky Bowen as Becky Thompson
  • Simpson Hemphill as Brother Taylor
  • Ed Shelnut as Coleman Stroud
  • Eddie Talr as Tom Hargitay
  • William Hallberg as Dan McAllister

On the set[edit]

Scenes at the old sawmill were filmed at Cross Lumber Company in Vaiden, Mississippi. The bridge featured in the film crossed the Yazoo River on County Road 512 near Sidon, Mississippi. It has since been demolished and replaced by a modern concrete span in 1987, with plaques at both the eastern and western ends commemorating the film.[2]

Release date[edit]

The film was scheduled for release on June 3, 1976 to coincide with the opening lyrics of the song ("It was the third of June..."); however, since most new motion picture releases in the U.S. do not occur on Thursday, the date was moved back to Friday, June 4.

'TV영화관' 카테고리의 다른 글

Deliverance  (0) 2017.07.19
Tallahatchie River  (0) 2017.07.19
The Drowning Pool (film)  (0) 2017.07.19
Nicholas II of Russia  (0) 2017.07.18
Man in the Iron Mask  (0) 2017.07.10