Monday, February 9, 2026

Hooked on Hook

 

 

 


 

The fantasy / fairy tale world has many, many memorable villains. Whether it be a literary villain, such as Rumplestiltskin  or the Big Bad Wolf from Little Red Riding Hood... Or villains from animated films, such as The Evil Stepmother from Snow White or Cruella De Vil from 101 Dalmatians... Or classic live action films like The Wicked Witch of the West in The Wizard of Oz or the villainous duo of Prince Humperdinck and Count Rugen from The Princess Bride.

By far, my favorite villain from fairy tales would have to be Captain Hook. That ne'er-do-well pirate from the classic Peter Pan. He first burst forth from the psyche of author J. M. Barrie back in the early 1900's and has been haunting the childhood of many a youngster ever since. He has been portrayed on screen, both in animated films and in live action films for well over 100 years now.

The first time, as near as I can tell, was in a 1925 silent film version with a guy named Ernest Torrance, who made a name for himself at the time playing villainous characters.  Hook has since been portrayed by the likes of Cyril Ritchard and Danny Kaye on TV, Cyril Ritchard (again) and Boris Karloff (!) on stage, and voiced in cartoon versions by Hans Conreid (among others).

But when it comes to live action versions of the Peter Pan story, although there have been several, by far my two favorites involve actors who could take over the camera any time they ever stepped in front of it. The first was the 1991 Steven Spielberg / Robin Williams entry, Hook. Then, just a mere 12 years later, a cast of (mostly) virtually unknowns came along, 2003's Peter Pan, which featured one of my favorite British actors, Jason Isaacs. 

(Side note: Jason Isaacs, BTW, was my choice for taking over the reins of the James Bond role when rumors cropped up that it was being re-inaugurated in the early 2000's. I found out later that he had indeed auditioned for taking over the role from Timothy Dalton before the producers went with Pierce Brosnan...)

Of the two portrayals, I have to give Hoffman the edge. Mainly because of his over the top performance. As the villainous Hook, he reminds me a lot of two other movies, in which I enjoyed the villain more than the ostensible hero; Raul Julia as M. Bison in Street Fighter and Max Von Sydow in Flash Gordon. It seems to me that Hoffman is relishing his role immensely. 

You have to understand Captain Hook and his prior relationship with Peter Pan to really understand his enmity with the boy. You see, like Captain Ahab, who lost his leg to the titular whale, Moby Dick, Hook has a hook for a hand because long ago Peter cut off his real hand and fed it to a crocodile. (I'd be pretty pissed, too, to tell the truth). Even the author admits he got some inspiration for the character of Captain Hook from the Melville novel.

Did you know that Hook was not in the original first draft of Barrie's play? I have no idea what went on with the story prior to Hook's introduction into the story, but apparently at some point Barrie injected the character into the story because he decided that, since children liked pirate stories, his play could use the character to appeal more to children.

I did not know this, but Hook was a college educated man. Really. He apparently was a graduate of Eton College (where his major was... I don't know... maybe creative entrepreneurship...?)  Hook, also, was not his real name (obviously), but Barrie once stated "to reveal who he really was would even at this date set the country in a blaze". 

Captain Hook's transition from stage play to animated film to live action film (and even to TV miniseries) has brought some interesting casting opportunities. Some you may be familiar with, while others may be unknown to you, depending on how big a fan of the Peter Pan story you are. 

One of the more interesting castings I came across involved a 2014 TV adaptation of the musical version of the story, called Peter Pan- Live! This one escaped my notice since, at the time, I didn't have access to a working television. But the cast included Christopher Walken as Hook (and in case you, like me, are saying "I didn't know Christopher Walken could sing...", well, judging by the clip I found, he probably could be said to be more of a rapper than a singer...)


 

Then there was Stanley Tucci, who played the character in an ITV miniseies called Peter and Wendy (which, sad to say, I can't find a decent clip to use to showcase his portrayal..).  

And in yet another cable station output, on Disney+, we get Jude Law as a definitely harder and more villainous Hook. I rather like Law's portrayal, and he just might be #3 in my list of favorites.


 

But none of the live action versions of Captain Hook are a match for Jason Isaacs or Dustin Hoffman.

Firstly (and #2 on my list) is the character as brought to the screen by Jason Isaacs. Isaacs proved his mettle as a villain in the Mel Gibson film The Patriot, as well as bringing to life the character of Lucius Malfoy in the Harry Potter movies.  So it is without a doubt that he could pull off a character like Captain Hook.

In Peter Pan (2003), Wendy (Rachel Hurd-Wood) entertains her two younger brothers, John (Harry Newell) and Michael (Freddie Popplewell), with entertaining swashbuckling adventures, including the story of Cinderella (Cinderella is a "swashbuckling adventure"??), but Peter Pan spies on her. His goal is taking back the adventures to tell his friends in Neverland, The Lost Boys.

Meanwhile, Captain Hook (Isaacs) bides his time, waiting for the return of Peter to Neverland. He has only one goal in mind, the complete utter defeat of Peter, in revenge for a resentment he has harbored against Peter. It seems that Peter had cut off his hand and fed it to a giant crocodile. The downside of this is the crocodile developed a taste for Hook meat, and seeks the rest of him. The crocodile is truly the only thing that Hook is actually afraid of.

When Wendy and John and Michael end up in Neverland, Hook decides his best opportunity for revenge is to use them as bait to lure Peter into battle.  Isaacs as Hook exemplifies the truly insidious nature of Hook, although he does occasionally garner a bit of goodness about him, although not enough of it to hinder him from his ultimate goal.

 


Isaacs, however, pales by comparison to Dustin Hoffman in terms of pure entertainment, if not in pure insidiousness. It's the campiness of Hoffman's portrayal that endears him to me. I never can resist an actor that plays a villain with such over-the-top panache like that which Hoffman brings to the role. In addition to the two previously mentioned Julia and von Sydow I would also add such endearing camp villains as Geoffrey Rush as Casanova Frankenstein in Mystery Men and John Lithgow as Lord John Whorfin in  The Adventures of Buckaroo Banzai Across the Eighth Dimension.

The essence of the over-the-top performance is to play it broad, but not so broad that it becomes ridiculous. There are a few out such cases out there that edge into the ridiculous. Not a big fan of Will Farrell in the first place, but his role in Zoolander takes it beyond the pale, in my opinion. 

And then there's Hoffman. Hoffman very rarely played anyone on the bad side of the coin, although he did play a few unscrupulous characters, such as "Ratso" Rizzo in Midnight Cowboy. But not anyone you could conceivably actively hate. Even as Captain Hook, it's really hard to hate him.


 

O.K., I seriously started out this entry only meaning to write a brief overview of Hook, as I did with the rest of the films in this entry, but sentimentality took over and I absolutely can't resist the voices in my head telling me to go more into detail on this particular film.   Some of that has to do with some facts I learned while researching the film, which will be noted at the end of this blog entry. 

In the context of the film, at some point Peter Pan had decided he did want to grow up after all. He is a grown man, now named Peter Banning (Robin Williams). Peter has pretty much gone whole hog into his career and the potential benefits, financial and status wise. But his sacrifice has been that he has neglected his children, promising to be there for special events, but constantly being distracted by the job. 

For instance, he has promised to be at his son Jack's (Charlie Korsmo) baseball game, but he is caught up in the rigamarole of taking care of business, and, even though he would like to fulfill his promise, he ends up having to send a subordinate to film the game.

(BTW: Does Charlie Korsmo look familiar? He had a VERY brief career as a child actor, choosing to go to college and study law, but if you saw the Warren Beatty film Dick Tracy, he was The Kid. I think that one was actually his first movie...)  

Peter and his family go on vacation to England, where Peter meets up with the woman who raised him as an orphan, Wendy Darling (Maggie Smith). His family, which includes Jack, his daughter Maggie (Amber Scott) and his wife Moira (Caroline Goodall) are there primarily for a vacation, but also to attend a dinner being held to honor Wendy and her work with orphans.


Peter gets upset when his children interrupt him during an important business call and Moira chides him, saying that their time as children is brief, and soon neither of them will be so enthusiastic about spending time with their father, but pursuing other interests. That very night, while Peter and Moira and Wendy are attending the celebratory dinner, a mysterious force comes into the house and whisks away the children. Peter finds a note left in place of his children.


When this catastrophic event happens Peter, quite naturally, calls in the local constabulary. (and wait, isn't that Phil Collins, the drummer for Genesis, in the role of a Police Inspector, postulating that the whole thing might be some sort of "prank"?)


It is therefore up to Grandma Wendy to clue in Peter on just who he is and who this mysterious "Jas. Hook" is. Peter was, of course, once known as Peter Pan, and originally came from Neverland. But, in the process of becoming an adult, he has either forgotten or chose to block out his memories of the time when he was the leader of the Lost Boys in that fabled land. Eventually an old ally, Tinkerbell (Julia Roberts) shows up to help him get back to Neverland so he can rescue his children. (Because, among other things, Peter has forgotten how to fly).

 

Peter and Tinkerbell arrive in Neverland and end up on Hook's pirate ship, The Jolly Roger. Peter is still not sure just what the Hell is going on, but Tinkerbell does her best to disguise him so he won't stand out like a sore thumb.  Enter Smee (Bob Hoskins), Hook's second mate. And starting off by echoing or parodying a line from a previous Robin Williams movie, introduces the villain:


 "Good morning, Neverland! Tie down the main mast matey's 'cause here he is, the cunning kingfish, the bad barracuda! A man so deep he's unfathomable! A man so quick he's fast... asleep! Let's give him a hand... 'cause he's only got one! I give you the steel-handed stingray! Captain James HOOK!

(Sounds kind of like he's introducing Hulk Hogan or some other wrestling sensation...) 


And finally the title star makes his appearance, and boy does Hoffman make an entrance! When Hook eventually figures out that this older man Peter is in fact Peter Pan he is disappointed. He demands that Peter fly up to his children to prove he is Pan, but guess what... this Peter is afraid of heights. So  Hook has decided to throw in the towel of his plan for revenge on Peter Pan and just kill the children. But Tinkerbell says, give her a week's time and she will mold Peter back into the Pan he, Hook, knew. Well, actually only 3 days, since that is all Hook is willing to concede.


Between this scene and the final battle (in which, yes, spoiler alert, Peter does indeed become Pan) we are treated to two separate stories. On the one hand, Peter has to convince the Lost Boys he is Pan, and is subjected to a three day boot camp to get him in shape, both physically and terms of his imagination, which has become seriously deficient since he became an adult.

On the other hand, Hook tries his best to make the children love him, which he thinks would seriously damage Peter's ego. He has no success whatsoever with Maggie, but it appears he is getting through to Jack, since the thing Jack wants more than anything else is to have a father figure who connects with him; i.e. cares about his interests and engages with him, which Peter as his real father had been neglecting.


It comes down to a final battle between Peter and the Lost Boys and Hook and his pirate crew.  You don't need me to tell you how that turns out in the end, but there is one loss for the Lost Boys which is sure to bring a tear to your eyes. 

The background of how Peter finally decided to stop living in Neverland and start living in the real world and become an adult is very revealing. It seems while in Neverland Peter Pan and the Lost Boys never aged. Peter gave up immortality in child form, then, for the love of a girl who eventually grew up to be his wife.    

OK. on to the reason (or reasons) why I thought this movie deserved a more in depth review.

First, the much vaunted Tomato meter ranks this movie as the absolute worst of Steven Spielberg's directorial output. Yes. Even worse than 1941. Although, truth be told, I liked that movie too. My vote for the worst would have been Always, which has Richard Dreyfuss taking over as some sort of guardian angel in the afterlife (I think). It should be noted, BTW, that the Tomato meter ranking is the only list I found that ranks Hook at the bottom, but still... The site says "The look of Hook is lively indeed, but Steven Spielberg directs on autopilot here, giving in too quickly to his sentimental, syrupy qualities." Really? I could have said much the same thing about E.T. The Extraterrestrial

Of course, the Tomato meter is based on actual reviews from the time, and I would be remiss to not point out that some of those reviewers were probably not in a happy frame of mind when they entered the theater... Roger Ebert said "No effort is made to involve Peter's magic in the changed world he now inhabits, and little thought has been given to Captain Hook's extraordinary persistence in wanting to revisit the events of the past."  

The film had a pretty prestigious cast. Hoffman, Williams,  Roberts and Smith all have won Oscars and Hoskins was nominated for one. Several other cast members were recipients of nominations and/or even winners of other awards. So it had a load of prestige actors. There is also a great score by none other than John Williams, a man who could score an episode of some low level TV show like My Mother the Car and make it memorable.

Hook was a bigger hit with audiences, however. It made $300 million on a $70 million investment and is rated no less than an A- on several audience review sites. And it did get some recognition by the Oscar committee that year, having been nominated for five Oscars (although none for Best Picture, Director or Actor...) It didn't win any, losing to either Bugsy or Terminator 2 in each category, but just getting nominated is an  accomplishment.

I saw Hook  on my 30th birthday in the theater, one of the few movies I saw that came out in theaters on my birthday. Unlike my experience with The Postman a few years later I actually enjoyed this one. I do think it has a niche however. Younger kids may not fully understand just what is going on: "Who is this old guy? Peter Pan is supposed to be a boy!" There may also be a period in your life where the whole sentimental theme is just annoying. I pity the adult who loses his childlike sensibilities completely, although I have to admit if I had seen this movie for the first time after I turned 40 I might have been turned away from it's overall thematic sense.

Now in my mid 60's I am starting to return to that childlike sense of wonder. Too bad I never had kids (or grand kids). It might be instructive to watch this with kids and see how they react.

Well, folks, that second star to the right is sending out it's enticing message. May have to trade in the Plymouth for some wings to get there however. Drive safely.

Quiggy


 

 

 

 

Sunday, February 8, 2026

Semiquincentennial Movie Project # 6: Alice's Restaurant

 

 

 

The Semiquincentennial  Movie Project is an ongoing celebration of the 250th anniversary of the founding of the United States. During the course of this project your humble blogger is choosing a movie a week to represent each of the 50 states in the Union, as well as a movie scheduled for 4th of July weekend that will represent the nation's capitol, Washington D.C. The order of the weekly entries will coincide with the order of each state's entry into the fold (although, not necessarily coinciding with the date of their entry into said fold).

 



Week #6: Massachusetts -


(BTW: That banner is the state's motto: "Ense petit placidam sub libertate quietem." for those of who didn't take French in school that translates, loosely,  to: "By the sword we seek peace, but peace only under liberty.")
 
The state of Massachusetts was established on February 6, 1788.

Details about Massachusetts:

State bird: chickadee

State flower: mayflower

State tree: American elm

Additional historical trivia:

Four U.S. Presidents were originally born in Massachusetts: John Adams, John Quincy Adams, John F. Kennedy and George H. W. Bush.

For you chocolate lovers; the first chocolate factory was established in MA, as well as the invention of Toll House Chocolate Chip Cookies.

Fenway Park (home of the Boston Red Sox) was the first established MLB baseball field.

"Watson! Come here! I want to see you!", the famous first telephone call occurred in Boston.

Lake Chargoggagoggmanchauggagoggchaubunagungamaugg (and there's a tongue twister) holds the record for the longest lake name in the U.S. The name, BTW, is Algonquin, and roughly means: "Fishing Place at the Boundaries - Neutral Meeting Grounds". And sometimes you may hear the since disproven translation as "You fish on your side, I'll fish on my side, and no one shall fish in the middle."All I can say is, Thank God no monster like the Loch Ness Monster has been spotted in Lake  Chargoggagoggmanchauggagoggchaubunagungamaugg.... 

 



 

Alice's Restaurant (1969):

Arlo Guthrie's famous "Alice's Restaurant Massacree", a folk rock protest song about the Vietnam War and the draft, was originally recorded in 1967. The word "massacree" deserves a bit of explanation. According to wikipedia it comes from the dialect spoken by natives of the Ozark Mountains. It is "a story that describes an event so wildly and improbably and baroquely messed up that the results are almost impossible to believe". Which pretty much defines the story as Arlo Guthrie relates the events preceding and surrounding his attempt to register for the draft. Keep that in mind, because I will point out some differences between the real story, the song and the movie as we go along.

The movie opens with Arlo and several others appearing before a draft clerk (Vinnette Carroll) to justify exemptions they listed on the draft registrations on why they may not be eligible for the draft. Arlo's excuse is Hutchison's chorea, which is hereditary. Unfortunately even though his father and other members of his family have it, Arlo does not have it at this point so his exemption is disqualified.


 

(Note: this may be a fictional representation of the real Arlo, but since he is called Arlo Guthrie in the film, and he does indeed have a dad named Woody Guthrie, both in the film and in real life, I am forced to take most of his personal part in the film as somewhat biographical. And Woody did indeed die from Hutchison's chorea.)


 

Arlo decides his best bet to avoid the draft is to enroll in college, which he does in Montana. but he is not cut out to the rigors of fitting into college life. He eventually gets expelled and heads to Stockbridge MA, where a couple named Ray and Alice Brock (James Broderick and Pat Quinn) have bought a de-consecrated church and basically have turned into some kind of commune for like-minded hippies. Alice also pens up a restaurant nearby, which, by the sound of the menu, has a rather eclectic feel to it.

The first hour of the film involves some rather deep and emotional content that was used to bulk the song up into a full-fledged movie.Two people that play an important part in Arlo's life come into the film. Roger (Geoff Outlaw) is a friend that Arlo grew up with, and Shelley (Michael McClanathan) is a former heroin addict who has just gotten out of rehab and is trying to make it straight.  

The film is ostensibly a comedy, but there are some serious moments in the film. One in particular that stands out is that Alice keeps becoming increasingly disenchanted with Ray, and often falls into other men's arms for solace. This is a microcosm of the attitude towards sex and fidelity that was a part of the 60's, especially among those who felt disenfranchised from the norm of the establishment (at least as much as I know from my history books... I was WAY too young to even be aware of it until I reached my teens in the 70's...)

Of course, the original song never mentions Arlo's dad, Woody, but there are some heartrending moments in the film as he visits dad in the hospital. Woody (played by Joseph Boley) is dying from the aforementioned disease. Arlo deals with it as best he can, but it is apparent, at least in moments that he is in the hospital room with Woody, that he would rather be anywhere else. I can empathise with that sentiment completely.  I, too, have dealt with death in my family and often wanted to be far away from it, because then I could pretend it wasn't happening.

Eventually the part of the film that incorporates the events in the song come into it. Ray invites a raft of friends and gets Alice to fix a "Thanksgiving meal that can't be beat". 


 

After the meal, Arlo and several friends pack up the debris left over from the shindig and take it to the city dump, only to find that the dump is closed for the holiday.


 

But they find a back road where they find a place that someone else has dumped a load of garbage and combine he two. Bu the fly in the ointment is Officer Obie (William Obanheim, playing himself). he finds out that Arlo was behind the illegal dump and arrests him. He also takes him to court. 


 

But the problem with the trial is that all the pictures that Obie and his officers took are pretty much useless, because the judge (James Hannon) is blind.  All that Arlo receives is a fine and an order to clean up the garbage 

Later, while at the draft board registering for the actual draft, Arlo makes a nuisance of himself, first by tring to pretend to be psychotic, then by complaining about a line in the form questioning whether he was rehabilitated from his crime (which is well and good if he had been convicted of rape or murder, but Arlo thinks it rather stupid to ask if he has rehabilitated from being a litterbug.


 

The movie is not quite over yet, however, there is some sentimental stuff to end it, which I won't delve into, but suffice to say that someone close to Arlo is going on to a greater reward.

The film has a 63% rating on Rotten Tomatoes, and did garner some good reviews. Newsweek said it was  "the best of a number of remarkable new films which seem to question many of the traditional assumptions of establishment America."  Believe it or not, director Arthur Penn even garnered a nomination for Best Director at the Academy Awards. His competition that year included George Roy Hill for Butch Cassidy and the Sundance Kid and the eventual winner John Schlesinger for Midnight Cowboy.

 According to a real life compadre in crime for the event, Richard Robbins (on whom Roger was based), the film is only about 15% based in fact, and the rest is totally fabricated. Arlo even said that the reason for his leaving Montana was not because of some run-in with the law, but that he dropped out voluntarily. Arlo himself has expressed the opinion that the movie was fairly accurate however, So who to believe? The friend or the central character himself?

You should know before going in that this film is markedly different in tone and feeling from Penn's acclaimed Bonnie and Clyde. Although both deal with characters who are somewhat at odds with the rules of normal polite society, the only way I would recommend these two as a double feature is if you wanted something to cheer you up after watching the devastation caused by the characters in the Bonnie and Clyde film, on BOTH sides of the law.

All in all, I can recommend Alice's Restaurant as at least a good window into the counterculture of the time period.

Until next time. drive safely folks.

Quiggy

 


 

Sunday, February 1, 2026

Semiquincentennial Movie Project #5: The Stepford Wives

 

 

 

The Semiquincentennial  Movie Project is an ongoing celebration of the 250th anniversary of the founding of the United States. During the course of this project your humble blogger is choosing a movie a week to represent each of the 50 states in the Union, as well as a movie scheduled for 4th of July weekend that will represent the nation's capitol, Washington D.C. The order of the weekly entries will coincide with the order of each state's entry into the fold (although, not necessarily coinciding with the date of their entry into said fold).



Week #5: Connecticut-

 



 
The state of Connecticut was established on January 9, 1788. 

Details about Connecticut:

State bird: American robin

State flower: mountain laurel

State tree: white oak

Connecticut is the only state to have an officially designated state composer: Charles Ives. Although every state does have a state song, and some acknowledge the state song composers, none have a "state composer" designation.

Do you get annoyed with that 60 or 70 MPH speed limit? Blame Connecticut as it was the first state to establish a speed limit. Although be glad it progressed over the years. Originally the rural road limit was only 15 MPH... And while on the subject of cars, the first permanent license plate originated here.

Connecticut is the home of the origin of such things as the sewing machine and the Frisbee.

Famous names who claim Connecticut as their birthplace: Katherine Hepburn, Christopher Lloyd, Michael Bolton, P. T. Barnum and our 43rd U.S. President, George W. Bush. 

 


 The Stepford Wives (1975): 

"Something strange is happening in the town of Stepford..." 

You know what the perfect wife would be? Someone who is docile, agreeable, a homebody, doesn't spend too much of hubby's money, in essence, that age-old male chauvinist idea of the perfect woman, whose only purpose is to stay "barefoot and pregnant". And it seems that the men of Stepford, Connecticut, are more lucky than the rest of the world in finding these ideal wives.

The Stepford Wives started out life as a novel by Ira Levin. Levin is the author who gave us Rosemary's BabyA Kiss Before DyingSliver and The Boys from Brazil, all of which were made into great, or at least fairly good movies.  (Some may disagree whether Sliver was any good at all, but I like it...) Levin wrote 7 novels in his career and 6 of them were made into movies. That's 86% of his novel output that is on celluloid. (Eat your heart out, Stephen King). I just wish someone would tackle This Perfect Day, the only one that hasn't been made, and #2 on my list of favorites of his work.

The cache of talent involved doesn't stop with the author, however. The screenplay is credited to William Goldman (The Princess BrideButch Cassidy and the Sundance Kid,  All the President's Men and Misery, among others.) Of course, director Bryan Forbes rewrote a lot of it, but Goldman's touch is still there. The cast included Katherine Ross in the headliner role of Joana Eberhart, with her husband played by Peter Masterson. (And here's an interesting tidbit. The part of one of their daughters, Kim, was played by Peter Masterson's real daughter, Mary Stuart Masterson, in her film debut.)

Tina Louise (Ginger on Gilligan's Island) and Franklin Cover (Tom Willis on The Jeffersons) were also among the supporting actors in the film. There could have been other big names involved. Diane Keaton, for instance, was approached to be the lead, but turned it down because her analyst didn't like it. (it may be overstated, but I think about at least 50% or more of Hollywood was in some sort of psycho-therapy in the 70's...)  Jean Seberg and Tuesday Weld were also considered.

The movie starts as Joanna Eberhart (Katherine Ross) and her husband, Walter (Peter Masterson) and their two daughters, Kim (Mary Stuart Masterson) and Amy (Ronny Sullivan) prepare to depart from New York City on their way to their new home in Stepford, Connecticut.  The trip is approached with varying degrees of attitude. Walter is enthusiastic about it (at one point he even gushes that "you don't even have to lock your doors in Stepford"). The kids are oblivious, since it's just another day, and probably just thinking about the new friends they'll make.


 

On the other hand, Joanna seems to be having a little apprehension. After all, moving to a small suburb from the hubbub of the big city affects her in more ways than one. For one thing, she is an artist (photographer), and the move will take her away from the artistic word in, say, Greenwich Village, or wherever she happens to do business.

To make things even more disconcerting for her, she finds that most of the women in Stepford are the exact opposite of her: they are more interested in being dedicated housewives, keeping clean kitchens and making exquisite meals, rather than being open to the feminist ideals that Joanna adheres to. And strange things happen; like when Carol Van Sant (Nanette Newman) takes a blow to the head in a traffic accident and Keeps repeating the same thing over and over again.


 

To make matter worse, there is a thriving social club in town, but it is strictly "men only", which is an affront to the radical feminist Joanna. One of things that stands out early in the picture is that Walter seems to be overly eager to cave in to his wife (to use a derogatory term; [expletive deleted]-whipped).


 

But he gradually gets his own backbone upright by joining this men's club, albeit to the objections of Joanna.  Joanna meets a neighbor, Bobbie (Paula Prentiss), who is like her a free-spirited feminist, and the two decide to start their own "women's club". But while Joanna and Bobbie, and another woman in town, Charmaine (Tina Louise), are receptive to the concept, the rest of the women fit into that dedicated housewife category. 


 

Bobbie

Charmaine

 

In fact, at their first meeting, although the feminist sector open up about their feelings on the male-dominated society in Stepford, the housewives delve into what the best product is to keep food from sticking to the pan when baking. (It all comes off like a TV commercial...)


 

Joanna and Bobbie start to get suspicious when Charmaine suddenly turns into one those dedicated housewives. Initially Bobbie thinks there must be something in the water and takes samples to a science lab, but they find it's nothing but ordinary tap water. And then, somewhere along the way, Bobbie also turns into one of those dedicated housewives. Joanna decides she's had enough, and if Walter won't pack up and leave Stepford, then she will take the kids and leave herself. 

 


The roadblock to that occurs when Walter, for some reason, has sent the kids off, so he can have a quiet weekend with Joanna. Since the "quiet weekend with the husband" occurred prior to her friends becoming the "alien" personalities, she gets her hackles up and decides to delve into this mysterious "men's club" meeting house.

 


I'll leave just enough for you to be curious about the ending, although it's a good bet that most of you already know, even if you never have watched the movie. The term "Stepford wife" has insinuated itself into the lexicon far enough that just the basic idea may be in your mind already. 

The film was released in February of 1975. The only real competition for it appears to be Shampoo, a Warren Beatty film that ended up being  the third highest grossing film of the year, making $49 million dollars. The Stepford Wives, although not a "dud", only managed to pull in $4 million dollars. Critical response was generally mediocre. It currently holds a rating of only 55% on Rotten Tomatoes. One critic even stated that the screenplay from the source material was "tedious and padded".

One of the more interesting aspects of it's reception was with the feminist sector of the population. I personally thought that the film had a fairly strong feminist tinge to it, but then, I am a male, and a single male at that, so what do I know? Wikipedia, quoting an article from Entertainment Weekly, says that at one showing to an audience of feminists, it was met with "hisses, groans and guffaws." Betty Friedan, a respected leader of the feminist movement, called it "a rip-off of the women's movement." However, some feminist authors did come to it's defense, and director Bryan Forbes objected to the criticism by claiming that if the message of the movie was anything it's anti-men.

The movie spawned three made-for-TV sequels and, in 2004, a remake starring Nicole Kidman in the Katherine Ross role. Haven't seen that, but I am given to understand it was beneath the original, and only barely made back it's production costs in the theater. 

In my opinion, the 1975 version gets a lot of bad press. I think that Katherine Ross carries the film well, and some of those "transformed" Stepford women give me the creeps, which says a lot about how well they became the docile, subservient women the men of Stepford created. There are also some decent parallels to the classic Invasion of the Body Snatchers, in that sometimes the changes in the "victims" can be so insidious and yet subtle that you just don't realize until it's too late. It doesn't seem to be a coincidence, to me at any rate, that both movies take place in bucolic suburbs rather than in the big city. (Of course, the 1978 remake of Invasion of the Body Snatchers did occur in a big city, and as I said in my review of that movie, it's up to you to decide which is a more scary scenario.

The one issue that I had with the movie is that it seems to ignore the children. One wonders how the children responded to the change in Mommy's personality. After all, besides Joanna, I'm sure there must have been some of the others who had had kids prior to their change. What did they think of the new attitude of Mommy?

The Stepford Wives was a much better movie than the remake with Nicole Kidman, that much is certain. Watching Ross and her gradual realization dawn that something is not quite kosher in Stepford is well worth the price of admission. 

Well, that's it for this time folks. Drive safely.

Quiggy


  

Friday, January 30, 2026

A Way, Way Too Early Announcement!

 

 


June 6 is the Official Drive-In Movie Day. I decided to go full hog with this beloved day this year.

Keep an eye out for more formal announcements and promotions over the next few months, but there will be an opportunity for you to participate. Be thinking about fond memories of your past at the drive-in, or your favorite movies you saw at a drive-in, or even just movies that have scenes that take place at a drive-in. Bloggers who choose to participate also will have an incentive...

I have three sets of door prizes I will be giving away to people who choose to participate in the fun. I have them on order, so I can't post pictures yet, but each door prize will consist of a drive-in themed sticker and a postcard, names to be thrown into a hat if more than 3 participate.

And, thanks to Rachel at Hamlette's Soliloquy for creating the above banner.

Until next announcement, drive safely, folks.

Quiggy 

Sunday, January 25, 2026

Semiquincentennial Movie Project #4: Gator

 

 

 

The Semiquincentennial  Movie Project is an ongoing celebration of the 250th anniversary of the founding of the United States. During the course of this project your humble blogger is choosing a movie a week to represent each of the 50 states in the Union, as well as a movie scheduled for 4th of July weekend that will represent the nation's capitol, Washington D.C. The order of the weekly entries will coincide with the order of each state's entry into the fold (although, not necessarily coinciding with the date of their entry into said fold).

 

 




 

Week #4: Georgia -



 
The state of Georgia was established on January 2, 1788.

Details about Georgia:

State bird: brown thrasher

State flower: Cherokee rose    

State tree: live oak

Additional historical trivia:

Georgia is the home of the vaunted peanut, and our  39th U.S. President, Jimmy Carter, was a peanut farmer in the state prior to his political career.

The stove top waffle iron, the cotton gin and even Coca Cola, are all products that first saw the light of day in the state. 

Georgia is one of only three states that proudly displays the motto "In God We Trust" on it,

Some famous people from Georgia: Jimmy Cater (of course), Martin Luther King, Jackie Robinson, Jeff Foxworthy and Ray Charles all were born in the state.   

 


 

Gator (1976): 

Gator is actually a sequel to White Lightning, the 1973 film that introduced the character of "Gator" McKlusky. That film features Gator as a moonshine still operator who goes undercover to help trap other moonshiners. But Gator is no flunky for the government. His real goal is to get revenge on a crooked sheriff who killed his younger brother.


 

After the end of White Lightning, Gator was essentially a free man,  and went back to his old lifestyle. Meanwhile at the capitol building, the governor of the state, played by Mike Douglas, is ranting about how he looks in the press because of that one degenerate county in the state. What county? Why Dunston County, home of Gator.

But the governor has a man that may be able to help, Irving Greenfield (Jack Weston). Greenfield is touted as one of the top agents in the Federal government. Greenfield has a plan. 

 



The key to solving the dilemma with Greenfield is to somehow nullify the influence of the county bigwig (and top crime boss) "Bama" McCall (Jerry Reed). What Greenfield proposes is getting the help of a recent parolee, our friend "Gator", to help bring in McCall.


 

Of course, catching Gator is going to be half the battle. Because he knows the swamps better than just about anybody, and can run through that stuff like a cottonmouth in the brush. But eventually the Greenfield crew do run down Gator. Since Gator is almost assuredly running moonshine again and a third conviction would send him away for a loooong time, Greenfield thinks he's got Gator by the cajones. 


 

But Gator is not quite ready to throw in with the Feds. That is, until Greenfield threatens to send Gator's dad Ned (John Steadman) to jail for moonshining, and putting his daughter, Susie (Lori Futch) into foster care. See, Greenfield already has them, even if not under arrest, and if Gator refuses to help bring Bama McCall in, he's going to be one lonely man with all hi family out of the picture. (As usual, these Feds play dirty...)


 

So Greenfield takes Gator to Dunston County, where it turns out that he and Bama were old buddies. Bama is willing to let Gator come in on his operations. See, Bama is a wheeler dealer in town, running all kinds of shady operations. Be forewarned! Jerry Reed is Bama, and if your only connection to Jerry Reed is a good 'ol boy who is harmless, like Cledus in the Smokey and the Bandit films, or J. D. Reed in the TV series Concrete Cowboys, you are NOT gonna like Bama... He's a lowlife of the first order. 

Bama has all kinds of crime in his milieu, like extortion, corruption, selling drugs. Gator is not entirely OK with this, but he is willing to go along with for a while. But then he discovers the really bad vice that Bama is into... prostitution.  And not prostitution with what would be at least normal, if not acceptable. See, Bama's big prostitution ring consists of underage girls. This really disgusts Gator and he tells Bama he wants out.


 

But Bama is not the kind of guy to just turn his back and ignore a backslider in his operation. He has two muscle boys, Smiley (Burton Gilliam) and Bones (William Engesser) to help him change Gator's nind, by hook or crook. 


 

Gator now wants to help Greenfield bring Bama down, and hooks up with a reporter, Aggie Maybank (Lauren Hutton) and a little off her rocker former city employee, Emmeline (Alice Ghostley) to break into City Hall and get files that will put Bama and some of his political cohorts away for a long time.


 

Don't get the idea that this is a typical Reynolds comedy. There is some serious stuff going on here, and more than one person is going to die. Think of it as something like Lethal Weapon. There is a bunch of comedy sprinkled throughout, but when it comes down to the nitty gritty, the serious side is going to come to the fore.

But one of the more humorous parts of the movie (at least for me, are the scenes where Bones, who is apparently Bama's chauffeur, in addition to one of his bully boys, has to drive Bama around in a converted red  Plymouth Gran Fury. Note: this is not the only car they used, just one of them. Anyway, the exaggeration of how big Bones is is highlighted by the fact that he has to stick his head out through the sun roof. (I'm fairly sure he was probably sitting on a box or something in the car scenes... Surely the actor wasn't THAT big...)


  

This was Burt Reynolds' first feature film as a director. According to what I read, Reynolds originally turned the role saying "it's a terrible script." But then they offered him the opportunity to direct and suddenly it was "a great script"... (The things Hollywood will do to get their way...) I couldn't find any information on a budget, and it didn't exactly break box office records. It only grossed $11 million. 

The critics weren't exactly kind to the movie either. On Rotten Tomatoes, the aggregator of what is the critic viewpoint, it stands at only 14%. Charles Champlin, a reviewer for the Los Angeles Time, not only managed to denigrate the movie, but also the kind of crowd that liked Reynolds movies: "Gator looks exactly what it is, a commercial concoction assembled for an undemanding mass market." (Phhht, Chuck...)

Ranker, one of my favorite go-tos for public opinion of films, however, ranks it #7 all-time as one of Reynolds' best movies, beaten out only by the first Smokey and the BanditThe Longest YardDeliveranceHooperThe Cannonball Run and White Lightning (in that order). My opinion is Gator is a movie that will appeal to those who love Reynolds screen charm and also for those action movies that blend a little humor into the mix. I especially liked seeing Bama get his comeuppance, even if I didn't particularly care to see Jerry Reed playing a thoroughly unscrupulous bad guy.

Well, that's it for this time. See you for the next entry, featuring the state of Connecticut.

Quiggy