Thunderbolt and Lightfoot

Thunderbolt and Lightfoot

Theatrical release poster, version #2[1]
Directed by Michael Cimino
Produced by Robert Daley
Written by Michael Cimino
Starring Clint Eastwood
Jeff Bridges
George Kennedy
Geoffrey Lewis
Music by Dee Barton
Cinematography Frank Stanley
Edited by Ferris Webster
Production
company
Distributed by United Artists
Release dates
  • May 23, 1974 (1974-05-23)
Running time
115 minutes
Country United States
Language English
Budget $4 million[2] or $2.2 million[3]
Box office $25,000,000[4]

Thunderbolt and Lightfoot is a 1974 American crime film written and directed by Michael Cimino and starring Clint Eastwood, Jeff Bridges, George Kennedy, and Geoffrey Lewis.[5]

Plot

As a young ne'er-do-well named Lightfoot (Jeff Bridges) steals a car, an assassin attempts to shoot a preacher delivering a sermon at his pulpit. The preacher escapes on foot. Lightfoot, who happens to be driving by, inadvertently rescues him by running over his pursuer and giving the preacher a lift.

Lightfoot eventually learns that the "minister" is really a notorious bank robber known as "The Thunderbolt" (Clint Eastwood) for his use of a 20 millimeter cannon to break into a safe. Hiding out in the guise of a clergyman following the robbery of a Montana bank, Thunderbolt is the only member of his old gang who knows where the loot is hidden.

After escaping another attempt on his life by two other men, Thunderbolt tells Lightfoot that the ones trying to kill him are members of his gang who mistakenly thought Thunderbolt had double-crossed them. He and Lightfoot journey to Warsaw, Montana to retrieve the money hidden in an old one-room schoolhouse. They discover the schoolhouse has been replaced by a brand-new school standing in its place.

Thunderbolt and Lightfoot are abducted by the men who were shooting at them—the vicious Red Leary (George Kennedy) and the gentle Eddie Goody (Geoffrey Lewis)—and driven to a remote location where Thunderbolt and Red fight each other, after which Thunderbolt explains how he never betrayed the gang.

Lightfoot proposes another heist—robbing the same company as before—with a variation on the original plan, since Lightfoot inadvertently killed their electronics expert, Dunlap, in his rescue of the fleeing preacher. In the city where the bank is located, the men find jobs to raise money for needed equipment while they plan the heist.

The robbery begins as Thunderbolt and Red gain access to the building. Lightfoot, dressed as a woman, distracts the Western Union office's security guard, deactivates the ensuing alarm, and is picked up by Goody. Using an anti-tank cannon to breach the vault's wall, as they did in the first heist, the gang escapes with the loot. They flee in the car, with Red and Goody in the trunk, to a nearby drive-in movie in progress. Upon seeing a shirt tail protruding from the car's trunk lid, the suspicious theater manager calls the police and a chase ensues. Goody is shot and Red throws him out of the trunk onto a dirt road, where he dies.

Red then forces Thunderbolt and Lightfoot to stop the car. He pistol-whips them both, knocking them unconscious, and kicks Lightfoot violently in the head. Red takes off with the loot in the getaway car but is again pursued by police, who shoot Red several times, causing him to lose control of the car and crash through the window of a department store, where he is attacked and killed by the store's vicious watchdogs.

Escaping on foot, Thunderbolt and Lightfoot hitch a ride the next morning and are dropped off near Warsaw, Montana, where they stumble upon the one-room schoolhouse—now a historical monument on the side of a highway—moved there from its original location in Warsaw after the first heist. As the two men retrieve the stolen money, Lightfoot's behavior becomes erratic as a result of the beating.

Thunderbolt buys a new Cadillac convertible with cash, something Lightfoot said he had always wanted to do, and picks up his waiting partner, who is gradually losing control of the left side of his body. As they drive away celebrating their success with cigars, Lightfoot, in obvious distress, tells Thunderbolt in a slurred voice how proud he is of their 'accomplishments', and slumps over dead.

Thunderbolt snaps his cigar in half (as it is no longer a celebration), and with his dead partner beside him, he drives off down the highway into the distance.

Cast

Production

Development & screenplay

Stan Kamen of the William Morris Agency came up with the initial idea for Thunderbolt and Lightfoot,[6] but gave it to Michael Cimino to write on speculation with Eastwood in mind.[7] Due to the great financial success of Dennis Hopper's Easy Rider, road pictures were a popular genre in Hollywood. Eastwood himself wanted to do a road movie.[7] Agent Leonard Hirshan brought the script to Eastwood from fellow agent Kamen.[8] Reading it, Eastwood liked it so much that he originally intended to direct it himself. However, on meeting Cimino, he decided to give him the directing job instead, giving Cimino his big break and feature-film directorial debut.[9] Cimino later said that if it was not for Eastwood, he never would have had a career in film.[10] Cimino patterned Thunderbolt after one of his favorite '50s films, Captain Lightfoot.[11] The music is composed by Dee Barton but the song "Where Do I Go From Here?" is composed and performed by Paul Williams.

Shooting

Although Eastwood generally refused to spend much time in scouting for locations, particularly unfamiliar ones, Cimino and Eastwood's producer Robert Daley traveled extensively around the Big Sky Country in Montana for thousands of miles and eventually decided on the Great Falls area and to shoot the film in the towns of Ulm, Hobson, Fort Benton, Augusta and Choteau and surrounding mountainous countryside.[12] The film was shot in 47 days from July to September 1973.[2][7][12][13] It was filmed in Fort Benton, Wolf Creek, Great Falls,[12] and Hobson. St. John's Lutheran Church in Hobson was used for the opening scene.

Eastwood did not like to do any more than three takes on any given shot, according to co-star Bridges. "I would always go to Mike and say 'I think I can do one more. I got an idea.' And Mike would say 'I gotta ask Clint.' Clint would say, 'Give the kid a shot.'"[14] Charles Okun, first assistant director on Thunderbolt, added, "Clint was the only guy that ever said 'no'. Michael said 'OK, let's go for another take.' It was take four, Clint would say 'No we got enough. We got it.' [...] And if [Cimino] took too long to get it ready, [Clint] would say, 'It's good, let's go.'"[12][14]

Release

Thunderbolt was released on May 23, 1974. The film grossed $9 million in rentals on its initial theatrical release[15] and eventually grossed $25 million overall,[16] making it the 17th highest-grossing film of 1974.[17] The film did respectable box office business, and the studio profited, but Clint Eastwood vowed never to work with the movie's distributor United Artists again due to what he felt was bad promotion of it.[18][19] According to author Marc Eliot, Eastwood perceived himself as being upstaged by Bridges.[16]

Given that for Eastwood this was an offbeat film, Franks Wells of Warner Brothers refused to back Malpaso in the production, leaving him to turn to United Artists and producer Bob Daley.[12] Eastwood was unhappy with the way that United Artists had produced the film and swore "he would never work for United Artists again", and the scheduled two-film deal between Malpaso and UA was cancelled.[20]

Thunderbolt and Lightfoot was released to DVD by MGM Home Video on June 13, 2000 as a Region 1 widescreen DVD and also by Twilight Time on February 11, 2014 as a Region 1 widescreen Blu-ray DVD.

Reception

Jay Cocks of Time called the film "one of the most ebullient and eccentric diversions around."[13] Leonard Maltin gave the film three out of four stars, describing it as "Colorful, tough melodrama-comedy with good characterizations; Lewis is particularly fine, but Bridges steals the picture."[21]

Thunderbolt has an 87% "Fresh" rating on Rotten Tomatoes. The RT consensus is "This likable buddy/road picture deftly mixes action and comedy, and features excellent work from stars Clint Eastwood and Jeff Bridges and first-time director Michael Cimino."[22] Thunderbolt has since become a cult film.[23][24]

As a result of this film and Cimino's TV commercial work, producer Michael Deeley would approach Cimino to direct and co-write the Oscar-winning The Deer Hunter (1978).[25][26]

Jeff Bridges received the film's only nomination for an Academy Award for Best Supporting Actor.[16] Eastwood's acting performance was noted by critics to the extent that Clint himself believed it was Oscar worthy.[27]

Analysis

Author Michael Bliss wrote that while Thunderbolt may appear to be a conventional violent action film with Eastwood in the lead role, the film is more like "a meditation on, than a representation of, the male camaraderie theme" using rhetorical devices such as symbol, camerawork, and allusive dialogue to add to that theme.[28] According to Bliss, the film's structural paradigm describes a tripartite series of events: natural order followed by disturbance followed by a restoration of natural order.[29]

See also

References

Footnotes

  1. "Thunderbolt and Lightfoot Poster #2". IMP Awards. Retrieved 2010-09-25.
  2. 1 2 Hughes, p.166
  3. Ready for Vietnam? A Talk With Michael Cimino: Cimino By LETICIA KENT. New York Times (1923-Current file) [New York, N.Y] 10 Dec 1978: D15.
  4. Thunderbolt and Lightfoot, Box Office Information. The Numbers. Retrieved May 22, 2012.
  5. "Thunderbolt and Lightfoot". Turner Classic Movies. Retrieved March 1, 2016.
  6. McGilligan, p. 237
  7. 1 2 3 Eliot, p. 154
  8. Eliot, p. 153
  9. Garbarino, Steve (March 2002). "Michael Cimino's Final Cut". Vanity Fair (499): pp. 232-235+250-252. Retrieved 2010-09-23.
  10. DVD commentary by director Michael Cimino on Year of the Dragon. Located on the Region 1 DVD of Year of the Dragon.
  11. "Michael Cimino - Biography". MSN Movies. Retrieved 2010-09-23.
  12. 1 2 3 4 5 McGilligan (1999), p. 239
  13. 1 2 Bach, p. 141
  14. 1 2 Bridges, Jeff (actor); Okun, Charles ("Cimino production manager, 64'-78'"); Dafoe, Willem (narrator); Epstein, Michael (director). (2004). Final Cut: The Making and Unmaking of Heaven's Gate. [Television Production]. Viewfinder Productions.
  15. "All-time Film Rental Champs", Variety, 7 January 1976, pg 44.
  16. 1 2 3 Eliot, p. 155
  17. Top Grossing Films of 1974. listal.com Retrieved September 7, 2015.
  18. Bach, p. 83
  19. Hughes, p.170
  20. McGilligan, p. 241
  21. Maltin, Leonard (August 2008). Leonard Maltin's Movie Guide (2009 ed.). New York, NY: Penguin Group. p. 1413. ISBN 978-0-452-28978-9.
  22. "Thunderbolt and Lightfoot". Rotten Tomatoes. Retrieved 2010-09-25.
  23. Martin, Mick; Porter, Marsha (October 2001). Video Movie Guide (2002 ed.). New York, NY: Ballantine Publishing Group. p. 1128. ISBN 0-345-42100-0.
  24. Carducci; Gallagher, p. 38.
  25. Deeley, p. 163
  26. Deeley, p. 164
  27. McGilligan (1999), p. 240
  28. Bliss, p. 151
  29. Bliss, p. 153

Bibliography

Further reading

Wikiquote has quotations related to: Thunderbolt and Lightfoot
This article is issued from Wikipedia - version of the 11/21/2016. The text is available under the Creative Commons Attribution/Share Alike but additional terms may apply for the media files.