Macon County Line

Macon County Line is a 1974 American independent film directed by Richard Compton and produced by Max Baer Jr. Baer and Compton also co-wrote the film, in which Baer stars as a vengeful county sheriff in Georgia out for blood after his wife is brutally killed by a pair of drifters.

Macon County Line
Theatrical release poster
Directed byRichard Compton
Produced byMax Baer Jr.
Roger Camras
(executive producer)
Richard Franchot
(associate producer)
Written byMax Baer Jr.
Richard Compton
StarringAlan Vint
Jesse Vint
Cheryl Waters
Max Baer Jr.
Geoffrey Lewis
Joan Blackman
Leif Garrett
James Gammon
Music byStu Phillips
CinematographyDaniel Lacambre
Edited byTina Hirsch
Distributed byAmerican International Pictures
Release date
  • August 8, 1974 (1974-08-08)
Running time
89 minutes
CountryUnited States
LanguageEnglish
Budget$225,000
Box office$30 million[1]

The $225,000 film reportedly became the most profitable film of 1974 (in cost-to-gross ratio), earning $18.8 million in North America[2] and over $30 million worldwide.[1]

The film is docudrama in tone. Although it was presented as "a true story" to attract a wider audience (much like the Hollywood revisionist film Walking Tall of 1973), its plot and characters are entirely fictional.[3]

Plot

In 1954 Macon County, Georgia, brothers Chris (Alan Vint) and Wayne Dixon (Jesse Vint) from Chicago are on a two-week spree of cheap thrills throughout the South before their upcoming stint in the Air Force. Wayne entered the service when Chris was given the option of military duty in lieu of prison as the result of an earlier episode with the law. Driving through Louisiana, the brothers pick up hitchhiker Jenny Scott (Cheryl Waters), a pretty blond with a shady backstory that she would rather not discuss.

Meanwhile, local backwater town sheriff Reed Morgan (Baer) is preparing to bring his son Luke (Leif Garrett) home from military school. Hunting season begins the next day and he buys Luke a new shotgun. When Chris, Jenny and Wayne experience car trouble, they must wait in Sheriff Morgan's town. Unable to repair the car themselves, they scrape together enough money to get it patched up by garage owner Hamp (Geoffrey Lewis).

Waiting at the garage, they are informally threatened by Morgan, who says they could be picked up for vagrancy if they decide to stick around. Not interested in trouble, the brothers and Jenny head out once their car is running, but after another breakdown, they take refuge in Morgan's barn. Inside the house, Morgan's wife is brutally raped and murdered by two men who then kill a cop when pulled over. When Morgan returns home to find his wife dead, he pursues Chris, Wayne and Jenny, believing they must have been responsible. There is a running firefight during the chase.

With Wayne and Jenny holed up in a boat hiding from Morgan, Chris sneaks out to try to start the boat's motor. A gunshot is heard, and Wayne and Jenny fear that Chris has been killed. Young Luke Morgan then enters the boat's cabin and shoots Wayne and Jenny. It is revealed that Morgan was killed during the firefight. Afterwards, a wounded Chris comes back to the boat to find his friends killed, and Luke being held by another policeman. The last scene is Chris in his car, finally repaired by Hamp, with the locals and police then watching him leave. The epilogue shows that Chris became a master sergeant in the Air Force, with a wife and three children. Luke spent the rest of his life in a mental hospital.

Production notes

While the poster advertising the film included the tagline "It shouldn't have happened. It couldn't have happened. But it did," and the title card states that it is a true story (and several reviewers have stated the same), director Richard Compton and producer Max Baer have said that they wrote the original story without any basis in historic events.[3][4] The film is one of several so-called "drive-in" films that were presented as true stories (à la 1972's The Legend of Boggy Creek, 1974's The Texas Chain Saw Massacre, and 1976's Jackson County Jail and The Town That Dreaded Sundown). In each case, most, if not all, of what was portrayed on screen was fictional (with the exception of The Town That Dreaded Sundown, which was inspired by the Texarkana Moonlight Murders of 1946).

Alan Vint and Jesse Vint, who played brothers Chris and Wayne Dixon onscreen, are brothers.

Reception

The film earned $10 million in rentals in North America.[5]

Home video releases

Anchor Bay released the film on both VHS and DVD in February 2000. The Anchor Bay DVD release included an audio commentary with director Richard Compton and the featurette, Macon County Line – 25 Years Down the Road. Both the VHS and DVD have been out of print since 2007.

The Warner Home Video DVD was issued on May 6, 2008. It uses the same transfer from the 2000 DVD release and is single-layered including subtitles - with no extra features.[4][6]

The film was released on Blu-ray disc by Shout! Factory on January 16, 2018.[7]

Legacy

Richard Compton directed the film Return to Macon County, released theatrically in 1975. Despite its title, the film is not a sequel, although it loosely follows a similar plot of mistaken identity.

See also

References

  1. Mavis, Paul (6 May 2008). "DVDTalk.com Macon County Line Review". Retrieved 23 May 2012.
  2. Macon County Line, Box Office Information. The Numbers. Retrieved July 7, 2012.
  3. Richard Compton (2000). Macon County Line (1973) (DVD). Anchor Bay.
  4. James Newman. "Macon County Line", imagesjournal.com. Retrieved on 2008-06-29.
  5. "All-time Film Rental Champs", Variety, 7 January 1976 p 44
  6. Mavis, Paul (6 May 2008). "Macon County Line: Review". Retrieved 23 May 2012.
  7. Macon County Line Blu-ray, retrieved 2018-05-21
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