Country Blue (1973) Poster

(1973)

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5/10
Low Budget Independent Pre-Dates "Smoky & The Bandit" genre
adzim19693 March 2005
Some interesting scenes with character actor legends Dub Taylor and David Huddleston. Shot in and around Tallahassee, Fla. the locations and local bit players are fun to watch. Opening aerial and local dirt track raceway footage is full of locals and red clay dust. The robbery at a small country grocery store, and a small town bank, the jail scene and state trooper action are totally authentic. This is probably Dub Taylor's (Bonnie & Clyde, The Getaway, You Can't Take It With You) longest screen role. The original music soundtrack is written and performed by several of L.A.'s top session artists. A strong first effort by twenty-somethings just out of USC Film School.
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4/10
Decent Movie
Rainey-Dawn12 October 2015
I was fairly surprised with this film. It's actually better than I expected it to be. It's a pretty good story - no not great - but decent. I liked it to a degree. It's not a film I would watch over and over but one that I might watch again sometime.

Stereo-typical redneck movie... not all Southerners are like some of the people in the film but some are. You can expect to see car chasing, bank robberies and love story in this movie. It's sorta a Bonnie and Clyde type of film.

This movie is OK if you like to watch B crime-dramas - you aren't missing anything if you pass this film up but if you do decide to watch it just know it's just an "ok" film but not all that bad either.

4/10
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4/10
Just okay film probably would play best at a drive-in with a second car chase feature
dbborroughs9 April 2006
A man on parole, in love with his bosses married daughter, robs a bank and then runs off to Mexico with the daughter in tow.

If you've ever wondered what Southern drive-in fare was like in the early 1970's, look no farther. This is the sort of low budget movie that played all along the South during the boom days of the drive-in movie theater. My guess this would have been the second or third feature of a multi feature program.

While this is not the best movie in the world (an understatement) it does have a certain nostalgic charm, at least for me. I like the fact that Dub Taylor, a character actor who's work goes all the way back to the Frank Capra movies of the 1930's is allowed to play something close to a lead. The movie itself is just okay, but its clearly a film that never could stand on its own except as a filler on a multi feature program.

Is it worth seeing? As a stand alone feature probably not, but if you're going to have a night of movies you might want to throw this one into the mix, especially if you're doing an evening of country themed drive-in movies.
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Decent drive-in entertainment
Wizard-815 December 2013
If you are in the mood for a 1970s southern drive-in movie, you might want to give "Country Blue" a try. To be sure, it's not a perfect movie. It has a number of slow spots, the level of acting is variable, and the boom mike is visible in several shots. Still, I had a reasonable amount of fun with the movie. It's always welcome to see Dub Taylor, who adds spark to his scenes. The production values, while not excellent, don't look too shabby. There are some pleasant songs on the soundtrack. The best things about the movie are the writing and the direction. There are several spots in the story that took me by surprise, coming out of nowhere and making me wonder just what was coming next. I couldn't predict what the ending would be. The direction really captures the feeling of the rural south; you can feel the heat and general poverty. Also, the direction adds some flourishes here and there that are novel and keep you watching. There are also some novel post-production edits here and there that get your attention. This movie won't ever win any awards, but it's good entertainment for those nostalgic for drive-in movies of this kind.
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5/10
wogibhglebbw wbegfase lbawlkbj
Bezenby30 July 2016
Bobby Lee is really bad at robbing banks, and finds himself released from prison only to find himself back in his old life. Annoying girlfriend, crappy job and all that. He sees no way out, except for one way, which is really badly robbing banks.

You see, Bobby hasn't got the fear when robbing banks. It's just that he tends to rob them in broad daylight while continually shouting his girlfriend's name (and vice versa). He also really advertises the car he's in, which leads to some slow car chases.

This film, however, is kind of enjoyable. Bobby's uncle is quite good as a guy who's been through all the crap Bobby's been through, and there's the bank manager who keeps running rings about Bobby. There's also a part of the film where things become ultra-violent for some reason, what with someone getting their guts blown out and someone being shot in the face with a shotgun. And the actual ending, which comes out of nowhere.

If you've picked up Mill Creek's 50 Drive in Classics and were putting this aside as 'not worth it', I'd maybe give it a watch. It's not bad.
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3/10
Redneck Violence
fiascofilmsco26 July 2000
Warning: Spoilers
This is a little drama about a bunch of stereotype rednecks in a south Georgia town. Our hero is in love with the married daughter of his boss. He is fresh out of prison and decides that he is going nowhere in his job, so he decides to rob a bank and go to Mexico, taking his bosses daughter with him.

After robbing the bank, and getting very little loot, they go back and rob it again.

The film is poorly recorded. Much of the dialogue is muffled. The music is sharp and clear, as it was recorded in a studio.

There are several "still" shots that I did not understand. One is during a song, and I think it might just be a time filler for a shot that was not long enough.

After several encounters with the "law," and several car changes, and a bloody violent battle where several die, we lose several of the principals in an unexpected accident. In the end, our hero gets away.

Dub Taylor is the best actor in this film. That should tell you alot. He laughs alot.

You've been warned.
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4/10
Love don't make everything right
nogodnomasters1 September 2017
Warning: Spoilers
The film takes place in Valdesto, Georgia near the Florida border. Bobby Lee Dixon (Jack Conrad) could we make this name more Southern?...gets out on parole. He dates Ruthie (Rita George) who is not quite divorced while working under the table as a mechanic for Jumpy (Dub Taylor) another ex-con. Bobby wants more, but doesn't want to go back to running cigarettes, one of the safer criminal jobs. He has a plan to rob a bank in Havana, Florida go to Mexico where Ruthie can get a cheap divorce. The plan is not that well thought out as our "Bonnie and Clyde" become lousy bank robbers.

There are scenes to laugh with and more to laugh at. "B" drive-in fare, available on 50 film pack of the 70's.

Guide: 2 quick F-word. Brief sex and nudity (Rita George)
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6/10
The perfect necking-at-the-drive-in movie
The Hoyk24 March 2005
Alright, stripping down to the essence, this is standard "southern discomfort" storytelling - poverty, crime, sex, corruption, and retribution. There's nothing inherently clever in the individual elements: we've seen 'em all before, and mostly done better. It does have the strength of atmospheric authenticity: it was shot in the South, and it feels real. The locations are appropriately weatherbeaten and lived-in, the character's behaviors don't feel over-the-top stereotypical; you get the notion real Southerners put this together. And of course, who doesn't love Dub Taylor? What I find most effective and interesting is that this movie has the perfect pace for a drive-in date. Whenever things get boring or a scene with the hero and his girl goes a little too long, you suspect this is when people in their cars would in turn focus on their beloved and start with the midnight baseball. You know how on the old Letterman show he'd sometimes say, "When you see me enjoy a delicious beverage, feel free to enjoy one at home"? The kissin' n' huggin' scenes seem to be giving the same signal to the viewer: it's follow-the-leader time. And sure enough, it puts all the really important plot detail and high-speed action at the end, just in time for when the average lover would have depleted their personal energies and would turn their attention back to the movie. Don't believe me? Try it at home sometime. It's much more fun than playing one of those sitcom drinking games.
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8/10
A Bonnie and Clyde wannabe love story
GOWBTW1 January 2019
Everyone knows the story of "Bonnie and Clyde". Well, this movie, "Country Blue", tells the story of an ex-convict who wants to get out of a small Georgia town, and head off to someplace he has never seen. Along with his girlfriend, they would bark off on robbing a bank. Since there's so much dirt going on, he wants to leave town as fast as he can. Since Bonnie and Clyde had the chemistry tp do the deed of robbing people, Bobbie and Ruthie had the love chemistry going on. This low budget film would soon birth the legendary "Smokey and the Bandit" film years later. It's perfect for a late night film. 2 out of 5 stars
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7/10
Rough and ready crime-drama that benefits from its authentic setting
Red-Barracuda18 February 2016
In the late 60's / early 70's a lot of films followed the template laid down by the landmark crime film Bonnie and Clyde (1967). There was a plethora of films about young couples getting involved in crime and then going on the run from the law. Country Blue is a pretty typical example of this. It's about a young guy just out of prison who starts an affair with his boss's daughter, before long they embark on a crime spree, robbing banks as a means of getting out of their dirt poor environment and starting a new life somewhere else.

Films set in the American South often focus on characters trying to get out of their environs. The rural South depicted in this film is shown warts and all. It's a place of poverty and hopelessness, full of run-down people. It's this very authentic location and feel that give it quite a bit of its interest. In this regard it reminded me a little of films such as Moonrunners (1975) and indicates that like that one Country Blue was a little ahead of the curve in terms of the soon-to-be- massively popular spate of films set in the Southern states – if you went to the cinema in the late 70's I daresay you'd be tripping over them, there were so many. Country Blue is a much lower budgeted affair than those though and it doesn't feature all that much good ol' boy humour. But its lower production values have, if anything, only accentuated the authenticity as the locations here are properly lived-in and battered.

For the most part it qualifies more as a crime-drama than anything else, with the action only really escalating in its final section, where we have bloody shoot-outs with the cops, a beating, an attempted rape and lots of car chases. It also has one of those organic sounding scores, compromising of country rock and pop songs which so many early 70's American movies have and which I am always a sucker for. All-in-all, Country Blue might be a little rough around the edges but it has an attitude and feel that I found very easy to get behind.
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6/10
Decent no-budget 70's South Bonnie and Clyde-wannabe
talisencrw14 March 2016
This is a Bonnie and Clyde-type film, though done in then-present-day 70's Deep South. It has a gritty feel, and one feels the angst of the stars, Bobby Lee (who just got out of the slammer on parole, having been inside for a year for an attempted grocery store robbery) and his girlfriend, Ruthie (married to another guy, but can't afford a divorce), trying to get their lives back on track in a dead-end hick-town he can't stand and is tired of just two days later. It's certainly watchable and is in no way as bad as reviews tend to give it. This is Jack Conrad's filmmaking debut, but it's not a monstrosity. After negotiations with Jeff Bridges and Robert Blake broke down for the main part of Bobby Lee, Conrad was forced to play the role himself, and he's no embarrassment. Though it tends to be ridden with cliché, and the main characters are extremely unintelligent in their bank-robbing and getaway approaches, it's still a fun ride and worth checking out if you have the opportunity.
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6/10
Crime doesn't pay.
cerealmon10 October 2019
Another one of the ol Mill creek 200 drive I cult cinema box set ya hear. Not a bad movie at all. Decently acted and shot. And the story was pretty good probably would watch this again. Even the music was pretty good.
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6/10
It's not all about production values
bt698nhj10 February 2023
The budget for this film may have been $10,000. But I don't care. It was set in South Georgia / North Florida, which is close to my heart since I grew up a middle Georgia. Was set in the early to mid-70s, which is near and dear to my heart since I was born in 1966. And it has some very redeeming elements and charming aspects, even though it's an extremely low budget movie with no name brand actors or anybody involved in this production. The 15 mph stop sign in Valdosta was funny as was the mega size Schlitz beer bottle in an early bar scene. And there were several scenes that had high production values, like the primary couple being affectionate in the water, and some of the chase scenes, very well done. I'm not sure that Smokey and the Bandit was much better than this movie.
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