Jackson County Jail (1976)
Facts
| Directed by | Michael Miller |
| Cast | Yvette Mimieux, Tommy Lee Jones, Lisa Copeland, Cliff Emmich, Michael Ashe, Robert Carradine, Severn Darden, Howard Hesseman, Nan Martin and Betty Thomas |
| Theatrical Release | March 31, 1976 |
| DVD Release | September 26, 2000 |
| Running Time | 84 minutes |
| MPAA Rating | R (Restricted) |
| UPC Code | 736991415690 |
| Buy this item ... | 2 new from $24.95, 12 used from $15.50 |
About Jackson County Jail
Yvette Mimieux is an East Coast professional who tires of life in Hollywood and decides to drive cross-country back to New York, until a carjacking on a rural highway plunges her into the worst night of her life. She's pawed by a sleazy bar owner, jailed next to cold killer Tommy Lee Jones, and raped by a lascivious slob of a jailer. When the sloppy good-ol'-boy cop reaches out to her in belated shame, his touch sends her into a panicked attack and she beats the life out of him until Jones drags her from the jail in an impromptu escape. On the surface this mix of Southern-fried cars-and-guns adventure and woman-in-peril thriller might look like pure exploitation. Director Michael Miller certainly shows a flair for wild car chases and pitched gunplay, but he also shows an unexpected sensitive hand in the seamier elements of the film. Mimieux is no shrinking victim; she carves out a strong, assured character slowly stripped of her dignity, and her shock and emotional hysteria during and following the attack is piercing. Tommy Lee Jones, in his first leading role, shows his star potential in a relaxed and confident performance as a terse career crook on the run from a murder rap. Almost philosophical about his way of life ("I was born dead," he tosses off before making a run for it), he is at once clear-eyed, candid, and the most tender character in the film. --Sean Axmaker Amazon.com
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Average user review:| Lackluster 1970's Flick |
Once done informing her husband that she is fed up with his infidelity, she then leaves Los Angeles for a new job in New York, intending to drive herself there. She does so without doing any packing or any of the other things that you would expect someone who's planning on such a long drive to do. One aspect of long distance driving that she is quite clearly incapable of doing is navigation and map reading. Driving from L.A. to N.Y. clearly means going northwards, but she actually drives into the Deep South. On her trip, she picks up a pair of hitchhiking punks who clearly have trouble written all over them. Once she makes it clear to them that she intends on driving north, they hijack the car and rob her.
After the hijack, Dinah enlists the aid of a restaurant owner who calls the sheriff's office on her behalf. However, the restauranteur is also a pervert who attempts to rape her. Whilst defending herself, a deputy sheriff shows up and arrests her instead. Once at the jail, she is then raped by a different deputy. She is able to overcome her attacker, kill him and then frees another inmate Tommy Lee Jones) and they escape together. They steal a car and on the way to the criminal's hideout, they get into a goofy chase with the now drunken sheriff. Dinah and the criminal evade the sheriff and wind up at a house owned by a friend of the criminal. However, the law catches up with them and proceeds to place the house under siege. Both Dinah and the criminal escape from the house.
This is the point where the movie really gets bad. Dinah gets into a discussion of right and wrong with her hardened criminal buddy and trys to convince him that thee is good in humanity. Her accomplice responds only by saying that she must have lived a sheltered life. Eventually, Dinah is severely injured by gunshots and caught. Her buddy gets himself gunned down right in the middle of a bicentennial parade which continues on despite the fact that police are engaged in a running gunfight with a hardened criminal whose six-shooter never runs out of bullets and several paraders and onlookers get downed by stray bullets. Even by the standards of the film's producer, Roger Corman, this is pretty unreal.
Jackson County Jail is a movie that was made with real acting talent, too bad the same could not be said of the script. June 27, 2006
| Jackson County jail...no place for a lady! |
L.A. ad executive Dinah Hunter (Mimieux) is having a bad day, and things are about to get a whole lot worse...after a conflict with a disagreeable client, she returns to the home she shares with her boyfriend, David (Hesseman) only to find him frolicking by the pool with a topless nymphet. Deciding things aren't working out for her on the west coast, she calls a friend back east to see if she could get her old job back (apparently she worked in an ad agency in NY prior to moving west). After securing her old position, Dinah decides to drive cross-country in her yellow AMC Pacer, eventually meeting up with a couple hitchhiking to Alaska, who she foolishly gives a ride to...they, in turn, steal her car and money, leaving her stranded with nothing but the clothes on her back. Circumstances lead to her being arrested and put into a cell next to a shaggy drifter named Coley Blake (Jones), who's awaiting extradition to Texas on murder charges. While in jail, she suffers an attack from a particularly frisky deputy, whom she ends up killing after he has his way with her. Coley and Dinah escape with the rural, trigger-happy authorities in hot pursuit, as the pair are viewed as stone cold cop killers. Perhaps next time Dinah will consider flying instead of driving...
I actually enjoyed this more than I thought I would, as the material seemed fairly solid, bolstered by a pair of excellent performances by Mimieux and Jones. I did feel the misogynistic element was laid on a bit thick, as we see one male character after another mistreating Dinah in various ways, from the fat, disgusting, advertising client who suggests she's in need a good schtupping, to her cheating boyfriend, along with the male hitchhiker and the greasy, opportunistic bartender, and then the deputy who initially arrests her without even listening to her side of the story (she's desperately trying to relate her circumstances, taking the Lord's name in vain, to which the deputy yells "You shut that tramp yap of yours!"), to finally another deputy, with a really bad case of thinning hair, who jumps her in her cell in a brief, yet extremely violent attack (he finished his `business' rather quickly, to which I dubbed him Quick Draw McGraw). Had this been a straight up expoiltation piece, I would have expected the seemingly excessive displays of machismo, but it felt like the filmmakers were trying to develop the dramatic aspects over the sensationalistic ones...then again, we are talking about a Roger Corman produced movie. About the only two characters that didn't treat her poorly were the sheriff, played by Needham, and Coley. As I mentioned, the real strengths in this film come from the two lead actors, primarily due to the sense of realism they brought to their characters. Mimieux's character isn't portrayed as an idiot victim turned violent, vengeance seeking feminista type as she would have been in your standard exploitation film, but an authentic individual who suffers an incredible ordeal, and is now thrown into a situation for which she has no frame of reference to deal with, versus Tommy Lee Jones' character, a thief who knows the score, the score being that if they're caught, few would be inclined to believe the version of events as they actually happened. Dinah did seem a bit overly naïve at times (when she found her boyfriend with another woman, she asked him to leave, but it was his house...yeah, he's the one who should leave), finding herself in awkward situations as a result...picking up those hitchhikers certainly seemed like a bad idea, even before they turned on her, along with the sequence just after she got ripped off and went to the bar to call for help. She asked for a dime to use the pay phone, but the bartender offered to let her use the phone in his seedy, backroom apartment...having seen the bartender, I would have probably opted to use the pay phone instead. Her naivety did come into play in terms of Jones' character, realizing after their escape how much in over her head she was, and his subsequent treatment of her. Jones was perhaps the strongest character in the film, displaying a raw intensity, an aspect often seen in his later roles, in a slightly more refined and focused fashion. And for you Mary Woronov fans, her part is relatively minor, but worth checking out if only for her `butchness'. All in all this is a tight, fast paced film, with a couple of great performances, worth, at the very least, a rental.
I would have liked to have given this release four stars, but due to poor presentation, I feel I have to go with three. Walt Disney Video, which recently acquired the rights to release a large number of Corman's films to DVD, provides a so-so fullscreen (1.33:1) transfer here, along with a substandard audio track, which claims to be in Dolby Digital Surround, which I found hard to believe as the audio is often muddled and hard to discern at times. There are a few extras, including a dated interview piece with Leonard Maltin and Roger Corman (4:15), brief biographies of Corman and the main cast, and a theatrical trailer for the film.
Cookieman108 January 13, 2006
| "Caught In The Clenched Fist Of Jackson County Justice!" |
After getting unnecessarily verbally abused Dinah Hunter (Yvette Mimieux) quits her job as a commercial producer and leaves Los Angeles for a new job in New York, intending to drive herself there. Stopping to eat at a diner she happens across a young couple who she sympathizes with and offers a ride to them. Later that evening the young couple steal Dinah's car and purse, forcing her out and abandoning her. Finding a road house bar she explains what happened and asks to use the phone. The owner leads her to a back room where he tries to rape her. She breaks free of him, tumbles back out into the bar and directly into the arms of a law officer. The owner claims that she was trying to beat him; lacking any identification she is taken into custody and brought to the county jail for questioning. They decide to hold her overnight so that her story and identification can be corroborated. Meanwhile, law enforcement officials have captured fugitive criminal Coley Blacke (Tommy Lee Jones) who is also held overnight before being transported to a larger facility. The sole law officer left on duty rapes Dinah in her jail cell; afterwards Dinah strikes him with a stool killing him. Coley urges Dinah to escape with him and she does so out of fear. The two of them hear on a radio broadcast that they are wanted for killing a police officer and realize they are now marked for death. Coley fails to convince her to contact the police and explain that he killed the officer and took her as a hostage - a fact he is sure they will be more than willing to believe and thus let her off the hook. On the lam they first hideout with Coley's fellow criminals where they are quickly tracked down and, then escaping there, take refuge in an empty farmhouse. Soon they are once again tracked down and attempt to elude capture by making their way into a nearby town. Dinah is severely injured by gunshots and caught; Coley is shot to death on mainstreet during a celebratory bicentennial parade.
This is the type of movie that was popular drive-in fodder during the resurgence it briefly saw in the early to mid-seventies. Beginning with the excellent 'Macon County Line' there were several similarly themed movies to make this circuit during this time frame. 'Jackson County Jail' even went so far as to use a very similar title and many of the same plot devices. What helps this particular film rise above the rest of the crowd is the presence of Mimieux and Jones who are both excellent in their roles and the absence of exploitation - which is equally refreshing and amazing given the setting and storyline. Screenplay author Donald Stewart also includes oblique existential references. From the beginning of the film Dinah is verbally abused by an executive; a waitress tries to shortchange her ("I gave you a ten", "No, you gave me a five."); she feels sympathy for a pair of hitch-hikers and gets her car & purse stolen by them; the bar owner tries to rape her; the police don't believe her and ultimately she is raped by one of them. The juxtapositioning of accepted doctrines of law enforcement and basic human kindness are counterbalanced with the unpredictable consequences of what happens when people purposely abuse and ignore them. Coley later tells her that "true human freedom is an impossibility in our corrupt world" and goes on to emphatically deny that there is no such thing as an honest person. Unbelievably she argues against his opinions in spite of the current situation she finds herself in! There are other camouflaged existential inferences throughout the film that make it interesting viewing. Near the end of the movie when Coley must leave the injured Dinah and attempt an escape he makes the final of his many philosophical statements telling Dinah "I was born dead" when she shouts to him he will get himself killed. The final shot on mainstreet may be perceived as pretentious but is actually quite fitting and well thought out.
There are many familiar faces to be seen in this film beginning with the two leads of course. Mimieux had already forged a name for herself in such cult classics as 1960's 'The Time Machine' where she played the beguiling Weena and then later that same year appearing as Melanie in 'Where The Boys Are'. She is also recognizable to television viewers from the many TV movies she made throughout the seventies and eighties. Other noteworthy films include the Disney sci-fi favorite 'The Black Hole' where she played a scientist and in the early sixties film 'Diamond Head' playing the sister of Charlton Heston. This was Jones' first significant movie role having appeared in a gratuitous role in 'Love Story' and starring on the television soap opera 'One Live To Live' from 1971 - 1975. His starring roles of Sam Gerard in 'The Fugitive' and as Clay Shaw in 'JFK' are nearly legendary now.
Also to be seen here: Howard Hesseman (Dinah's husband) who everybody knows as Dr. Johnny Fever from the TV series 'WKRP In Cincinnati'; Severn Darden (the sheriff) whose list of credits is endless; Betty Thomas (a waitress) who starred for years on 'Hill Street Blues'; Robert Carradine (hitch-hiker) who most people will know from the 'Revenge Of The Nerds' movie series; Mary Woronov (Pearl) who has appeared in countless Corman cheapies and several other indie films and Hal Needham (Fallsburgh police chief) renowned stuntman and film director.
The DVD has received some knocks in other reviews here for its picture quality. Actually I didn't think it was bad at all; the colors do look soft but I perceive that as an inherent part of the original that can't be improved upon. It is presented in full screen which I consider a distraction but again it was probably filmed this way. The special features include biographies, film trailers and a decent but too short interview with Corman by film critic Leonard Maltin. All in all I consider this DVD the best $5.00 I spent last week. November 24, 2004
| Yvette Is A Dish !! |
| Good film, terrible DVD |
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