26 reviews
Very good acting performance by Jeff Bridges. He hit just the right note as the naive, in-over-his-head, but determined and aggressive stock car driver, Junior Jackson.
His performance as a young country kid, trying to break into the big time, with small-time resources, is memorable.
Valerie Perrine is equally good as Marge, the man-starved woman who takes a liking to Junior. She senses he's someone who may be on the way up, while her current beau, successful driver Kyle Kingman, is probably on the way down. To hedge her bets, she makes sure to warm both their beds, to ensure she will be with the guy in the winners circle.
The movie looks, feels and sounds woefully dated, and the production and direction leave something to be desired. There are decent stars in this movie, but it looks like it was made on a shoe-string budget.
Bridges, Perrine, William Smith (as Kingman) and Ed Lauter (as Burton Colt, Junior's car owner) make this work with excellent performances.
A simply made movie, with outstanding characters.
His performance as a young country kid, trying to break into the big time, with small-time resources, is memorable.
Valerie Perrine is equally good as Marge, the man-starved woman who takes a liking to Junior. She senses he's someone who may be on the way up, while her current beau, successful driver Kyle Kingman, is probably on the way down. To hedge her bets, she makes sure to warm both their beds, to ensure she will be with the guy in the winners circle.
The movie looks, feels and sounds woefully dated, and the production and direction leave something to be desired. There are decent stars in this movie, but it looks like it was made on a shoe-string budget.
Bridges, Perrine, William Smith (as Kingman) and Ed Lauter (as Burton Colt, Junior's car owner) make this work with excellent performances.
A simply made movie, with outstanding characters.
- jmorrison-2
- Jun 23, 2005
- Permalink
Elroy Jackson Junior (Jeff Bridges) drives fast along the back roads of North Carolina delivering moonshine whiskey for his father (Art Lund). Their still explodes and father is sent to jail. Junior starts racing dirt tracks and demolition derby for small time operator Hackel (Ned Beatty) to raise money for his father's legal defense. He builds his own cars. His brother Wayne (Gary Busey) tries to get him a garage mechanic job and his mother is worried about safety. He meets sweet Georgia peach Marge (Valerie Perrine) working one of the races. The races get bigger and bigger.
This has a great sense of the backwoods world of racing. Bridges is terrific as a man waiting to explode. It's got good car sequences. It also has the great Jim Croce song "I Got a Name". The story needs a bit more drama. Junior needs to overcome something insurmountable. It all feels rather predetermined but it's compelling nevertheless.
This has a great sense of the backwoods world of racing. Bridges is terrific as a man waiting to explode. It's got good car sequences. It also has the great Jim Croce song "I Got a Name". The story needs a bit more drama. Junior needs to overcome something insurmountable. It all feels rather predetermined but it's compelling nevertheless.
- SnoopyStyle
- Jan 9, 2016
- Permalink
Lamont Johnson directed this critically-lauded, though under-appreciated stockcar drama (often referred to as "Hard Driver") concerning a young hellion (Jeff Bridges) in North Carolina who's into racing cars and "hot doggin' the law!" It isn't Shakespeare, though the William Roberts script (adapted from Tom Wolfe's short stories) is literate and bracing, and the film has built up a cult-following in the last thirty years. Performances by Bridges, Valerie Perrine and Gary Busey are all solid, with Bridges' powerful scene in a recording booth the emotional centerpiece of the film. The soundtrack prominently features Jim Croce's song "I Got a Name". Interesting, well-made lower-budget item marketed as a quickie B-flick but actually offering something more substantial. ** from ****
- moonspinner55
- Apr 4, 2007
- Permalink
Why is it that the only people commenting on "Last American Hero" do not live in America? Even when the film was first released in 1973, the panoramic view of Jeff Bridges' fast moving car swirling up the autumn leaves of the American wooded hills accented by Jim Croce's engrossing song of "I've Got a Name" gave "Last American Hero" an overwhelming nostalgic and "American" feel, at least to those of us who saw it in theaters overseas. And for both sheer physical appearance and charisma of the human personification of "American", nothing could beat Jeff Bridges and Valerie Perrine, especially when they stood out against the secondary American characters played by Gary Busey, Ned Beatty, and William Smith. For me one of the most inspiring piece of movie banter of all time is presented in the film when Jeff Bridges as Elroy meets his father in jail and in reference to Elroy's somewhat whiny note of "What are we going to do now?", the father angrily yells at him, "What's your name?!" "Elroy Jackson Junior!" Jeff Bridges yells back. "You'll find a way," the father responds in a confident, reassuring, American tone.
Because it showcases some beloved film actors in roles typical for them, and also because it features stock car racing at a particular stage that would have been difficult to replicate authentically later on, this film holds up. It portrays what might have become of the characters in Thunder Road (1958) had they come along a few years later. That film featured a '50 Ford just like the one in the latter film's demolition derby. Rarely does a film contain that prominent an hommage to a car.
Competent portrayal of an ornery country boy (Jeff Bridges) who gets out of his equally ornery father's moonshine business to make good as a race driver, With Bridges, the talent is there as always, and Valerie Perrine SPARKLES as his biggest fan who remains elusive as a lover. Geraldine Fitzgerald is affecting as long-suffering Mama
I watched this movie today on AMC and loved it. I don't know how well the film was received upon release, but in light of the current Hollywood narrative for action movies, Last American Hero deserves appreciation. It should definitely be considered an American classic.
The movie is a docu-drama based on the few years in the life of Junior Johnson, a famous stock car racer. A young Jeff Bridges brings the main character to life with a great performance, inspired and entertaining. The supporting cast is also excellent with Gary Busey as the brother and Valerie Perrine as the love interest.
All the elements of a great movie that time forgot: thrilling racing scenes, three-dimensional characters, humor, a complicated plot, and so on.. It's a shame that action movies today don't sacrifice some of the explosions, blood, and high-tech props for the type of entertainment and engrossment that Last American Hero delivers.
The movie is a docu-drama based on the few years in the life of Junior Johnson, a famous stock car racer. A young Jeff Bridges brings the main character to life with a great performance, inspired and entertaining. The supporting cast is also excellent with Gary Busey as the brother and Valerie Perrine as the love interest.
All the elements of a great movie that time forgot: thrilling racing scenes, three-dimensional characters, humor, a complicated plot, and so on.. It's a shame that action movies today don't sacrifice some of the explosions, blood, and high-tech props for the type of entertainment and engrossment that Last American Hero delivers.
- bjeffreysmith
- Aug 4, 2005
- Permalink
Decent, but not spectacular, car-racing movie. Solid enough plot and direction. Just lacks something special. Doesn't seem overly profound or engaging.
Good performance from Jeff Bridges in the lead role.
Good performance from Jeff Bridges in the lead role.
This movie is what any NASCAR fan should see.
From the simple fact that not every driver comes with a clean background. You have to do what it takes to live. With that in mind and not giving the story away Jeff Bridges character Junior Jackson does what it takes to make the money. And that of course but racing. From the lower circuits to the higher ones This is kind of a fast pace movie, but its kind of dry. For the viewer that can sit threw the slow times and watch a movie for how a movie should be (for the story) you will enjoy it.
A good underrated movie, and I recommend you see it.
From the simple fact that not every driver comes with a clean background. You have to do what it takes to live. With that in mind and not giving the story away Jeff Bridges character Junior Jackson does what it takes to make the money. And that of course but racing. From the lower circuits to the higher ones This is kind of a fast pace movie, but its kind of dry. For the viewer that can sit threw the slow times and watch a movie for how a movie should be (for the story) you will enjoy it.
A good underrated movie, and I recommend you see it.
- justinmgodell
- Mar 27, 2009
- Permalink
"Damn foolishness to one person is breath of life to another."
If you're a fan of NASCAR, this is probably a film for you. It's well made, and Jeff Bridges is great at channeling the intensity of racer Junior Johnson. To me the sport is damn foolishness and terrible for the environment, so despite the pearl of wisdom above from his moonshine producing father (who spent 20 of his 63 years in prison), the film was tough for me to fully appreciate. I loved the moments revealing his character, like when he's in the recording booth trying to compose an audio letter to his family, which was probably the highlight of the film. The tension with other drivers over the young woman (Valerie Perrine) and the race drama was less interesting. The film seemed mostly predictable, and never really got into a higher gear. The Jim Croce tune was nice though.
If you're a fan of NASCAR, this is probably a film for you. It's well made, and Jeff Bridges is great at channeling the intensity of racer Junior Johnson. To me the sport is damn foolishness and terrible for the environment, so despite the pearl of wisdom above from his moonshine producing father (who spent 20 of his 63 years in prison), the film was tough for me to fully appreciate. I loved the moments revealing his character, like when he's in the recording booth trying to compose an audio letter to his family, which was probably the highlight of the film. The tension with other drivers over the young woman (Valerie Perrine) and the race drama was less interesting. The film seemed mostly predictable, and never really got into a higher gear. The Jim Croce tune was nice though.
- gbill-74877
- Oct 17, 2023
- Permalink
This is one of my favorite gear head movies.Some really great footage of 311 Speedway and Hickory Speedway.In 1993 I visited 311 Speedway for my first time with a sprint car team to race there.I couldn't believe how I knew just about every inch of the property because of the Last American Hero movie.It was a great experience.This movie captures the vibe that was alive in the early 70's of muscle cars and the will to make it to Winston Cup Racing.It's a fantastic,laid back,country folk,style movie that builds to a dream ending dream!Sam Ard's #00 gets a lot of attention as well as Bobby Allison's #12 owned by Junior Johnson gets a lot of footage as well.Enjoy if you can.I have since 1973....
- motornature
- Sep 4, 2011
- Permalink
The movie was well shot and directed with great acting by Bridges, Busey and others. I am surprised that it is not possible to find out why the attire, fashion, hairstyles and car model years were all from late 1960s/early 1970s fitting better the time when the movie was filmed than the actual events that were depicted (Johnson's career went from 1955 to 1966). The article by Tom Wolfe that served as the foundation for the screenplay was published in Esquire magazine in 1965. These cars were not even built then. Perhaps this was meant to be a depiction only inspired by the real events but the timeframe and story are so close that it does not make sense why the did not remain more faithful to the actual period.
Jeff Bridges stars in this fact-based movie as Junior Jackson, a former moonshine runner who goes straight from the back roads of the Carolinas to the muddy dirt tracks of NASCAR in an era when the sport was hardly known north of the Mason-Dixon line and the drivers liked their cars fast and their women even faster.
There was an old saying that NASCAR never did condone fighting amongst the drivers, but I can see where they got the saying that, "If you have to do it, though, make sure it's at the start-finish line." I did a little research on Jackson's career and the story here holds to the fact that he wasn't one of the "cleanest" drivers in NASCAR, but it does help to have that little bit of controversy among your driver(s) when it comes to putting butts in the grandstands. I was fortunate enough to visit the Legends of Racing Museum in Daytona a few weeks ago and met Jack Anderson, a former driver from that era, and I listened to some of the stories surrounding the times and it seems that everything holds true, which makes this a film portrayed very well in every sense of the word. If you're a fan of stock car driving at any level, this movie is for you! 8 out of 10 stars!
There was an old saying that NASCAR never did condone fighting amongst the drivers, but I can see where they got the saying that, "If you have to do it, though, make sure it's at the start-finish line." I did a little research on Jackson's career and the story here holds to the fact that he wasn't one of the "cleanest" drivers in NASCAR, but it does help to have that little bit of controversy among your driver(s) when it comes to putting butts in the grandstands. I was fortunate enough to visit the Legends of Racing Museum in Daytona a few weeks ago and met Jack Anderson, a former driver from that era, and I listened to some of the stories surrounding the times and it seems that everything holds true, which makes this a film portrayed very well in every sense of the word. If you're a fan of stock car driving at any level, this movie is for you! 8 out of 10 stars!
- moviedude1
- Dec 30, 2008
- Permalink
- Woodyanders
- Feb 7, 2006
- Permalink
Jeff Bridges' combination of redneck roughness and choirboy sweetness is just right for this 1973 tale of a poor Southern boy, Junior Jackson, making good on the car racing track. The movie is based on Tom Wolfe's articles about the famous stock car racer, Junior Johnson, whom Wolfe dubbed "The Last American Hero". Cinematic Junior, like the real one, learns how to drive hard and fast while running the moonshine whiskey made by his father. The movie covers the first year or so of his career, from when he takes up racing to raise money while his father is in jail, until his first big win.
The movie celebrates individuality and competitiveness, but despite all his skill, guts and cheek, even Junior can't make it by himself. Real success comes only after he gives up his independent status, and agrees to drive for a car-maker (Ed Lauter). Also in support are his family, with Art Lund and Gary Busey excellent as his father and brother; and a stock car groupie (Valerie Perrine) who retains a soft spot for him, whoever else she's currently sleeping with. However, for many viewers, the main interest of the film will lie less in its plot, characterisations, or "right stuff" message, than in the atmosphere and thrills of the races which the movie graphically captures.
The movie celebrates individuality and competitiveness, but despite all his skill, guts and cheek, even Junior can't make it by himself. Real success comes only after he gives up his independent status, and agrees to drive for a car-maker (Ed Lauter). Also in support are his family, with Art Lund and Gary Busey excellent as his father and brother; and a stock car groupie (Valerie Perrine) who retains a soft spot for him, whoever else she's currently sleeping with. However, for many viewers, the main interest of the film will lie less in its plot, characterisations, or "right stuff" message, than in the atmosphere and thrills of the races which the movie graphically captures.
Every youngun in the Southeast should see this movie before graduating from high school. So why has this movie been buried for the last 50 years? I can't believe I didn't get to see this movie until I was 44 years old. Beautifully shot, Junior Johnson's semi-biographical film feels like it should be considered a classic, right up there with Ben-Hur and Gone with the Wind. I'd watch this movie every day because it reminds me of car racing back when it was the greatest sport on tv, before money ruined it. Jim Croce provided the soundtrack for the movie, with "I Got a Name" as the theme song. The movie was released less than two months before Croce was killed in a plane crash.
Modern people might not say this is great cinema; but even viewed through 'retro' 1970s eyes it is a wonderful slice-of-life picture of a sport that, even then, would soon be fading past its peak. The oil crisis of 1974 would put a huge question-mark to the future of gasoline-powered auto racing and future generations would enjoy the pastime almost as a guilty pleasure. In the 2020s the whole concept is almost a social sin. But for the period in which they story takes place, it was the mortals' gladiator races and the clash of the Titans rolled into one.
The movie is pretty faithful to the details such as car technology, business practices, and social atmosphere of the time. Watch for cool shots of early-1970s cars and engines (especially a red 1969-1970 Corvette with stock hubcaps and whitewalls - they really did make them like that!). Best of all, actors in in-car shots really seem to be actually driving the cars.
Jeff Bridges is 23 as this movie is being made and looks all of 17. He plays the role of Junior convincingly as a naive country boy, full of loyalty to family and friends that others aim to undermine or exploit. His maturation process includes learning the hard way about disreputable women and being reminded of his reasons for wanting to race cars in the first instance. His apparent arrogance is only the way in which his native sense of honesty and ethics manifests itself, indeed the very best of his character. It's why the ending of the story will please the audience.
Watch it for the nostalgic scenes of the best generation of American cars, the hairstyles and fashioned, the technology details, all very unlike anything 40-50 years hence. But watch it too because it's a great little story about heroes and their adversaries who, at least for a time, can't tell each other apart.
The movie is pretty faithful to the details such as car technology, business practices, and social atmosphere of the time. Watch for cool shots of early-1970s cars and engines (especially a red 1969-1970 Corvette with stock hubcaps and whitewalls - they really did make them like that!). Best of all, actors in in-car shots really seem to be actually driving the cars.
Jeff Bridges is 23 as this movie is being made and looks all of 17. He plays the role of Junior convincingly as a naive country boy, full of loyalty to family and friends that others aim to undermine or exploit. His maturation process includes learning the hard way about disreputable women and being reminded of his reasons for wanting to race cars in the first instance. His apparent arrogance is only the way in which his native sense of honesty and ethics manifests itself, indeed the very best of his character. It's why the ending of the story will please the audience.
Watch it for the nostalgic scenes of the best generation of American cars, the hairstyles and fashioned, the technology details, all very unlike anything 40-50 years hence. But watch it too because it's a great little story about heroes and their adversaries who, at least for a time, can't tell each other apart.
- jonniecomet-14209
- Dec 31, 2021
- Permalink
Jeff Bridges did a great job as Jr. Jackson(Johnson). It was after reading an old interview with Jr. Johnson and him referencing the movie that I sought it out to see. And I was not disappointed. Gary Busey also did a great job. From the moonshine runs, to the demolition derbies there was a lot of truth. To those who've never experienced the deep south and some of it's uniqueness, especially for the era, this was dead on. Here it is more than 30 years later and Nascar hasn't changed all that much. The grooming of drivers has, so movies like "The Last American Hero", help with the preservation of a simpler time and people. Yet the altruism in the seeking to gain another dollar still reigns today, some thirty years later. There aren't many movies you can say that about.
- toquestyle
- Dec 13, 2004
- Permalink
The great American movie - fast cars, fast women (okay, woman), fast cutting. The American dream... and it happens to be true, as well! The performances had the realism I love in these classic movies from the '70s and the locations, thanks to Lamont Johnson's almost-documentary approach, are like time-travel back to those days; a by-God record of US social history. Yes, sir.
- presumin_ed
- Jul 8, 2000
- Permalink
A Ford Mustang barrels into view and roars around a cemetery. Foreshadowing danger and maybe even death can't happen faster than that in a movie, and there's no lingering. The Mustang roars on, passing a boy who waves and shouts to the driver (Jeff Bridges) as if he was a hero, before it churns along woodland dirt roads toward home: an ample shack with a corrugated roof in the rolling hills of the Piedmont. The movie is based on the early life of Junior Johnson (1931-2019), who began his racing career as a moonshine runner in North Carolina. This is full hillbilly immersion, and the only politics is an irrefutable truth: government corruption begins at the lowest level, with local scoundrels.
Bridges brings Junior to life with extraordinary skill. He's a fierce and fearless driver, a hard-bargaining businessman, and a renegade whose fists are his second resort. But there is a subtle performance underneath. He's all boyish innocence when he is with his father (Art Lund), a respected rogue who prides himself on his bootleg whiskey, and has the rheumy eyes and hard-won truisms to prove it. Sitting in jail, his distilling works destroyed, he tells Junior, "Damn foolishness to one person is breath of life to another." They are kindred spirits, two mavericks who will inevitably face off.
The title may seem grandiose, but director Lamont Johnson is aiming high here, as was the writer, WIlliam Roberts ("The Magnificent Seven") who adapted Tom Wolfe's articles about Johnson. They look squarely at proud and obstinate men who will go their own way, the American "rugged individual" way, turning their whole existence into the fast lane.
It's also about changing times, including a liberated young woman (Valerie Perrine) who both mirrors and diverges from Junior's tough but traditional mother (Geraldine Fitzgerald). The era of corporate sponsorship is in the future, but technology isn't: for financing, Junior becomes beholden to a team owner, Burton Colt (Ed Lauter), a deal that forces Junior to wear headphones so Colt can issue driving instructions. To Junior, that's a leash. The movie is never predictable, except in the best way: we know Junior so well that we know immediately what he's going to do with that leash, and we're eager to find out when and how.
The racing footage is solid, from demolition derby to Motor Speedway races, and I'd like to thank IMCDb contributors for helping me know one Chevy from another. Finally, a note to fellow reviewer vmarconi, who rated this movie 6: If you're reading, I understand your criticism, but I accepted anachronistic vehicles. Given the sheer number of cars driven and/or destroyed in the film, it would have been nearly impossible to find enough contemporaneous vehicles. It's a technical flaw, not an artistic one.
Bridges brings Junior to life with extraordinary skill. He's a fierce and fearless driver, a hard-bargaining businessman, and a renegade whose fists are his second resort. But there is a subtle performance underneath. He's all boyish innocence when he is with his father (Art Lund), a respected rogue who prides himself on his bootleg whiskey, and has the rheumy eyes and hard-won truisms to prove it. Sitting in jail, his distilling works destroyed, he tells Junior, "Damn foolishness to one person is breath of life to another." They are kindred spirits, two mavericks who will inevitably face off.
The title may seem grandiose, but director Lamont Johnson is aiming high here, as was the writer, WIlliam Roberts ("The Magnificent Seven") who adapted Tom Wolfe's articles about Johnson. They look squarely at proud and obstinate men who will go their own way, the American "rugged individual" way, turning their whole existence into the fast lane.
It's also about changing times, including a liberated young woman (Valerie Perrine) who both mirrors and diverges from Junior's tough but traditional mother (Geraldine Fitzgerald). The era of corporate sponsorship is in the future, but technology isn't: for financing, Junior becomes beholden to a team owner, Burton Colt (Ed Lauter), a deal that forces Junior to wear headphones so Colt can issue driving instructions. To Junior, that's a leash. The movie is never predictable, except in the best way: we know Junior so well that we know immediately what he's going to do with that leash, and we're eager to find out when and how.
The racing footage is solid, from demolition derby to Motor Speedway races, and I'd like to thank IMCDb contributors for helping me know one Chevy from another. Finally, a note to fellow reviewer vmarconi, who rated this movie 6: If you're reading, I understand your criticism, but I accepted anachronistic vehicles. Given the sheer number of cars driven and/or destroyed in the film, it would have been nearly impossible to find enough contemporaneous vehicles. It's a technical flaw, not an artistic one.
This is what the Dukes of Hazzard could have been,or at least this help inspired the Dukes.Junior Jackson drives a Mustang fastback,he runs moonshine in it,he outruns the revenoors in it,he races it on the track (sorta like the General Lee?).When his racing ambition outgrows the Mustang,he buys a Chevy (ugg) and proceeds to move on to an established team.This is the story of Junior Johnson,long time NASCAR racer and car owner.His family runs moonshine,but is trying to conform to modern tastes.Juniors talent makes him a star,and catches the eye of cute in the face V Perrine.A very southern story,a very southern feel,a great big slice of a time gone by.Bridges is excellent as Junior.Don't think anybody could have done as well.His smirks and facial expressions (or lack thereof) are classic.Very underrated film.Should have been given more attention.
- mark.waltz
- Aug 12, 2024
- Permalink