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Billy Jack is the second, and highest grossing, in a series of motion pictures centered around a fictional character of the same name, played by Tom Laughlin. The film was released in 1971.PlotBilly Jack is a Native American Green Beret veteran, hapkido master, and gunslinger. The character made his début in The Born Losers (1967), a so-called "biker film" about motorcycle gangs terrorizing a California town; Billy Jack rises to the occasion to defeat the gang by defending from their wrath a college student who has evidence against them. The first film was considered the typical drive-in theater fare of the period, described by Entertainment Insiders reviewer Rusty White as "pure exploitation, but with something extra."This changes with the second film, Billy Jack, in which the hero must defend the hippie-themed Freedom School and its students from the machinations of racists. The school is organized by Jean Roberts, played by Laughlin's wife, Delores Taylor, who also appears in each subsequent film. The movies go to some length to explain how the anti-establishment pacifist philosophy of the Freedom School can be reconciled with the martial arts and gunplay featured prominently in the plots of the films. Billy Jack hit on a potent formula with this message in 1971, and the film went on to become one of the highest grossing of its time, and remains among the top 100 when the list is adjusted for inflation. Billy Jack helped launch the martial arts craze that swept the United States in the 1970s. It was arguably the first American film to feature a non-Asian lead character who used the martial arts as his primary weapon of defeating the villians. The style of martial arts used in the film is the Korean art of Hapkido. Though Laughlin, a Brown Belt in the art, performed many of his own fighting stunts, it was Hapkido Master Bong Soo Han, who performed the advanced techniques. Two controversial scenes were noted by filmgoers and reviewers. In one, Jean (Taylor) is raped by Bernard (David Roya), the corrupt son of the county's most successful (and ruthless) businessman. The scene includes a wide-angle establishing shot of Jean tied to stakes on the desert floor, nude. In the second scene, as Bernard sits with a woman in his car at a lake, he uses a switchblade to cut her bra and demands she take it "all the way off." (Several theatres intentionally pointed the projector slightly low to keep the actress's nipple area off the screen. Conversely, other theatres intentionally pointed the projector slightly high.) Billy and Jean arrive, rescue the woman ("Will you look?" she asks Billy, to which he responds, "Probably."), and force Bernard to drive his Corvette into the lake. Billy Jack's wardrobe (black T-shirt, blue denim jacket, blue jeans, and a black hat with a beadwork band) would become nearly as iconic as the character. Later films in the series featured increasingly implausible plots and tended to rely less on the martial arts than on the message, which wore thin as the 1970s marched on; the franchise eventually faded into obscurity after two more sequels. The theme song of the films, "One Tin Soldier" by Coven, became a Top 40 hit in 1971, and featured the chorus: :Go ahead and hate your neighbor, go ahead and cheat a friend :Do it in the name of heaven, you can justify it in the end :There won't be any trumpets blowin' come the judgment day :On the bloody morning after, one tin soldier rides away Films in the series
Laughlin's website mentions plans to make another sequel, entitled Billy Jack’s Crusade to End the Iraq War and Restore America to Its Moral Purpose by the only way possible - Impeaching Bush & Cheney. [ Visit the complete Wikipedia entry for Billy Jack ] Some related entries: Ski Party | The Vanishing | Triad | Edward II | Toonzone Entertainment | Goggle boy | The Lost Honour of Katharina Blum | The Cursed Videotape | Mad Hot Ballroom | Lust in the Dust | Things to Come This page is based on the copyrighted Wikipedia article Billy Jack; it is used under the GNU Free Documentation License. You may redistribute it, verbatim or modified, providing that you comply with the terms of the GFDL. | Searches on eBay
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