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Convoy

1978

Action / Drama

81
Rotten Tomatoes Critics - Rotten43%
Rotten Tomatoes Audience - Upright72%
IMDb Rating6.31016923

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Plot summary


Uploaded by: OTTO

Top cast

Ali MacGraw Photo
Ali MacGraw as Melissa
Madge Sinclair Photo
Madge Sinclair as Widow Woman
Ernest Borgnine Photo
Ernest Borgnine as Sheriff Lyle 'Cottonmouth' Wallace
Kris Kristofferson Photo
Kris Kristofferson as Martin 'Rubber Duck' Penwald
720p.BLU 1080p.BLU
811.67 MB
1280*720
English 2.0
NR
23.976 fps
1 hr 50 min
P/S 0 / 2
1.64 GB
1920*1080
English 2.0
NR
23.976 fps
1 hr 50 min
P/S 1 / 15

Movie Reviews

Reviewed by grantss4 / 10

What was Sam Peckinpah thinking?

Three truckers are setting off across country when they are harassed by a local Sheriff. The Sheriff is happy to use his power to extort money from anyone who he runs into, and he has a particular dislike for truckers. He and one of the truckers, "Rubber Duck", have a long-standing feud. This boils over when the truckers refuse to give in to one of his extortion attempts and get into a fight with the Sheriff and the local police. This results in a cross-state, even inter- state chase, and grows in magnitude as more and more trucks join the rebels, forming a convoy.

Pretty weak movie. Generally just one long car/truck chase scene, with little escapades along the way. Had some potential to make a statement about freedom and taking a stand against fascism (maybe a Vanishing Point with trucks) but hardly touches either subject. Instead it's one of those mindless elongated cross country car chase movies.

Most perplexing of all, this is directed by Sam Peckinpah, the man who gave us The Wild Bunch, Cross of Iron, Straw Dogs and Pat Garrett and Billy the Kid. His movies usually have solid plots, good themes and are quite gritty and violent. This has none of those traits. Why he chose to direct this, I don't know. He must have needed the money.

Reviewed by slokes5 / 10

Never Gets Out Of First Gear

This film is a strange duck. One of the only two bona fide commercial hits for one of the most celebrated American directors of his era nevertheless pretty much killed Sam Peckinpah's career. What went wrong?

Some blame the basic concept, basing an entire movie on a three-year-old AM novelty hit. Like the song, it's a rambling tale about truckers ramming roadblocks and talking to each other on citizens-band radios. Kris Kristofferson as lead trucker Rubber Duck seems sheepish about the overall point, while Ali MacGraw as his love interest looks uncomfortable in a bad haircut.

"Convoy" isn't Shakespeare, but for the first 35 minutes it establishes an amiable tone and a colorful cast of supporting players. The jokes are hit-and-miss, but establish an enjoyable trucker camaraderie. Kristofferson's not much of an actor for me, but he's effective here working his gruff-but-kindly persona for what it's worth.

The early part of the film culminates in a fistfight in a roadstop diner. This sequence is well-shot and edited, belying the notion of Sam directing the entire film out of his skull on cocaine. A slow-motion shot of ketchup splattering over one combatant shows Bloody Sam had a sense of humor about his reputation. One cop seems impervious to fists and chairs alike, leaving Duck to marvel: "That ain't no cop, that's a mule wearing a uniform." You laugh because it's set up well.

But then the film moves to the Rubber Duck and his pals escaping the law, and with that ideas run out fast. The movie pushes its points, hazy as they are, with unbecoming directness. One cop introduces himself: "My name is Bob Bookman, sir, and I hate truckers." The Duck goes on some existential tangent about his growing band of followers, telling his pal Pig Pen (Burt Young) "Who the hell else they got?"

Much of the film focuses on Sheriff "Dirty" Lyle, overplayed by an uncommonly intense Ernest Borgnine, who chases the Duck because, well, he's the law and doesn't like backtalk from people he hits up for bribes. The story wanders into amnesty discussions between the Duck and an ambitious governor, with assorted points about grandstanding politicans hammered over and over.

In an out-of-nowhere dramatic shift, trucker Spider Mike (Franklin Ajaye) is beaten and stuck in jail in Texas, setting the stage for the Duck to break him out. The amiable comedy of the early film still lingers, but it's largely overwhelmed by this and other stabs at significance. By the end, the Duck has passed from myth to deity in a drawn-out finale with a lot of strained laughter. Here's an idea: It's a comedy when the audience is left laughing, not the actors on screen.

"Convoy" never sinks entirely; the visuals are cool and the supporting cast fun company. It just doesn't do enough with what it has. It's here I think Peckinpah failed the film, not working the script in a more engaging direction. He leans on stunts in place of story; after the fifteenth flipped cop car I started getting old "A-Team" flashbacks.

A lot of familiar faces from other Peckinpah films appear here, in both lead and supporting roles. Sam himself appears twice, as a boom operator in a camera car chasing the convoy and as a face on the T-shirt of Widow Woman (Madge Sinclair) that reads: "Uncle Sam Wants You".

Early in the film, Widow Woman sums up the spirit of "Convoy" when someone asks her if she wants to join them in their law-breaking adventure. "Why the hell not?" she replies. It's a line that worked when Ben Johnson said it in "The Wild Bunch". Here it is not so convincing. "Convoy" entertains, but it never convinces. For a Peckinpah movie, that isn't good enough.

Reviewed by SnoopyStyle5 / 10

some vehicular destruction

On a remote stretch of highway, truck driver Martin "Rubber Duck" Penwald (Kris Kristofferson) encounters hot lady Melissa (Ali MacGraw). Later, he and other truckers get shaken down by corrupted Sheriff Lyle "Cottonmouth" Wallace (Ernest Borgnine). Melissa had to sell everything including her car and hitches a ride with the Duck. Cottonmouth start harassing the truckers which leads to all-out fight. The Duck leads a truck convoy for the state border to escape the long arms of the law.

The question for this movie is whether legendary director Sam Peckinpah can take the inspiration from a novelty hit song and turn it into something great. The answer seems to be no. Here's the deal. I'm a sucker from mass vehicular destruction and awesome stunt work. This movie certainly destroys quite a few vehicles but I'm not awed by it. There is one good truck crash early on but it's shot from too far away. There is another big truck destruction during the climax. Again, it's pulling its punch. The trailer is obviously stationary when they blow it up. I have to assume that they didn't want to damage the bridge. In which case, I would suggest doing it on the road. That scene needs the truck to be speeding and crashing while exploding. It needs the kinetic energy. My favorite vehicle scene is probably getting crushed between two trucks. It may not be great stunt work but I love the fun concept.

Kristofferson should work great with this character. It's a cowboy movie and he would be better as a lone cowboy. Ali MacGraw has the short perm and it's weird looking. She has next to no chemistry with Kristofferson. I think that there is a way to make this work better. This may be a good premise for some fun mindless destruction. As it stands, it's not that smart but nowhere near mindless enough to be that fun.

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