Deliverance
Deliverance is a 1972 American thriller film produced and directed by John Boorman, and starring Jon Voight, Burt Reynolds, Ned Beatty and Ronny Cox, with the latter two making their feature film debuts. The screenplay was adapted by James Dickey from his 1970 novel of the same name. The film was a critical and box office success, earning three Academy Award nominations and five Golden Globe Award nominations.
Widely acclaimed as a landmark picture, the film is noted for a music scene near the beginning, with one of the city men playing "Dueling Banjos" on guitar with a banjo-strumming country boy, and for its notorious male rape scene. In 2008, Deliverance was selected for preservation in the United States National Film Registry by the Library of Congress as being "culturally, historically, or aesthetically significant."
Plot
Four Atlanta businessmen, Lewis Medlock, Ed Gentry, Bobby Trippe, and Drew Ballinger, decide to canoe down a river in the remote northwestern Georgia wilderness. They want to travel the fictional Cahulawassee River before a hydroelectric dam is completed that will control the river and ultimately flood the valley, transforming it into a vast "lifeless" lake. Lewis, an experienced outdoorsman, is the leader. Ed is a good friend of Lewis and a veteran of several trips, but lacks Lewis' machismo. Bobby and Drew are novices. While traveling to their launch site, the men condescend toward the locals, who are unimpressed by the "city boys". At a local gas station, Drew engages a young boy in a musical duel, with the boy on a banjo and Drew on his guitar. Although the duel appears mutual and Drew enjoys it, the boy ignores him when prompted for a congratulatory handshake.Due to the apparent hostility of some of the locals, Ed unsuccessfully tries to convince Lewis to call the trip off, but he refuses. The men spend the first day canoeing without incident, successfully negotiating the rapids that dot the river. About to go to sleep, Lewis takes off into the dark but returns saying that he thought he had heard something or someone. In the morning while the others are still asleep, Ed takes Lewis's recurve bow to hunt, but hesitates and misses a clear shot of a deer.
Traveling in pairs, the foursome become briefly separated. Bobby and Ed, in one canoe, land briefly and encounter a pair of mountain men emerging from the woods, one of whom is carrying a shotgun and is missing two front teeth. They have a verbal confrontation, and the men force Bobby to strip. One of the men rapes him. Ed is bound to a tree and held at gunpoint by the other man. While the second local prepares to assault Ed sexually, Lewis and Drew arrive, and Lewis fatally shoots the rapist with an arrow. The other man flees into the woods.
The men argue about what to do with the dead man, but Bobby and Ed's vote for Lewis's plan to bury him and continue as if nothing had happened. Drew had wanted to inform the authorities, but Lewis argues that they are in hostile territory and unlikely to receive a fair trial. Any local jury would be composed of the dead man's friends and relatives. He thinks the body will soon be buried by the reservoir water and will never be found. Bobby wants to hide his being sodomized. The four continue downriver but the canoes reach a dangerous stretch of rapids. As Drew and Ed reach the rapids in the lead canoe, Drew falls into the water. It is unclear why.
The two canoes collide on the rocks, spilling Lewis, Bobby and Ed into the river, where Lewis breaks his leg. The wooden canoe breaks up under the impact and pieces float downriver. Lewis believes that Drew had been shot by the man who fled. Ed climbs a nearby rock face in order to dispatch the stalker by bow and arrow. Bobby looks after Lewis. After reaching the top and hiding out until the next morning, Ed sees a man he takes to be the stalker appear on the cliff top with a rifle and look down into the gorge where Lewis and Bobby are located. Ed clumsily shoots and manages to kill the man, accidentally wounding himself.
When he takes the body back to the other men, Bobby is uncertain if it is the person they had earlier encountered, but Ed insists that he is. Bobby and Ed weigh down the body in the river, and repeat the same with Drew's body, which they come upon downriver. Lewis is distracted by pain but encourages this attempt to hide events.
Upon finally reaching their destination of Aintry, Bobby and Ed take Lewis to the hospital. They tell authorities that Drew's death and disappearance were accidental, and do not mention their earlier violent encounter with two locals. Local Sheriff Bullard and his deputy both appear doubtful. The deputy's brother-in-law has been missing since a hunting trip in the mountains. Having no legal basis to hold the men, Bullard tells them never to come back. Bobby assures him that they won’t.
With Lewis still hospitalized and in danger of losing his leg, Bobby and Ed take leave of each other to head home separately. Declining Bobby's offer, Ed says he will inform Drew's wife of Drew's death. At his own home, Ed is comforted by his wife and returns to his role of husband and father. One night, Ed dreams of a dead man’s hand rising from a lake. The vision wakes him and causes him to bolt upright in bed. His wife settles him back down beside her and tells him to go to sleep.
Cast
- Jon Voight as Ed Gentry
- Burt Reynolds as Lewis Medlock
- Ned Beatty as Bobby Trippe
- Ronny Cox as Drew Ballinger
- Bill McKinney as Mountain Man
- Herbert "Cowboy" Coward as Toothless Man
- James Dickey as Sheriff Bullard
- Billy Redden as Lonnie, the banjo boy
- Macon McCalman as Deputy Queen, whose brother-in-law is missing
Production
Deliverance was shot primarily in Rabun County in northeastern Georgia. The canoe scenes were filmed in the Tallulah Gorge southeast of Clayton and on the Chattooga River. This river divides the northeastern corner of Georgia from the northwestern corner of South Carolina. Additional scenes were shot in Salem, South Carolina.A scene was also shot at the Mount Carmel Baptist Church cemetery. This site has since been flooded and lies 130 feet under the surface of Lake Jocassee, on the border between Oconee and Pickens counties in South Carolina. The dam shown under construction is Jocassee Dam.
During the filming of the canoe scene, author James Dickey showed up inebriated and entered into a bitter argument with producer-director John Boorman, who had rewritten Dickey's script. They allegedly had a brief fistfight in which Boorman, a much smaller man than Dickey, suffered a broken nose and four shattered teeth. Dickey was thrown off the set, but no charges were filed against him. The two reconciled and became good friends, and Boorman gave Dickey a cameo role as the sheriff at the end of the film.
The inspiration for the Cahulawassee River was the Coosawattee River, which was dammed in the 1970s and contained several dangerous whitewater rapids before being flooded by Carters Lake.
Casting
Casting was by Lynn Stalmaster. Dickey had initially wanted Sam Peckinpah to direct the film. Dickey also wanted Gene Hackman to portray Ed Gentry whereas Boorman wanted Lee Marvin to play the role. Boorman also wanted Marlon Brando to play Lewis Medlock. Jack Nicholson was considered for the role of Ed, while both Donald Sutherland and Charlton Heston turned down the role of Lewis. Other actors who were attached to the project included Robert Redford, Henry Fonda, George C. Scott and Warren Beatty.Stunts
The film is infamous for cutting costs by not insuring the production and having the actors perform their own stunts. In one scene, the stunt coordinator decided that a scene showing a canoe with a dummy of Burt Reynolds in it looked phony; he said it looked "like a canoe with a dummy in it". Reynolds requested to have the scene re-shot with himself in the canoe rather than the dummy. After shooting the scene, Reynolds, coughing up river water and nursing a broken coccyx, asked how the scene looked. The director responded, "like a canoe with a dummy in it".Regarding the courage of the four main actors in the movie performing their own stunts without insurance protection, Dickey was quoted as saying all of them "had more guts than a burglar." In a nod to their stunt-performing audacity, early in the movie Lewis says, "Insurance? I've never been insured in my life. I don't believe in insurance. There's no risk".
"Squeal like a pig"
Several people have been credited with the phrase "squeal like a pig", the now-famous line spoken during the graphic rape scene. Ned Beatty said he thought of it while he and actor McKinney were improvising the scene. James Dickey's son, Christopher Dickey, wrote in his memoir about the film production, Summer of Deliverance, that because Boorman had rewritten so much dialogue for the scene one of the crewmen suggested that Beatty's character should just "squeal like a pig". Boorman himself, however, in a DVD commentary he made for the film said the line was used because the studio wanted the male rape scene to be filmed in two ways: one for cinematic release and one that would be acceptable for television. As Boorman did not want to do that, he decided that the phrase "squeal like a pig", suggested by Rabun County liaison Frank Rickman, was a good replacement for the original dialogue in the script.Soundtrack and copyright dispute
The film's soundtrack brought new attention to the musical work "Dueling Banjos", which had been recorded numerous times since 1955. Only Eric Weissberg and Steve Mandel were originally credited for the piece. The onscreen credits state that the song is an arrangement of the song "Feudin' Banjos", showing Combine Music Corp as the copyright owner. Songwriter and producer Arthur "Guitar Boogie" Smith, who had written "Feudin' Banjos" in 1955, and recorded it with five-string banjo player Don Reno, filed a lawsuit for songwriting credit and a percentage of royalties. He was awarded both in a landmark copyright infringement case. Smith asked Warner Bros. to include his name on the official soundtrack listing, but reportedly asked to be omitted from the film credits because he found the film offensive.No credit was given for the film score. The film has a number of sparse, brooding passages of music scattered throughout, including several played on a synthesizer. Some prints of the movie omit much of this extra music.
Boorman was given a gold record for the "Dueling Banjos" hit single; this was later stolen from his house by the Dublin gangster Martin Cahill. Boorman recreated this scene in The General, his biographical film about Cahill.
Reception
Deliverance was a box office success in the United States, becoming the fifth-highest grossing film of 1972, with a domestic take of over $46 million. The film's financial success continued the following year, when it went on to earn $18 million in North American "distributor rentals".Critical reception
Deliverance was well received by critics and is widely regarded as one of the best films of 1972. The film is in the top tier of films on review aggregation website Rotten Tomatoes, with an 89% rating based on reviews from 62 critics.Gene Siskel of the Chicago Tribune gave the film four stars out of four and wrote, "It is a gripping horror story that at times may force you to look away from the screen, but it is so beautifully filmed that your eyes will eagerly return." Charles Champlin of the Los Angeles Times called it "an engrossing adventure, a demonstrable labor of love whose pains have largely paid off in making us empathize with stirring deeds in a setting of cruel beauty. Reynolds suggests that given the right material he is more than just another pretty hand and Voight, in the most substantial role he has had since 'Midnight Cowboy' proves again what a versatile actor he is. Ned Beatty and Ronny Cox are excellent in the briefer roles as the other voyagers." Gary Arnold of The Washington Post wrote that the film was "certainly a distinctive and gripping piece of work, with a deliberately brooding, ominous tone and visual style that put you in a grave, fearful frame of mind, almost in spite of yourself."
Not all reviews were positive. Roger Ebert of the Chicago Sun-Times said:
Dickey, who wrote the original novel and the screenplay, lards this plot with a lot of significance – universal, local, whatever happens to be on the market. He is clearly under the impression that he is telling us something about the nature of man, and particularly civilized man's ability to survive primitive challenges But I don't think it works that way. What the movie totally fails at, however, is its attempt to make some kind of significant statement about its action. hat James Dickey has given us here is a fantasy about violence, not a realistic consideration of it. It's possible to consider civilized men in a confrontation with the wilderness without throwing in rapes, cowboy-and-Indian stunts and pure exploitative sensationalism.
Arthur D. Murphy of Variety wrote that the setting was "majestic" but it was "in the fleshing out that the script fumbles, and with it the direction and acting." Vincent Canby of The New York Times was also generally negative, calling the film "a disappointment" because "so many of Dickey's lumpy narrative ideas remain in his screenplay that John Boorman's screen version becomes a lot less interesting than it has any right to be."
The instrumental piece, "Dueling Banjos", won the 1974 Grammy Award for Best Country Instrumental Performance. The film was selected by The New York Times as one of The Best 1,000 Movies Ever Made, while the viewers of Channel 4 in the United Kingdom voted it #45 on a list of The 100 Greatest Films.
Reynolds later called it "the best film I've ever been in". However, he stated that the rape scene went "too far".
Awards and nominations
;Nominated- Academy Award for Best Picture
- Academy Award for Best Director — John Boorman
- Academy Award for Best Film Editing — Tom Priestley
- New York Film Critics Circle for Best Film and Best Director
- Golden Globe Award for Best Motion Picture – Drama
- Golden Globe Award for Best Director – Motion Picture — John Boorman
- Golden Globe Award for Best Actor – Motion Picture Drama — Jon Voight
- — Arthur "Guitar Boogie" Smith, Eric Weissberg, and Steve Mandel
- — James Dickey
[American Film Institute] lists
- AFI's 100 Years...100 Thrills—#15
Legacy