Earlier this week I opened with the question, “What does the audience want?” Now it’s my turn to tell you what I want.
I want more movies with blue-collar heroes.
With all the talk about The Fall Guy, which I still hope to see, I decided to watch Hooper, Burt Reynolds’ 1978 followup to the great Smokey and the Bandit. It reteams him with director Hal Needham and his real-life girlfriend Sally Field, for another bit of good-natured nonsense. This time, Reynolds plays Sonny Hooper, Hollywood stuntman. Not just any stuntman, but the best stuntman. He’s friends with the former-best stuntman, Jocko (Brian Keith), and sees firsthand the long-term consequences of his career choice.
It’s already starting to take its tole.
There’s a new, soon-to-be best stuntman on deck in “Ski” Shidski (Jan-Michael Vincent, who had already done the young protege thing in 1972’s The Mechanic). Hooper could have easily made Ski a villain, or dwelled on Hooper’s feeling threatened by him. But this is a more realistic movie than that and doesn’t need anything so contrived. Like most working men, Hooper doesn’t want to stop doing what he loves, but he’s humble enough to offer a helping hand to the man who will inevitably replace him.
Which isn’t to say there’s not conflict.
Gwen (Field) wants Sonny to retire before he kills himself, and the director of the latest movie he’s working on wants him to do the biggest stunt of all time. Naturally, Hooper figures out a way to make everyone happy: if he can get the biggest paycheck of all time, he’ll do the biggest stunt of all time, and be done. The movie we’re watching shows that working in Hollywood can be a lot of fun (where else can you have a topless girl jump out of cake?) and that everything is open to negotiation.
You just have to know how hard to push against The Man.
At its core, Hooper isn’t that much different from Smokey and the Bandit in that regard. The Man is a buffoon, and the men who do the real work work hard and have fun at their expense. One might argue that these sorts of stories went out with The Dukes of Hazzard and the rest of the hicksploitation genre, which is never coming back.
But think about it…
…What’s Star Wars but a farmer, a trucker and his dog, giving the Empire a major headache?
There’s plenty of room these stories in all genres. You can probably think of other examples and I’d love to hear them. Done right, movies with this theme can’t help but make us smile. Right now Hollywood loves to tell us that masculine working-men are toxic and that humanity isn’t that good anyway. And then they wonder why no one wants to watch their movies anymore. But whenever Smokey and the Bandit hits Netflix, it's in the top ten. I know what I want.
Clearly, I'm not alone.